H eadlines
One Year of the Pandemic: Those We’ve Lost
L OCA L
SOPHIE PANZER | JE STAFF
IN APRIL 2020, the Jewish
Exponent ran the first segment
of “Those We’ve Lost to
COVID-19.” The series aimed to pay
tribute to those who died of
a disease that threatened to
overwhelm their memory with
staggering death tolls and
frightening symptoms.

O ne ye a r si nc e t he
pandemic began, the Exponent
has featured 25 people in
six sections of “Those We’ve
Lost,” and the names of new
coronavirus victims continue
to appear in the newspaper’s
Death Notices section and staff
inboxes. These names belong
to Jewish teachers, veterans,
clergy, doctors, business
owners, nonprofit workers,
athletes, artists and more.

This is by no means an
exhaustive list of members
of the Philadelphia Jewish
community who have died of
COVID-19 over the last year,
but it is a tribute to those we
covered thanks to the outreach
of their loved ones.

Most of the people below
received more extensive
coverage at the time of their
death. Two of the people,
Ashley Altman and Susan
Love, were not covered in one of
our “Those We’ve Lost” install-
ments, so they get a little extra
detail here. For the others, we
chose a couple of humanizing
details about them to remind
you of who they were.

March 2020
Dr. Irvin Kean, 95, worked
out twice a day and walked
the golf courses of Sarasota,
Florida, six days a week. He
was a dentist for 43 years.

April 2020
Rebbetzin Rachel Altein,
95, was an influential leader
within the Chabad Lubavitch
movements and worked
at the Chabad Women’s
Organization’s publication Di
Yiddishe Heim (“The Jewish
Home”) as its English-language
editor. Loretta Coleman, 85, was
born in London during World
War II and married Gerald
Coleman, a “bespoke tailor
from Liverpool,” as her son
Rabbi Alexander Coleman
put it.

Margit Feldman, 91, was
born in Hungary and survived
Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen.

She served on the New Jersey
Commission on Holocaust
Education for more than
40 years, helped pass a state
law mandating a Holocaust
and genocide curriculum in
public schools and co-founded
Raritan Valley Community
College Institute for Holocaust
and Genocide Studies.

Ethel Hamburger, 92, was
a longtime Sisterhood leader
at Beth El Congregation in
Bethesda, Maryland, the
1947 Chicago Jr. Hadassah
Ashley J. Altman
Membership Queen and
one-time Congregant of
the Year at Beth Sholom husband, Bernard Millrood, in
1974. She was an artist who
Eileen Chanin, 74, taught Congregation in Elkins Park.

loved painting, needlepoint
herself to play the piano
and sculpture.

Sylvia Millrood,
82, was
the one-handed after an injury. She
first president
of the
Sisterhood had an adventurous spirit and
Gloria Allen Moskowitz,
traveled to Morocco with her of Congregation Or Shalom,
88, was the former admin-
which she
founded with
her 1-year-old as a young mother.

istrative coordinator
of John Bartram High School
Motivation Annex, where she
A simpler, more convenient
was known for her dedication
lifestyle awaits at Dunwoody
to underserved students. “If
Village. Newly renovated one-
you called her up she had time
and two-bedroom apartments
for you no matter when it was,
are currently available,
no matter how long it took,”
daughter Susan Goldman
allowing you to spend less time
said. worrying and more time living
in the moment, doing the things
you enjoy. Contact us today.

Decidedly Different .

® Decidedly Ready.

(610) 359-4400 | www.dunwoody.org
3500 West Chester Pike • Newtown Square, PA 19073-4168
Independent Living • Rehabilitation • Personal Care • Skilled Nursing • Memory Support • Home Care
6 MARCH 11, 2021
A Continuing Care
Retirement Community
Five-Star Rated Healthcare
Pet Friendly
JEWISH EXPONENT
Courtesy of Jennie Nemroff
a World War II veteran who
helped build the old Liberty
Bell Pavilion. He founded
community spaces like the
Beachcomber Swim Club
and West Oak Lane Jewish
Community Center dedicated
to serving
middle-class families and Jewish people.

Roy Gomer, 83, was a
dedicated father and loved
taking care of his grand-
children. His wife, Bobbie
Gomer, 79, was a fixture of
the Philadelphia bridge scene
and achieved the distinction
of Platinum Life Master. They
Eve Rudin, 103, was a died within one day of each
passionate liberal political other.

activist. “She went door-to-
door against McCarthy and
Libbie Rubin Greenbaum,
had a lot of influence on me,” 96, enjoyed swimming, tennis
daughter Marion Rudin Frank and bridge. She was active in
said. “She was very much the Sisterhood of Main Line
for women having an equal Reform Temple and Hadassah.

opportunity.” Arlene Horowitz, 78, was
May 2020
a former art educator in the
Richard Aronson, 94, was Haverford School District and
JEWISHEXPONENT.COM