They both made such a lasting impression with me, that when I discovered that they were about to get their umpteenth award for the unstinting and tireless work they do helping others, I thought it would be the perfect time to not only talk to them about this, but more importantly also discover why their relationship is one of the most endearing love stories that I have ever come across.
QG: In the movie when you first get together romantically with Connie, you tell her that you were not happy with her first kiss. Has she got better now?
QG: Let’s talk about what a pair of romantics that you are. In the early days when you were both still married to your husbands you were writing these passionate love letters to each other and then destroying them so no-one would find out.
C: We are very big romantics and I do know that in every room in the house there is a love affair going on. There is such a joy of knowing that she is always here with me.
R: I cannot explain fully the emotional and physical impact that was happening to me in regards to me falling in love with Connie, as it was so overwhelming. I never even dreamt that we would come together as a couple, and I don’t think I have ever read a book or seen a movie that described my feelings that I experienced.
QG: Let’s go back to those days when you had to decide between your husband and in some respects your kids, and choose to finally be with each other. How did you both find the strength and resolve to do that?
C: Going over this is not easy, even all these years later. I didn’t like being a mother. I never viewed myself as a good mother, and I was not one. I didn’t know how to be one. I didn’t even know how to be a woman, so how the hell was I going to be a mother? So to me I did a mitzvah and let my children be with their father. I wasn’t there for them, and I couldn’t give mothering that I viewed other mothers give to their children. So falling in love with Ruthie gave me the freedom to let my children be who they are
.
I felt then that I was not an adult. I still had remnants of being a sick child and needing to rest and be happy, and yet here I was having to be there for my kids. It is tough talking about it but I am very grateful now that my kids are fine, otherwise I would have this terrible burden of guilt if they were not healthy and didn’t have a life of their own …. but they do.
My daughter has the residue still of a very difficult relationship with me, and I am sorry about that, but there is nothing that I can do about what was. I only know that I love her and she loves me even though there is still ‘stuff’. On the other hand Moshe and I had a different relationship because he is a boy and I could manage being a mother to a boy but I simply couldn’t manage being a mother to a girl, because I didn’t know how to be a girl. I’m not making nice to myself, but I do seem to think that I need to pound myself to make myself look bad in order to accept that I left my children.
This is the first time that I am talking this way and it’s been 45 years. I don’t know how anyone can take anybody else into consideration when you make such an enormous leap from the traditional to the healthy. The day I allowed myself to be physically with Ruthie and then to go and live with her, I was my healthiest in every single way.
QG: to Ruthie : You liked being a mother?
The difficulties that we had with Connie being shut out of the relationships with my children and their spouses, and my now late ex husband, also hasn’t healed yet. I try to juggle everything so that it would all work out and that I could be OK with Connie. The thing that changed everything was that it became the high Holy Days ….Yom Kippur … and I knew that this was my chance. At this very important holiday you are meant to take care of things that need settling at that time and before the Ark closes. So as I had made up my mind that I wanted to be with Connie, I went to my ex husband during Services and I said ‘it’s over.’
QG: Do you think the whole aspect of coming out as gay and having to take into consideration the fact you are a parent is a problem that just lesbians have to deal with (and not gay men)?
C: Married and divorced women with children go through this continuously with their husbands. When I was leaving for Israel totally alone and having dinner on the boat, the person next to me said you must not be close with your family. I said ‘I don’t know what is close to me is, but you are absolutely right‘ as I didn’t have a close relationship with my own parents. I remember when my daughter gave birth just two years ago to her second child, and I asked if she would like me to come help. I hope she heard my sincerity, but she has a tiny house and she said not to come as it would be much too claustrophobic. She was absolutely right, and I didn’t feel insulted at all. I deal with Eileen and she deals with me very differently than a lot of other mother-daughter relationships.
QG: But what do you say to women now on the threshold of coming out and have children? Is it the same situation?
R: In listening to you Connie, I’ve just realized the uniqueness of who you are. That kind of uniqueness in a relationship to your parents, to your children, to the whole works. You didn’t buy it …. and it probably wasn’t even sold to you, but it was sold to most women…. to be a mother and to be a wife. The important thing is that I fell in love with you and the way that you are helped me to fully come out and for the two of us together to be in this room right now and being interviewed because we are pioneers and this is all because of you .
