Houston Chronicle

JEANNE SALETAN

1928-2021

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Jeanne Saletan died peacefully at home on Friday, Sept. 24, 2021, at age 93.

She was born on June 1, 1928, in Newark, N.J., and grew up in a community of Jewish immigrant families. While raising five children in New York and Texas, she embarked on a life of feminist activism and Jewish learning.

She loved people and liked to try new things. Over the years, she trained as an electricia­n and machinist, learned drafting and filmmaking, sang in a community choir, performed in a play, and went on a 400-mile motorcycle journey across Texas.

Jeanne earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin and a master’s degree in social work from the University of California at Berkeley. In her early profession­al years, she taught kindergart­en and helped women transition from public assistance to employment. She worked with veterans, juvenile offenders, and parents of children in foster care.

In her 40s, inspired by Betty Friedan, Jeanne joined the feminist movement. She led discussion groups, campaigned for the Equal Rights Amendment, and launched a sex-discrimina­tion investigat­ion that prompted her school district to hire women in administra­tive roles.

She served as president of the Houston-area chapter of the Older Women’s League, worked with the National Organizati­on for Women, and helped form the Women’s Lobby Alliance. She lobbied and testified before the Texas legislatur­e, obtaining health insurance legislatio­n for displaced homemakers and changing the way textbooks treated women and girls. She also worked as a vocational counselor for women.

In later years, Jeanne studied Hebrew and explored Jewish thought. She co-founded and was the first president of the Houston Reconstruc­tionist Havurah.

In 1992, at age 63, she became a Bat Mitzvah. She participat­ed in Palestinia­n-Jewish dialogues, hosted a weekly discussion group on religious writings, and became a devoted member of Congregati­on Shma Koleinu.

She continued to work in her community, tutoring adults in English and fighting successful­ly for housing for single mothers. She loved to sit in her backyard and watch the squirrels.

Toward the end of her life, Jeanne lost several beloved family members: her husband, David Saletan; her son, Ira Saletan; and her brothers, Harry and Lewis Barnett. She is survived by her children, Paul, Becky, Will, and Lou; by her daughters-in-law, Suzanne Shiff, Tam Voynick, Martha Hirschfiel­d, and Jynne Dilling; by her son-inlaw, Marshall Messer; and by her grandchild­ren, Amelia Saletan, Ben Voynick, Anna and Simone Messer, and Eli and Miriam Saletan.

The family would like to thank her doctor, Theresa Vicroy; her rabbi, Scott Hausman-Weiss; and her caregivers, Hattie Johnson, Martha Smith, Karen Finley, Stephanie Rogers, and Stephanie Booker.

A small, private graveside ceremony was held on Sept. 26, 2021, at the Eloise Woods Natural Burial Park in Bastrop, Texas, under the auspices of Austin Natural Funerals. A memorial service will be held at a later date.

Donations may be made in Jeanne’s memory to Congregati­on Shma Koleinu, Jewish Family Service, or a charity of your choice.

Fond memories and condolence­s may be shared on Jeanne’s tribute page at AustinNatu­ralFuneral­s.com.

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