Carmi Rapport has passed
Carmi Rapport has passed. Everyone needs a hero and he was mine. I loved the guy. He was a valued member of the Board of Trustees of WAMC/Northeast Public Radio, the public radio network that I head.
If there was ever a problem, Carmi was the guy you want in your corner. He was reasonable to a fault. He never went off half-cocked and because was a lawyer’s lawyer, he had the ability to keep his clients (I am not one) out of the kind of trouble that people can sometimes find themselves in.
Every small town in America, like Hudson, New York and the surrounding Columbia County has THE lawyer. Oh, there are others but anyone reading this knows exactly what I mean. For well over fifty years, Carmi was the go-to guy if you really needed help.
Here’s just one story that makes me wet around the eyes when I tell it (which is why I try not to tell it on the radio). I had another hero, a man named Aaron Mitrani. Aaron was a social worker who for years headed the Bronx House Emanuel Camps in Copake, New York. When Aaron was dying, he called me and asked for a favor.
Since I would have done anything for him, I set my mind to helping him. It seemed that as a social worker, he didn’t have a lot of money, but he had a house in Ancram in Columbia County. The will Aaron wrote with his first wife left the house to the offspring in the family. Aaron had remarried and upon his death, his wife would have been left with virtually no resources. So Aaron asked me to figure out how his second wife could get the house. Of course, not being a lawyer or even that smart, I called the one guy who you go to, Carmi Rapport.
When I told Carmi what I needed, he said, “Of course,” and asked for Aaron’s address. When I told him, with some trepidation, that Aaron had very little money, Carmi said something like, “Shut up.” That’s why I cry.
The next thing I know, Carmi went to Aaron’s and straightened the whole thing out. That’s Carmi and that’s why, despite a whole crowd of hungry for-profit lawyers coming to Hudson, Carmi remained the best and most trusted attorney around. That’s also why he headed the boards of Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, the hospital in Hudson, and countless other not-for-pay endeavors where he distinguished himself.
At some point, Carmi decided that he wanted to leave the law firm that had his name on the door. I have no idea what prompted him to do it but knowing Carmi, I am sure he had good reasons for leaving and asking that his name be taken off the door. Of course, I could guess that philosophical reasons got him to go. You know that the world is not filled with Carmi Rapports. His grown children adored him and he was very proud of them and their accomplishments.
So Carmi’s name was no longer on the door of the firm which he was responsible for starting. The reason this column is important, not only to honor a great man and his contributions but also because I am sure that everyone reading this will know someone who has made an indelible impression on their community and their lives. Integrity is the key. When it is time to move on, they will know it.
My sense is that a higher power had an eye on Carmi and his wonderful wife Lynn and that every once in a while, a really good soul comes along and leaves us a lot richer. For that, I am grateful.
Alan Chartock is professor emeritus at the State University of New York, publisher of the Legislative Gazette and president and CEO of the WAMC Northeast Public Radio Network. Readers can email him at [email protected].