Rose Goldsmith Stern
American clubwoman
Rose Goldsmith Stern (October 19, 1866 – January 24, 1931) was an American clubwoman. She was a chair of the National Council of Jewish Women and an advocate for deaf education and for supports for deaf veterans of World War I.
Quotes
edit- To sit and wring my hands in agony may have been the first emotion with which I met this great sorrow. But I pulled myself together and applied my whole thought to the working out of the great duty that had fallen to my lot.
- Stern, Rose Goldsmith. "The Problem of the Training of a Deaf Child as Viewed by a Mother--I", American Annals of the Deaf 63(2)(March 1918): 152.
- Stern is describing her own reaction to the discovery that her firstborn son, Sylvan G. Stern, was born deaf.
- Is it not time that the public should be enlightened on the subject of the ability and efficiency of those who, normal and intelligent in every respect, lack only the sense of hearing?
- Stern, Rose Goldsmith. "Our Deafened Soldiers: A Problem of the Near Future" The Survey 40(23)(September 7, 1918): 627-630.
- I believe in organizations and social clubs. While I claim that the deaf are equal to their hearing friends in every respect and should be treated accordingly, I still feel that there is an unexpressed bond of comradeship and sympathy amongst persons similarly afflicted, and that they derive much satisfaction from associating with others of their kind.
- Stern, Rose Goldsmith. "Our Deafened Soldiers: A Problem of the Near Future" The Survey 40(23)(September 7, 1918): 627-630.