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Princeton Personality by Jean Stratton
Wednesday, June 4, 2008


Sarah Hirschman, Founder of People &
Stories/Gente y Cuentos, Wins “Bud” Vivian Award
“It is not enough to have a good mind.
The main thing is to use it well.” Rene Descartes
This advice by the French philosopher has
surely been at the forefront of Sarah Hirschman’s life and work. This
year’s winner of the Leslie “Bud” Vivian Award for Community Service,
Mrs. Hirschman is highly educated, with an undergraduate degree in
philosophy and master’s degree in French literature. Her schooling in
Paris was complemented by reading Russian classic literature under the
guidance of a Russian tutor, and she later studied existential
philosophy with Simone de Beauvoir. She has put this comprehensive
education and knowledge to use for others, especially those without
formal education. By founding People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos, Mrs.
Hirschman has enabled participants to share the richness of great
literature and by doing so, gain insight into their own lives.
Born in Kovno, Lithuania in 1921, Sarah
was the daughter of Russian Jewish parents, Nicholas and Fania Chapiro.
Mr. Chapiro was a businessman, and when Sarah (known as “Sarotchka” to
family and friends) was 4, the family moved to Paris. Strong Russian
influences remained very important in her life, remembers Mrs.
Hirschman. “I had a Russian tutor, Konstantin Vasilevitch Motchulsky,
who was a famous literary critic, and he said to me, ‘We’ll just read
together.’ I started reading Russian literature very early, and this had
a big impact on me.”
Lycée Molière
At 6, Sarah came down with scarlet fever,
which was a very serious illness. “I was so sick, I needed a nurse, and
a Russian woman, Ekaterina Liubimovna Lixacheva, came to live with us.
This woman was very cultured, and she had trained as a nurse. She stayed
with us, and really brought me up. She had a great influence on me.” At
the same time, Sarah enjoyed school at the Lycée Molière in Paris, and
was a good student. School was basically for learning and study; there
were not a lot of extracurricular activities, as is the case in U.S.
schools. Sarah did participate in gymnastics, and on vacations, she and
the family took trips in France, especially to the beach, where she
enjoyed swimming.
“One of my favorite memories is of lying
on the grass and looking up at the mirabelles (little yellow plums) on
the trees,” recalls Mrs. Hirschman. “When I was a child, I was only
allowed to see animal and nature movies, but as I got older, I enjoyed
the cultural life of Paris. I went on expeditions to museums and
theater, and later, after I was 17 or 18, I went to Avant Garde French
theater.”
Also when she was 18, she had the
opportunity to study Existentialism for a year with Simone de Beauvoir,
which prompted a great interest in philosophy.
Good Ear
In 1939, just before the outbreak of World
War II, Sarah’s life changed drastically, when the family moved to the
U.S. “I wasn’t really aware of all that was going on, but my father felt
that terrible things were happening in Europe, and he wanted to leave
France. We left for New York in the fall of 1939. I didn’t know English,
and I was very depressed to leave France. I wanted to stay. I felt I was
French, and I wanted to defend France.”
Nevertheless, once in New York, Sarah put
her mind to learning English, first by auditing classes in Plato at
Columbia University. She had a good ear for language, and began to pick
up English readily. Then, with the help of a friend of her parents, she
went to Cornell for one semester. Sarah didn’t care for the rules and
regulations at Cornell, however, and was glad when her parents moved to
California, and she transferred to Berkeley, where she entered as a
junior. “I majored in philosophy, but I didn’t like the department’s
emphasis on logical positivism; I got my bachelor’s degree in
philosophy, but then switched to French literature for my master’s.”
While an undergraduate, Sarah lived in the
International House with other foreign students. There, she met Albert
O. Hirschman, a young German scholar in economics, who had previously
lived in France for a number of years.
Sarah and Albert were married in 1941, and
two years later, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, serving in the OSS
(Office of Strategic Services). Sarah received a Fellowship to Columbia,
and then her studies were postponed by the birth of their first child,
Katia, in 1944. Another daughter, Lisa, was born in 1946.
Marshall Plan
After the war, the Hirschmans moved to
Washington, D.C., where Albert was working with the Marshall Plan. “It
was very difficult to get housing after the war,” remembers Mrs.
Hirschman. “A woman actually gave up her house to us, and she lived in a
trailer in the back yard.”
In 1952, Mr. Hirschman was approached by
the World Bank to oversee economic development in Colombia, and the
family moved to Bogotá, a move that was to have an important effect on
Mrs. Hirschman’s life and work.
“I loved Colombia. I learned Spanish, and
became interested in young writers there. It was a great inspiration to
me in my work. I was interested to see that people had different ways of
doing things. I became aware of the ingenious ways people solved
problems, and I went on expeditions, and met so many young writers and
painters. There were also colonies of Russian, French, and German
people, and the country was incredibly beautiful.”
The Hirschmans returned to the U.S. in
1956 when Dr. Hirschman (he had earlier earned a Ph.D.) received an
invitation from Yale to write a book about economic development. Mrs.
