• Log in
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
    Communities & CollectionsTitlesAuthorsSubjectsDate
    Log in

    Legend

    Restricted to current U-M faculty, staff, and students Limited access: U-M users onlyRequest Copy Access by requestHathi Access via HathiTrustFulcrum Access via Fulcrum
    View Item 
    •   Home
    • Archival Collections -- Bentley Library
    • Beth Israel Congregation "Jewish Life in Ann Arbor" Oral History Project Records
    • View Item
    •  
      Home
    • Archival Collections -- Bentley Library
    • Beth Israel Congregation "Jewish Life in Ann Arbor" Oral History Project Records
    • View Item

    Interviews - Sheila (Happy) Feigelson and Ruth Siegel, 2013

    Beth Israel Congregation (Ann Arbor, Mich.)
    2015

    View/Open

    ddc001315.WAV
    Restricted to on-site access at Bentley Historical LibraryAudio file
    (405.1MB
    WAV audio)
    Audio recording of interview. Access restricted to Bentley Library only.

    Feigelson_Siegel.pdf
    Restricted to on-site access at Bentley Historical LibraryPDF file
    (169.8KB
    PDF)
    Original copy of transcript. Access restricted to Bentley Library only.

    Feigelson_Siegel_bhl-8c6a1226.pdf
    Restricted to on-site access at Bentley Historical LibraryPDF file
    (165.4KB
    PDF)
    Preservation copy of transcript. Access restricted to Bentley Library only.

    Feigelson_Siegel_ddc001315.zip
    Restricted to on-site access at Bentley Historical LibraryZip file
    (20.7MB
    application/zip)
    Photographs of participants and interview log files. Access restricted to Bentley Library only.

    Abstract

    Ruth Siegel is interviewed by Sheila Feigelson on 4/21/2009 at 2:00:00 PM in Ann Arbor, MI. Ruth (89) talks to her friend Happy (73) about marrying into a Jewish family and the Jewish community in Ann Arbor. Interview log: 3:00 Ruth talks about moving to Ann Arbor in 1949- worked at the U of M in the music department. She lived in a boarding house with other girls. 4:45 Happy came from Minneapolis and raised family in Ann Arbor. 7:25 Happy talks about learning Hebrew. 10:00 Happy talks about what she loves about Ann Arbor-opportunities to learn. 11:00 Ruth talks about joining Rabbi White's temple- he was Conservative. Temple Beth Emeth was formed for Reform Jews. 12:40 Happy talks about singing in the Temple Beth Emeth choir. 15:50 Ruth and Happy talk about religious tolerance in Ann Arbor. 18:45 Ruth talks about her husband who worked for the Department of Defense. It was shocking when he died. People at the synagogue were supportive. Ruth talks about her sons. 29:20 Ruth and Happy talk about raising their children in Ann Arbor. 34:00 Ruth talks about converting to Judaism for her husband. They knew it would be easier to adopt children if they came from the same religion.

    Other Identifiers

    2013047_0001_00013

    Subjects

    Sons
     
    1940s, Forties
     
    Children
     
    Judaism
     
    Spouses
     
    Adoption
     
    converting to Judaism
     
    Jewish community
     
    kosher home
     
    Temple Beth Emeth
     
    Rabbi White
     
    Minneapolis, Minnesota
     
    New York City
     

    Rights

    The collection is open without restriction but access is limited to the Bentley Historical Library's Reading Room.
     
    "Copyright is held by StoryCorps, Inc., 80 Hanson Place, Brooklyn, NY 11217"
     

    Types

    Sound recording
     
    Images
     
    Office Documents
     

    Handle

    https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/113242

    Metadata

    Show full item record

    Collections

    • Beth Israel Congregation "Jewish Life in Ann Arbor" Oral History Project Records

    University of Michigan Library

    • U-M Library
    • Michigan Publishing
    • Accessibility

    About Deep Blue Documents

    • Deep Blue Repositories
    • Contact Us
    • Frequently Asked Questions

    Privacy and copyright

    Library Privacy Statement

    Works found in Deep Blue Documents are protected by copyright unless otherwise indicated.

    © 2025, Regents of the University of Michigan. Built with DSpace