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The most rewarding work I did besides Hadassah was for the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. I would go to the airport to pick up somebody who had come from a different world. And when you bring them into this country and make them realize they are free now, nothing matches it. Laughing and crying and hugging and
kissing are the same in every language. |
Sarah Kappelman Harris
Sarah Kappelman Harris divides her life into three parts: her family, her work
with Hadassah, and her work with HIAS (Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society). Born
in 1910 to Russian immigrant parents and raised as an Orthodox Jew, Sarah
attended Goucher College, graduating with a degree in Romance Languages in
1930. She taught Latin and worked at the May Company clothing store before
marrying Leroy Kappelman in 1938. Sarah dedicated herself to raising her three
daughters, Marsha, Victoria, and Carol, while volunteering for Jewish community
organizations. Through her local and national leadership roles in Hadassah,
Sarah met many prominent people, including Eleanor Roosevelt, Helen Keller,
Hubert Humphrey, and Henrietta Szold. At HIAS, Sarah performed work that
deeply touched her heart, meeting new immigrants as they arrived in Baltimore.
Following the death of her first husband, Sarah married Herbert Harris in 1980.
Sarah has lived in accordance with her conviction that Jewish women are
essential in transmitting Judaism to their families.
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| © 2004 Jewish Women's Archive. Photograph by Joan Roth |