The Jewish Daily Forward
Who would have predicted that
one of America’s most crucial battles for gay and lesbian rights would
be won by an 84-year-old bottle blond Jew?
On June 26, Edith Windsor won her suit at the Supreme Court, a decision that struck down the federal Defense of Marriage Act.
Windsor,
who lives in New York City’s Greenwich Village, married her longtime
partner, Thea Spyer, in 2007 in Toronto. When Spyer died in 2009, she
left her estate to Windsor. Because of DOMA, Windsor was prohibited from
the benefit of a tax exemption for surviving spouses, and she was
compelled to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in real estate tax on
Spyer’s estate.
In 2010, with the help of her lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, also a Jewish lesbian, she filed suit to recoup her money.
According
to Ariel Levy’s profile of Windsor in The New Yorker, Kaplan saw her
client as the ideal plaintiff to defeat DOMA. A feminine octogenarian
whose lifelong partner was deceased was unlikely to be painted as a
political radical in the press. Windsor was the “perfect wife,” taking
care of Spyer for decades after she was diagnosed with multiple
sclerosis in 1977.
Windsor and Spyer’s relationship was much more
than that of caretaker and patient. Over their four decades together,
the two women traveled internationally — to Suriname, St. Thomas, Venice
and elsewhere. Though Kaplan advised Windsor not to speak publicly
about her sex life because of how it might affect the case, sex was an
essential part of Windsor and Spyer’s romance, even after Spyer grew
increasingly immobile because of her MS.
Spyer and Windsor were
both Jewish, but they came from strikingly different backgrounds. Spyer,
a psychologist, was born in Amsterdam. Her family made a fortune in the
pickle business and escaped Holland before the Nazi invasion. Windsor,
on the other hand, grew up in a family of modest means in Philadelphia. A
graduate of Temple University, she married her brother’s best friend
but divorced him less than a year after the wedding. (She kept his last
name; her maiden name was Schlain.) At 23, Windsor moved to New York
City to pursue a master’s degree in mathematics at New York University.
She later became one of the first female senior systems programmers at
IBM.
In 1967, two years before the Stonewall riots galvanized the
gay rights movement, Spyer proposed to Windsor. So as not to arouse
suspicion among Windsor’s co-workers, who didn’t know about her sexual
orientation, Spyer giving her a round diamond pin instead of an
engagement ring. Four decades later, the two finally wed.
Continue reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment