Meet 113-year-old Goldie Michelson — the oldest person in the US

Meet 113-year-old Goldie Michelson — the oldest person in the US

After the death this month of 116-year-old Susannah Mushatt-Jones, a 113-year-old Jewish lady named Goldie Corash Michelson became the oldest living person in the United States.

Goldie, as most people who know her call her, is in great shape for her age, but she’s a little hard of hearing these days. So, Renee Minsky, 84, talked about her mother’s extraordinary life — which has involved Jewish volunteer work, theater, and a lot of chocolate. Here are some of the aspects that stand out.

1. She’s lived in Worcester, Massachusetts, for more than a century

Born to Reform Jewish parents in Russia in 1902, Goldie immigrated to the United States when she was 2. Apart from her time as an infant in Russia and a stint as an undergrad at Pembroke College — a women’s college in Providence, Rhode Island, that merged into Brown University in 1971 — Michelson has lived her entire life in her adopted hometown.

2. There’s a theater named after her at Clark University

Goldie has a lifelong passion for theater, which she taught to Hebrew school students at Worcester’s Temple Emanuel (now Temple Emanuel Sinai), Jewish senior citizens, and others for decades. She still has a small theater in the basement of her home, complete with a stage, footlights, and a dressing room, which doubles as a laundry room. When Clark University learned that Goldie was leaving generous funding for future renovations to its theater in her will, the school renamed it the Michelson Theater.

3. She wrote a master’s thesis about Worcester’s Jews

Michelson completed a master’s degree at Clark University in sociology, and her thesis focused on a community that few probably know better than she does — the Jews of Worcester. In “A Citizenship Survey of Worcester Jewry,” Goldie found that many of the city’s Jewish immigrants were intimidated by the task of learning English and didn’t pursue American citizenship.

4. She volunteered for Jewish groups like Hadassah and helped resettle Soviet Jewish refugees

After the borders of the Soviet Union opened up for Jews in 1989, a new wave of Jewish immigrants came to Worcester. Michelson was among the volunteers to help them settle in and integrate themselves into American society. Minsky fondly recalled attending the first bar mitzvah of a Soviet immigrant — an experience she said was “incredible.”

5. She says the key to her longevity was walking

Goldie doesn’t leave home much anymore, but for much of her life, she walked 4 or 5 miles every morning.

“One of the great joys of life was when I sold my car,” she told Clark University’s magazine in 2012.

However, her real secret could be being a Jewish lady named Goldie — up until last year, the presumed oldest Jew in the world was 114-year-old Goldie Steinberg of New York.

JTA

read more:
comments