Interview with Ivan Lazaro
IntervieweeInterview with
Ivan Lazaro
InterviewerInterviewed by
Angelica Gajewski
Date2 March 2025
Mediumborn digital audio file
DimensionsDuration: 39 Minutes, 16 Seconds
ClassificationsInformation Artifacts
Credit LineCommunity History Project Collection
DescriptionAudio file of interview with Ivan Lazaro. He was interviewed by Angelica Gajewski on 2 March 2025 in Quaker Hill, CT.
Ivan Lazaro was interviewed as part of the Connecticut Museum of Culture and History's Community History Project discussing moments of change in his life.
Ivan Lazaro is a young resident of Quaker Hill Connecticut. He discusses the loss of his father as an impactful moment of change along with a major car accident that left him in critical condition. He details his experience with grief and the multiple interpersonal changes that his father's death prompted, including a major change in his career ambitions.
Ultimately, both moments of change that Ivan discusses connect back to transformations in his perception of community and what is necessary to build productive relationships with others. He reflects on his experience as providing him with perspective on the value of familial units, economic stability, and domesticity.
Ivan Lazaro was interviewed as part of the Connecticut Museum of Culture and History's Community History Project discussing moments of change in his life.
Ivan Lazaro is a young resident of Quaker Hill Connecticut. He discusses the loss of his father as an impactful moment of change along with a major car accident that left him in critical condition. He details his experience with grief and the multiple interpersonal changes that his father's death prompted, including a major change in his career ambitions.
Ultimately, both moments of change that Ivan discusses connect back to transformations in his perception of community and what is necessary to build productive relationships with others. He reflects on his experience as providing him with perspective on the value of familial units, economic stability, and domesticity.
Object number2024.79.14
NotesSubject Note: The Connecticut Museum of Culture and History’s Community History Project (CHP) is a public-facing initiative, focused on contemporary collecting, gathering items of the recent past as well as from events happening today. This program developed community historians to identify, document, and preserve their experiences as residents of Connecticut, and to share these experiences during a series of community presentations. The project focused on the theme "Redefining Moments of Change." Conneticans share stories of people or events who have changed their lives or how they have sparked change in the lives of others.Cataloging Note: Digitization and access to this collection is supported by a Congressionally Directed grant through the U.S. Department of Education.
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