Dr Ruth Westheimer was born as Karola Ruth Siegel
in Frankfurt, Germany, on June 4 1928. She was the Only child of
an Orthodox Jewish family at the time of the rise of Hitler and the
hatred of the Jewish Race. When she was 10 years old, her father
was taken in custody and sent to prison camp. Soon afterward, Dr
Ruth tells that her mother, fearing for her safety sent her out of
Germany for six months of school. The move was supposed to be just
temporary while the “trouble” in Nazi Germany blew over:
She writes:
“When I was 10 years old, my mother and grandmother
put me on a train in Frankfurt bound for a school in Switzerland.
Because of the Holocaust, that school became an orphanage
for all of us sent there from Germany and I never saw my
parents or grandparents again.”
Ruth’s parents died in the Holocaust and for six years,
she stayed at the Swiss school that became a foster home
for her. When she was old enough to be on her own, Ruth immigrated
to Palestine where the new state of Israel had recently been
proclaimed. Joining the struggle for the country’s
independence, she became a freedom fighter and was injured
by shrapnel from an explosion.
Dr Ruth’s next move was to pursue her education at
the Sorbonne in Paris. There, she taught kindergarten to
support herself. In 1956, she immigrated to the United States
where she obtained her master’s degree in sociology
and a doctorate in education. In September 1980, Dr Ruth
began her psychology based radio program Sexually Speaking,
which experienced huge popularity right from the start. It
started as a 15 minute program and within one year became
an hour long program where listeners called in questions
about sex for Dr. Ruth to answer. Her popularity and expertise
on the radio grew to an educational network including television
and books and more.
Today, Dr. Ruth Westheimer is popular for her open and frank
discussions about sexual literacy as well as her dynamic
and outspoken personality tempered with her good nature and
great sense of humor.
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