Thursday, September 17, 2009

Censorship

Last Sunday, September 13, 2009 the New York Post published a story, Field of Baby Sorrows, about two women in search of stillborn infants buried in the public cemetery on Hart Island. These women are among many who contact me to find out what happened to the body of a child they lost in New York City. They have often been searching for a very long time. Most were told "the city will take care of it" and nothing else.

Within 12 hours, my website, which hosts a digital database of burial records obtained through New York State Freedom of Information Law, was hacked and shut down. This is the second cyber attack in the past six months in response to media coverage. Engineers got the site functioning again in a day. However, women who may have read the article were again denied access to public information.

The posthumous blog, which appears as someone enters the database, has now become plagued with robots and spiders that saps its memory. This is truly old testament style retaliation in opposition to having people find their family and friends.

So, I have decided to start this "off-site" blog as a way to preserve stories of people located through the Hart Island Project.

1 comment:

  1. Why are they making it so difficult for these people to visit their loved ones. How can they do so legally. This whole situation makes me so sad especially after seeing the pictures on the site. These people deserve better than that.

    ReplyDelete