
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
|
Vol.
18, No. 15
|
July 28 - Aug. 24, 2005
|


New Director's Theme: 'Joy
and Justice'
By HEATHER HADDON
After 19 years on the job, Mary
Dailey officially stepped down as executive director of the Northwest Bronx
Community and Clergy Coalition in May. Dailey is a hard act to follow, but
James Mumm comes to the position with a wealth of local organizing
experience.
Dailey operates at a lightning pace, and Mumm is already keeping up that
tempo. “Anyone who steps into Mary’s shoes knows she runs, not walks,” said
Mumm, 34. “That’s what I’m doing. It suits me.”
In his first three months on the job, Mumm oversaw the Coalition’s annual
meeting and yearly celebration, planned a long-term vision meeting, and
delved into more sundry tasks like building a better office database. “The
organization is amazing,” said Mumm, a thick layer of grant proposals
covering his desk. “I’m really excited to contribute my boundless energy.”
Overseeing a $2.5 million budget, a large base of members, and various local
campaigns, anyone at the Coalition’s helm must be driven. Mumm comes to the
post with a seemingly unquenchable vigor, whether it’s for protecting
affordable housing, snowboarding or practicing the deceptively difficult art
of Zen.
Mumm cut his teeth on grassroots work at an early age. His mother was a
union organizer for the electrical workers in Buffalo and Chicago, and he
got involved with her campaigns as a teenager. Mumm grew increasingly
passionate about local advocacy, helping him overcome a tough childhood and
bumpy academic path.
“He’s gone through a lot of stuff,” said Wanda Salaman, who co-directed
Mothers on the Move (MOM), an organizing group in Longwood, with Mumm. “He
can relate to the problems that Bronx people have.”
Joining the Organization of the Northeast, a Chicago group, Mumm led
successful campaigns on housing, welfare rights, and other key issues. He
came to New York — specifically, University Heights — in 2002 to fundraise
and strengthen MOM. “He got the organization back on track financially … and
started launching a lot of new stuff,” said Salaman, a Valentine Avenue
resident who still directs MOM.
Mumm hopes to capitalize on his fund-raising skills for the Coalition, and
to build on the group’s power and vision. “We are going to take a good look
at [identifying] the issues that matter to people,” said Mumm, who was
planning a summer strategic planning session.
“It’s a natural moment to do this.”
Trim and athletic, Mumm radiates confidence and intensity. “I like to win,”
he said bluntly. “I hope all our elected officials are ready to deal with
us.”
Mumm says he is committed to seeking out a plurality of voices and tapping
that power for grassroots activism and personal development. “Some people
might think he’s a smarty-pants, but he understood what our members wanted,”
said Salaman, a former Coalition organizer. “He has a lot of ideas and
ambition, and he listens to others.”
Part of Mumm’s openness and energy stems from his practice of meditation and
Zen Buddhism. Hardly monkish, Mumm’s mantra is “joy and justice,” and his
spiritual side is intrinsically linked with activism.
An avid sportsman, Mumm regularly rides his bike in the Bronx, plays
basketball, hikes upstate, snowboards out west and is planning to climb two
mountain peaks this summer. “Life would not be complete if I spent all my
time working,” he said. “The time playing and doing things with friends
feeds my energy so I can work 12-hour days.”
Those long hours have quickly come upon him, but Mumm is calm nonetheless.
“I can’t think of anything I’d rather be doing,” he said.
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