CASA-NYC Supper Club celebrates hope, advocacy and future

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CASA-NYC Supper Club celebrates hope, advocacy and future
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That sentiment anchored CASA-NYC’s annual Supper Club on April 21st at Tribeca Rooftop, where New York’s civic, cultural, and philanthropic leaders gathered

Hope, when it is real, does not remain contained. It moves, it transfers, it insists—quietly and persistently—on being carried forward, shaping not only individual lives but the very architecture of what we come to understand as legacy.

Arshay Cooper captured this with striking clarity in his reflection that the hope one receives is not meant to be held, but given; it is, perhaps, the most refined form of inheritance, one that asks to be extended beyond oneself into futures not yet formed. That sentiment anchored CASA-NYC’s annual Supper Club on April 21st at Tribeca Rooftop, where New York’s civic, cultural, and philanthropic leaders gathered in support of youth navigating the foster care system.

The evening carried a rare kind of atmosphere—polished, yet deeply human, elevated without ever feeling distant. This was not charity performed for optics. It was care enacted with intention, a room unified by the understanding that the work at hand requires far more than attention; it requires continuity, patience, and presence. CASA-NYC operates within some of the most complex and fragile conditions imaginable.

Children enter the foster care system through rupture, often removed from their homes with little explanation, separated from siblings, and placed into environments that shift unpredictably. Stability becomes inconsistent. Trust, once broken, is not easily restored. To build a foundation under these circumstances—one strong enough to support not just survival, but growth—is an undertaking that demands both rigor and heart.

Volunteer advocates, appointed by judges, step into this reality with remarkable commitment. Their role extends far beyond observation or administrative support. They become a constant in lives defined by transition, showing up with consistency, listening with care, and asking the questions that ensure a child’s needs are neither overlooked nor deferred. They advocate for uninterrupted education, for thoughtful healthcare, for placements that offer a sense of safety and continuity.

They fight to preserve connections between siblings and to ensure that each child’s voice is not lost within the scale of the system. The work is meticulous, though its most meaningful impact often unfolds in quieter ways, through the gradual rebuilding of trust and the subtle, powerful shift from uncertainty to belief. The evening reflected this depth with a series of moments that felt both intimate and expansive.

New York Attorney General Letitia James presented the CASA-NYC Impact Award to longtime Volunteer Advocate Barbara Edwards Delsman, honoring a lifetime of steadfast dedication. Letitia James carries a presence defined by clarity and conviction, embodying a form of leadership that is both formidable and deeply grounded in principle.

Arshay Cooper’s recognition followed with equal resonance, his work centered on instilling belief in young people who have too often been denied it, reinforcing the idea that hope, when given with intention, becomes a catalyst rather than a sentiment. A spoken-word performance by Jassmine Parks brought the lived experience of foster care into sharp focus, her voice bridging the distance between audience and reality with an honesty that left little room for abstraction.

It was a reminder that behind every system, every statistic, there are lives unfolding in real time, shaped by the presence or absence of care. Then the room shifted, almost imperceptibly at first, as Samara Joy took the stage. What followed felt less like a performance and more like a gentle recalibration of energy, as the space softened and the crowd eased into a kind of jazz-soaked, undeniably delicious delight.

Her voice carried with warmth and clarity, moving through the room in a way that felt both intimate and expansive, drawing people in without force. At Table 12, composure gave way to something far more honest—shared glances, laughter, the kind of delighted disbelief that comes from witnessing someone entirely in their element. There was no pretense, no need to capture the moment for elsewhere, just the quiet thrill of being fully present.

The evening drew together an extraordinary group of supporters, including June Ambrose, Amy Ryan, and Deborra-Lee Furness, each contributing to a room defined not by excess, but by sincerity. What lingered most was a sense of authentic care, a rare and refined elegance rooted in empathy and shared purpose. CASA-NYC’s Supper Club illuminated a truth that feels increasingly vital. Even under the harshest conditions life may present, it remains possible to build something enduring.

With the right advocacy, the right consistency, and the willingness to show up when it matters most, children are not defined by what they have endured, but by what they are given next. Hope, when extended with intention, becomes structure, becomes foundation, becomes future, and in rooms like this, it becomes something even more powerful: a collective commitment to carry it forward.

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