In memory of Paul Naish
Roman Catholic Funeral Mass for Paul Dana Naish
Saturday, May 7, 2016 at 1:00pm
Reception to follow downstairs
Our Lady of the Rosary Church (St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Shrine)
7 State Street (across from South Ferry Terminal)
New York, NY 10004
There are two options for making a donation to honor Paul Naish:
- To the CUNY Graduate Center
Some history alumni have arranged for donations to the History department of the CUNY Graduate Center (GC) to be made in Paul’s name. The funds would be earmarked for a research and travel grant for which History Ph.D. students would apply. Our aim is to raise $4,000 for this one grant, which we plan to call The Paul D. Naish Travel and Research Grant. Please join us in this effort to remember Paul, an avid researcher and a dedicated scholar, and to assist graduate student research at the institution he cherished and believed in. Any amount is welcome.
Checks should be made payable to: The Graduate Center Foundation. This is very important as it insures that the funds are received by the 501-c3 connected to the GC.
Please write “in honor of Paul D. Naish” in the memo section of the check. This is also very important, as it insures that the funds will be delivered to the right fund.
Please send donations to:
The Graduate Center Foundation
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue, Room 8204
New York, NY 10016
Please include your name and address and the GC will issue you a receipt of the gift which you can use for tax purposes.
2. To Guttman Community College
In an acknowledgement of Paul’s excellence, the President at Guttman Community College has created the “Paul Naish Excellence in Teaching Award for full and part-time faculty to recognize exceptional teaching that contributes to student learning, pedagogical innovation, and operationalization of the Guttman model. Paul has exemplified these values in his work at Guttman and the President wanted to recognize his contributions through a faculty award. The annual award will be given out in the Fall and will be part of the larger faculty awards ceremony.”
Please send donations to:
Guttman Community College Foundation
Attention: The Paul Naish Excellence in Teaching Award
50 West 40th Street, Suite 706
New York, New York 10018
Thank you.
- Gwynneth Malin : gwynnethmalin@gmail.com
Here is a beautiful tribute from Paul’s advisor, Professor Jim Oakes:
Paul was the first student whose dissertation I supervised here at the Graduate Center, and he set a high bar—both personally and intellectually—for all those who came after him. It seems almost incidental to say that Paul was a delight to have sitting in a seminar, but it still must be said that he was an exemplary student. The best students always come to class prepared and ready to contribute, but I can’t recall anyone who read history with a more open mind, with more genuine curiosity, or who so appreciated the sheer joy of intellectual life. Paul was a literate and cultivated man, but he wore his cultivation lightly, without a flicker of pretension.
For those who have not encountered the joy of Paul’s writing, his forthcoming book will come as a pleasure. He wrote gorgeous sentences, fluid paragraphs, and dazzling chapters. He found source material where none of us though to look, and drew insights that none of us had ever imagined.
He loved to teach and he loved his students, and he developed a powerful sense of obligation to the kind of students who filled his classes at Guttman. When the temporary position became permanent, after so many years of uncertainty, Paul was thrilled almost beyond words. I say almost because he kept me abreast of his prospects with a steady stream of optimistic emails that masked whatever demoralization he must have felt after so many near misses and disappointments.
But more than his qualities as a scholar and a teacher, what most stood out in Paul was his kind and gentle soul. He was not naïve about the brutality of academic politics, and he knew nonsense when he saw it–all it took was a roll of his eyes to let you know that he was onto it. But he never cut anybody down. He looked for the best in people and was better than anyone at finding it. He was funny, but never cynical. He loved to laugh, but his humor was never hurtful.
I will never stop being proud to say that Paul Naish was my student. He was a distinguished scholar, an outstanding teacher, and a beautiful human being, and I will miss him terribly.