Italian American Museum: L’On Gr. Uff. Dominic R. Massaro Was Integral Part Of Italian-American Community, Served As NY Supreme Court Justice Since 1986
In Memoriam: L’On. Gr. Uff. Dominic R. Massaro
December 18, 2024
Editor’s note: Staten Islander previously covered Mayor Adams hosting of an Italian-American Heritage Celebration at which he presented citations to the IAM founder and others who have made positive contributions to the Italian-American community.
Dominic R. Massaro is one of only a dozen Americans of Italian descent to hold Italy’s highest decoration – – Cav. di Gran Croce della Repubblica Italiana. He enjoyed a half century career filled with prominent public service as a member of the bar, jurist, author and lecturer. A “highly qualified” nominee to the judiciary by Governor Mario Cuomo in 1986, he has since presided as a Justice in the Supreme Court of New York. Justice Massaro was a central personality in the organized Italian American community.
Justice Massaro served seven years as a New York City, then New York State human rights commissioner. The holder of four earned and numerous honorary doctoral degrees, he is equally at home in Washington or Rome and has been published in legal and scholastic circles. On three separate occasions, the Journal of the American Bar Association credited him with “trends in the law.” A trustee of La Scuola d’Italia in New York and of the American University of Rome, he holds the rank of “Academic” at the Tiberian Academy there. A Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow, he is listed in Who’s Who in American Law and The American Bench. His treatise, “Cesare Beccaria, The Father of Criminal Justice: His Impact on Anglo American Jurisprudence” earned Italy’s International Dorso Prize.
Judge Massaro was appointed Chair of the Urban Public Higher Education Committee by the New York Committee of Italian American State Legislators to investigate and make recommendations to The City University of New York with respect to the needs of their Italian American students, faculty and administrators. His report was instrumental in establishing the John D. Calandra Italian American Institute Research and Service Institute as well as the University continuing its policy of inclusion of Italian Americans as an affirmative action category.
He is “President Emeritus” of the Conference of Presidents of Major Italian American Organizations and was the long-time Historian of The National Italian American Foundation. He was the recipient of ten score awards, honors, and citations presented over the years for professional and civic accomplishment, including the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Four Freedoms Award.
Justice Massaro’s chivalric conferrals are impressive, including The Vatican’s Pontifical Knight of the Grand Cross of St. Gregory the Great and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta’s Knight of the Grand Cross of Merit. By wide acclamation he served three terms as president of the prestigious American Society of the Italian Legions of Merit. He completed 15 years as Principal Representative of the American Judges Association (NGO) at the United Nations.
The Italian American Museum sends its deepest condolences to the Massaro Family.
May his soul rest in peace.
Visitation
Friday, December 27, 4:00 – 8:00 pm
Pelham Funeral Home
64 Lincoln Avenue
Pelham, NY 10803
Mass of Christian Burial
Saturday, December 28, 10:00 am
Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church
559 Pelham Manor Road
Pelham, NY 10803
Banner Image: L’On. Gr. Uff. Dominic R. Massaro. Image Credit – IAM
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Junior Night time Editor or Whatever you are on deck right now:
Italian-American should be hyphenated. Ya, know, the thing that’s like a phone lying on its side.
(relating to the young ones)