Hirschman took anthropology courses there, and continued to emphasize
her strong interest in studying people and their problem-solving
practices.
Another university beckoned in 1958.
Professor Hirschman was asked to teach economic development at Columbia.
Mrs. Hirschman had a series of part-time jobs, including with
Heilbroner’s Latin American magazine.
“Albert was planning a book during this
time and had to travel a lot,” says Mrs. Hirschman. “I decided I could
work as his assistant, and I learned the way he thought about problems;
how solutions evolved and developed. It’s not just logic.”
So Different
The Hirschmans traveled to El Salvador,
Peru, Uruguay, Pakistan, India, Thailand, Uganda, Ethiopia, Nigeria, and
later to the Dominican Republic. She remembers “studying dams in
Calcutta and bicycle cooperatives in the Dominican Republic. Each place
was so different.”
In 1966, she had an adventure of another
kind, this time in New York. Her ability to speak Spanish was an
important factor in how her career progressed. “I worked with
sociologist Clara Barksdale on the Lower East Side. We worked with
Latinos, and I learned a great deal. The people would come in with their
problems — not just ‘we have rats in the apartment,’ but about
difficulties with their families. This was very important to me. How do
you get people to talk about themselves and get them to think more
critically about their problems?”
Later that year, when Dr. Hirschman was
asked to teach economics at Harvard, they moved to Cambridge, and Mrs.
Hirschman worked at a skill training center, again helping Hispanic
people. She was also employed at Boston University, and was in charge of
placing professional Latin American women in temporary training jobs
while they were studying in the U.S.
A few years later, she was strongly
influenced by a seminar with Brazilian philosopher and educator Paulo
Freire. “It was about how he had taught literacy to poor people in
northeastern Brazil and how to relate literacy to the lives of the
people; the importance of life experiences in learning,” she explains.
Short Stories
“This really impressed me, and I thought
maybe I could do it with short stories and how people could talk through
those about their own life experiences. In 1972, I decided just like
that to go to public housing in Cambridge and see if there was interest
in this. I talked with Puerto Rican women, and they were receptive.”
Thus emerged People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos (then known only as Gente
y Cuentos), a new way of learning and sharing great literature. The
participants often had little or no formal education, and some were
illiterate. But the beginnings of an intriguing idea had taken root.
“I read stories aloud in Spanish, and the
people would enter the stories through experiences in their own lives,”
explains Mrs. Hirschman. “So the perspective of the story and their own
individual perspectives connected.”
Making a connection. That is the key.
“This is done in a group,” continues Mrs.
Hirschman. “The participants’ view of the story depends on their own
experiences. When they see that they can talk about it, that they can
hear themselves, they become validated. They defend their point of view
and become curious about others. It also gives people enormous pleasure.
“I always say ‘What’s democracy?’ A chance for people who don’t usually
have a voice to participate.”
Specific Question
The sessions, which usually take place
once a week for six to eight weeks for an hour and a half to two hours,
with a new story each week, are very non-judgmental, she adds. “The
climate is very welcoming. The story does not demand a conclusion; it
asks questions, makes you wonder, spikes your imagination. The people
are not inhibited.” As the coordinator or facilitator, Mrs. Hirschman
would follow the reading with a question. “Most often, I like to have
silence after the reading aloud, to let the story resonate. Then, I
usually like to ask a specific question on some salient line or moment
of the story to start the conversation. I never ask questions that are
too general like: ‘Well, how did you like the story?’ That kind of
question would certainly result in vague, uninteresting comments.
“If a question goes to some surprising or
particularly suggestive moment, the conversation becomes honest,
imaginative. People are forced to think for themselves.” The program
began to grow, and the first group was followed by another, then
another. Mrs. Hirschman worked hard to compile an interesting
bibliography, and included the works of such authors as Gabriel Garcia
Márquez, Julio Cortázos, Jorge Luis Borges, and Juan Rulfo for the
Spanish curriculum.
In 1974, the Hirschmans headed south to
Princeton, when Dr. Hirschman became a member of the faculty in the
School of Social Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study. Mrs.
Hirschman was determined to continue Gente y Cuentos in a new locale,
and contacted a priest at Mt. Carmel Church in Trenton.
“I suggested the idea, and he was
interested. Then, I went out and continued to sell the idea all over New
Jersey, including Newark. We had programs in community centers in the
Trenton area, Newark, and other locations in the state.”
NEH Grant
As the program grew, more people began to
take part in a variety of locations, including learning centers,
residential treatment centers, libraries, and prisons. In 1981-82, a
National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) grant enabled the project to
expand to other states and locations, including Florida, Texas, New
York, Illinois, Massachusetts, and Puerto Rico. Mrs. Hirschman held
workshops to train others in the program’s concept and methods. Also in
1982, Mrs. Hirschman was invited to set up a program in a barrio outside
Buenos Aires, and the following year, she taught a course in the
program’s method at the University of Buenos Aires.
