[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 127 (Thursday, September 10, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E2238-E2239]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BEATRICE ROSENBERG'S 90TH BIRTHDAY
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HON. KENDRICK B. MEEK
of florida
in the house of representatives
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Mr. MEEK of Florida. Madam Speaker, I'd like to take this opportunity
to say a few words about one of my constituents, Beatrice Rosenberg,
born ``Bernice Zam'' on her 90th birthday.
Beatrice Rosenberg, born Bernice Zam, in the Bronx, New York,
September 12, 1919, has lived through a Great Depression, two World
Wars, and the many other events that have marked the last 90 years in
America and through it all has continued to laugh and to dance. Her
family and friends have said that through all of this, through poverty,
through wartime and through widowhood, she has been relied on and has
``been there'' for them.
Bernice's father died when she was six months old. Her mother was a
factory seamstress paid by the piece to sew lace onto ladies'
undergarments. In 1935, when Bernice was 16, she had to quit high
school to work in a laundry to support her pregnant mother and out-of-
work stepfather. She gave all her earnings to her mother, except for
carfare to work and to dance clubs, where she jitterbugged her cares
away.
In 1943 she married a young pilot just before he shipped off to fight
in World War II. (When her license application didn't match her birth
certificate, she learned that her birth name actually was Beatrice, not
Bernice). Her husband was overseas when she gave birth to their
daughter in July 1944, and a few months
[[Page E2239]]
later he was shot down and reported missing in action in France. A
farmer found and sheltered him in a barn until the French Resistance
could smuggle him out of danger.
For two years after the war she lived on an airbase in Ashiya, Japan,
as part of the post-war occupation, but the marriage was strained by
the time they returned to the States. She and her daughter moved into a
one-bedroom apartment in a 5th floor walk-up in the Bronx already
occupied by her own mother and teenage half-sister.
In 1949 she brought her daughter with her to Savannah, Georgia, where
her husband was stationed on a Strategic Air Command Base, to obtain a
divorce. She waitressed in a diner for $25 a week plus tips, on the
3:00 to midnight shift, hiring a teenager for her daughter's after-
school care. She met and married another airman, and after two years he
shipped out to an operation in the Azores. Unfortunately, he died at
the age of 33 after spending years in the service operating refuelers.
With an 11-year-old daughter to care for, Bernice could not indulge
her grief. Instead, she moved back into that cramped Bronx apartment,
and used some Air Force insurance money to take a course in
switchboard. She became a receptionist and met Dan Rosenberg. They
lived happily for many years, and when he passed on, Mrs. Rosenberg
moved in with her daughter and her family while working full time and
eventually moved to Florida and sold handbags at Macy's, finally
retiring at age 70. Since then she has enjoyed a life of card games,
friendships, and family. Although she uses a walker, she still dances
every chance she gets.
Her family: daughter Sydelle Pittas and her husband Phillipe Koenig;
her granddaughter Pilar Alessandra and husband Pat Francis along with
their daughters Sara and Rita; granddaughter Chris Pittas; and
granddaughter Michele Koenig Augieri and her husband Gary Shafner (who
have just given her a great-grandson named Felix), join with many other
nieces and nephews in paying tribute to Beatrice Rosenberg on her 90th
birthday.
At 90, Mrs. Rosenberg still laughs heartily and will, no doubt, dance
at her party.
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