C: There is a truth in that. We were asked this question just this past week. What would you tell the people who are still in the closet today. Ruthie answered in a split second ‘tell them to call us’. Ruthie is right. Call us. If you are going to be so caught in the way you are supposed to be and you can’t get out of it, then don’t get out of it. Stay in it : stay married : stay unhappy. Stay with the guy and the diarrhea, the migraine and the constant headaches and backaches. There is nothing more that Ruthie and I can do. Is there a solution ? Yes. You have to be able to detach yourself from this ‘but I love them!’ I love them also, and yet I have a full life without being next door to them, or in their lives.
R: I’m going to my new theory which is 6 years old now from when my youngest granddaughter was born. When I saw for the first time she was two weeks old . We looked into each other’s eyes and I knew then that every single human being is born with everything that is going to be with them. Not what’s going to happen and why? Because parents get in the way, teachers get in the way, self esteem gets in the way but it’s all there if we really knew how to bring it out. So I recognized the same thing for myself, born into the family I was born into and the experiences that I had.
I started screaming when I was in the 9th grade. I was Female Class President and Christmas was coming and I knew that in music lessons we would sing Christmas songs . I said “No! We’ve got to sing Hanukkah songs too”. I got the three class Presidents together and I said we don’t sing no matter what Mrs Parker plays. Tell everybody not to sing, They didn’t all know why, but I did. So she comes in and plays the chords and there is silence. She plays them again, and silence still. Then she wanted to know what was going on. As I am responsible and 90 kids are looking at me, I said “well, we are mostly Jewish kids and we would like to sing Hanukkah songs too”. She listens and says you’re going to have to bring your mother up and go see the Principal. I knew again that I had something. My mother was handicapped so when she walks into the Jewish Principal’s office and talks Hanukah I knew we couldn’t lose and we didn’t. That was my very first fight and it continued throughout my life.
QG: Did you stop like that when you were married to Sol?
R: No, No! There was the Mother’s Action Committee for Cantello Apartment Buildings in Brooklyn and we got lights were there were no street lights. We got a synagogue and all kinds of things for the community and it was all very democratic.
QG: You never hesitated about what you wanted then, but still had trouble with yourself on a personal level.
R: I don’t think so, but my personal issues did trouble me. I was concerned that I would be looked on as ugly . I didn’t know any lesbian in my whole life. I only knew …..what was that book?
R: I thought then that it was a disgusting thing and the people were disgusting people, and that wasn’t going to be me. I couldn’t handle it.
QG: You went from being a couple together to being activists running an LGBT self help group and working with PFLAG. Why?
C: The two women at the door charging the entrance fee were really good looking blondes, well made up and wearing beautiful clothes and Ruthie was convinced that they were the owner’s wives and not lesbians. She made up a whole story about their glamorous lives. Then one day we go to a Lesbian Discussion Group on the West Side and one of these blondes is there and Ruthie goes right up to her and demands “so you’re a lesbian?” The woman laughs hysterical and says she’s been one since birth, but we were totally green then.
Finding out some of these women’s sad stories : the oppression, the not coming out at work, the losing of children, the losing of family, and their need to come out and so I decided to write a workshop called : The Importance of Being or Is There Life After Coming Out? I have a talent for that, and that’s what started us helping other women and gay men too.
C: I’m going to share how I use the word myself . I don’t use the word faith in relationship to God. I have two children living in Israel and my son is Hassidic, so how did I evolve where God is not in my life? Maybe it is because as selfish as I was as a mother letting my children free enough to live with their father, but I don’t believe in God, and I am an atheist. I call myself a culinary Jew because my world without latkes would be unbearable! (laughs)
My charity, my doing things for other people is all my Jewishness…. I don’t believe it comes from a God. Someone asked me if I didn’t believe in God, what did I believe in, I said in goodness. And I act out …. not all the time …. but certainly it is my guiding force that gets me through the day and in being a good person.
Being with Ruthie…she has been a guiding force for me . She knows my talents and is totally supportive of my talents …. but when I say totally supportive, don’t let’s get carried away as sometime she is NOT so supportive.
(Both laugh)
Labels: 2016, culture, Interviews, political