The Nation Lost a Titan. Brooklyn Lost a Native Daughter.
'Ruth Bader Ginsburg Kiki to her Brooklyn family was a product of the boroughs public schools and synagogues. She is revered on her home ground.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a child of Brooklyn long before she was Notorious daughter of Jewish immigrants, graduate of P.S. 238 and James Madison High School (class of 1950), cheerleader known as Kiki Bader, member of the East Midwood Jewish Center.
She lived on the first floor of a two-story house on East Ninth Street in the multiethnic Midwood neighborhood and fed her mind at the local public library branch, upstairs from a Chinese restaurant and a beauty parlor.
Shes part of the folklore of the community, said Joseph Dorinson, who lives in the neighborhood and has taught at James Madison. My neighbors brother dated her.
Howard Teich, founding chairman of the Brooklyn Jewish Historical Initiative, said Justice Ginsburg resonated so profoundly with Brooklynites the elders who followed her judicial career and the young people who loved the pop icon because she represented the values of her block.
Its a place that lends itself to the values of modesty and people living with each other, and that has lasted her through her lifetime, he said. As an emblem of pride, he added, Shes singular in terms of who she was.
Over the weekend, as news spread of Justice Ginsburgs death on Friday, makeshift memorials of candles, signs, flowers and even an R.B.G. action figure went up outside James Madison High School and her childhood home. Hundreds gathered Saturday night outside the courthouse in Foley Square in Manhattan, holding candles and singing the civil rights anthem Woke Up This Morning With My Mind Stayed on Freedom, and a vigil was also held outside Kings County Supreme Court. Handwritten signs in different parts of Brooklyn urged neighbors to honor her legacy by voting. . .
The following day in his sermon, the rabbi read from an essay Ms. Ginsburg had written as a student at the synagogues Hebrew school in 1946, at age 13, arguing against complacency after World War II ended. There can be a happy world and there will be once again, when men create a strong bond towards one another, a bond unbreakable by a studied prejudice or a passing circumstance, he recited, quoting the future justice.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/20/nyregion/ruth-bader-ginsburg-brooklyn.html