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The Canadian Jewish News
November 22, 2007
Arts education advocate
receives honour
By Frances Kraft
TORONTO – Lola Rasminsky says she was an improbable candidate
to become a passionate advocate for arts education and the founder
of two arts-related businesses, as well as an organization that
provides arts programs in low-income areas of Toronto.
Nevertheless, Rasminsky's work earned her a membership in the
Order of Canada earlier this year and a Mayor's Arts Award that
she received Oct. 17 in the Arts for Youth category.
With no formal business background (although she studied economics
in university and educated herself by reading and attending public
lectures), Rasminsky finds it "quite funny that I'm running
two businesses," she said in an interview at the offices
of her non-profit organization, Arts for Children of Toronto
(AFC) – an airy 1,200-square-foot space in a downtown,
century-old restored tin factory.
A youthful 63, Rasminsky comes
across in person as low-key but energetic and articulate, with
a sense of humour that is often aimed at herself. "I
am, by nature – although you probably wouldn't guess it – extremely
shy, reserved, quiet," she laughed, adding that she didn't always have
such big ideas.
But she remembers that her late father, Louis Rasminsky – the
governor of the Bank of Canada from 1961 to 1973, and an early
Order of Canada recipient – often quoted poet Robert Browning,
telling her and her brother that "a man's reach should exceed
his grasp."
A "hugely supportive" parent, he even took time off
work and borrowed books from the Bank of Canada library to help
her study for a first-year university economics exam.
Her mother, Lyla, who died in 1976, had also wanted to start
a children's arts program, but her plans were cut short when
she became ill with cancer, Rasminsky recalled.
After graduating with a master's degree in philosophy from the
University of Toronto, Rasminsky began her career teaching music
at private schools in the United States and then at Toronto's
Associated Hebrew Schools.
Her first major foray into entrepreneurship, after running a
small arts school out of her basement while her two sons were
young, was the Avenue Road Arts School, which she established
in 1993.
AFC, a separate entity, was an outgrowth of the school.
"It didn't feel right to me that only children who could
afford our fees could have the benefit of some good arts training," Rasminsky
said. She established scholarships to remedy the situation, but
she "soon discovered that transportation was a problem for
kids from low-income areas, so we decided to go to them [in addition
to offering scholarships]."
Of the 12-year-old AFC's projects, which serve 8,000 children
each year, Rasminsky is probably most familiar with a drumming
group in the Eglinton Avenue-Keele Street area, where she has
spent much time over the past four years.
"When I see this transition from kids who don't even know
they have talent to kids who can give something back, that's
hugely rewarding," she said, referring not only to their
burgeoning skill and public performances, but to the fact that
some now serve on the organization's advisory council and others
have gone on to teach in the program.
These days, Rasminsky spends most of her time raising funds
for AFC, which last year had a $600,000 budget. The $15,000 in
award money she received last month will be used to hire a supply
co-ordinator, she said.
"We needed that person. We didn't know how we were going
to pay for it, but we committed to having it anyway."
But she said she still spends "quite a bit of time" at
the school.
"I love seeing the faces of the students when they leave
their classes," she said. "I love seeing the sense
of well-being that comes from expressing themselves in a way
that they like."
Rasminsky's second business, Beyond the Box, provides arts workshops
to businesses to foster bonding, improved communication and creative
thinking. Her husband, Bob Presner, has taken over as its president.
A project in the works for AFC is a collaboration with JVS Toronto
that will combine arts and job training for teenagers.
Although she believes inroads have been made, Rasminsky said
she doesn't think enough people understand the value of an arts
education.
"I equate engagement in the arts with engaging the imagination," she
said. "It's a very empowering place to be."
Ironically, she said her own exposure to the arts as a child
in Ottawa was not, by and large, a positive experience.
Rasminsky describes one childhood piano teacher as a "such
a martinet that I would leave my lessons crying."
Now an accomplished pianist who celebrated her 60th birthday
by giving a recital, Rasminsky said that when she became proficient
enough to play "really wonderful music, it became its own
reward. It just gives you such joy that you want to practise,
you want to get better, and you want to be able to play those
beautiful pieces."
Any teachers she hires, however, must bring out the best in
students in a supportive way. She insists on it.
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