Up to now, she had been operating the
programs primarily on her own, and by 1985, she realized she needed
help. “Also, in 1985-86, we added an English program, and I wanted to do
an inter-generational (senior citizens and high school students) and an
inter-town (Princeton and Trenton) project. This was a pre-cursor of
Crossing Borders,” she explains. “I held a big workshop, and Pat Andres
participated. She became a coordinator, and later in 2000, executive
director. I owe a great deal to Pat, who continued to help develop the
program.”
The English program, People & Stories,
began in 1986 in New Jersey under the sponsorship of the New Jersey
Council for the Humanities, whose support has been continuous. The
project became a non-profit corporation in 1993. Mrs. Hirschman has the
respect, admiration, and affection of colleagues and those who have
participated in the programs. She has been honored with awards from
various organizations, including the Public Humanities Award from the
New Jersey Council of the Humanities in 1994. “Your commitment … has
opened the riches of literature to many …. Through People & Stories, you
have reached out to include those often excluded, and have encouraged
those often mistakenly thought not capable of participating to partake
of the resources that the humanities offer …,” reads the statement.
Spanish Speakers
Lawrence R. McCarty, Ph.D., Professor
Emeritus of Foreign Languages at Community College of Philadelphia, is a
coordinator of People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos at community centers in
the Philadelphia area. He comments on Mrs. Hirschman’s fluency in
various languages and its impact on the program.
“Sarah is multilingual and fluent in
Spanish. It is through her efforts that Gente y Cuentos has reached so
many Spanish speakers and new arrivals in the U.S.A. She, together with
the bilingual team, identify the great short stories to be included in
the Spanish bibliography.
“I have known Sarah since 2000, and she
has proven to be a wise adviser and loyal colleague to all her fellow
coordinators. It is through her guidance that we coordinators have
learned that we are also participants, as together we explore the
universal themes and poetic imagery found in great short stories. It is
important to recognize Sarah Hirschman’s initiative and earnest
dedication to this program.” Support for the program has continued to
expand. An NEH grant in 2004-05 enabled People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos
to reach 14 additional states. In the US, 1,000 people now participate
in the program every year in 35 locations and under the guidance of 22
coordinators.
For all her efforts in establishing,
developing, and continuing this unique program, Mrs. Hirschman was
recently honored with the 12th annual Leslie “Bud” Vivian Award for
Community Service. The award was presented by the Princeton Area
Community Foundation at a reception at the Princeton Public Library on
Mat 22. Mrs. Hirschman’s nominators described her as a “citizen of the
world … who developed a way to invite those with basic literacy skills
to enjoy and benefit from the same artistic works usually studied in
college classrooms. She has included thousands of people in a world
where the doors were previously closed. She has found ways to bring
people together in discussions driven by complex stories that don’t
offer easy answers, but encourage people to explore values and talk
about difficult questions.”
New Readers
The sentiments of the award nominators are
echoed by Mrs. Hirschman’s colleagues. “Sarah is dear to my heart. I
value my 21-year relationship with her as a friend and as a mentor,”
says Patricia Andres, People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos executive
director. “I have been privileged to witness the joy her creation has
given many, many people, especially new readers of literature. Sarah’s
inspiration, that literature holds beauty and power for all, has
translated into an organization that both returns literature to the
people and uses it as a venue to create deeper understanding among those
of different educational and cultural backgrounds.” Adds Marcy Schwartz,
Professor of Latin-American literature at Rutgers, and a coordinator in
the program, who currently works with a group of inmates at Yardville
Prison: “Sarah is completely inspiring. She is a real mentor in so many
ways. She is a person of astounding depth and knowledge.
“She has huge amounts of energy and
determination, and has been unwavering in her dedication to this program
she has created in which people’s voices are heard, their opinions
count. In this program, everyone is listened to, and everyone’s life
experience is valued. It’s not about having a right answer; it’s about
exploring.”
Mrs. Hirschman is delighted to see the
program continue to expand. “I am very excited about the two projects in
Colombia and France. My daughter Katia is director of People & Stories
in France, and there are already 30 programs each year. Colombia is also
especially receptive to the project since there is so much interest in
books and libraries there. They have a program of their own in which a
little book is distributed at every bus station for people to take and
share with family and friends. Then, they can return it to another bus
stop.”
A world traveler, Mrs. Hirschman has found
Princeton a congenial place to call home for the past 34 years. “I’ve
met a lot of interesting people in Princeton,” she reports. “I like
walking in the woods, I like to take the train to New York, and there
are interesting events at the Institute. I also have lots of friends at
Princeton University.” A long-time friend of more than 30 years is
Hildred Geertz, Professor Emeritus of Cultural Anthropology and one of
the first female professors at Princeton University. Professor Geertz
emphasizes the importance of People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos to Mrs.
Hirschman.
Rich Treasure
“I want to say that the People & Stories
project has always been central to Sarah’s whole being. She is a deeply
literary person and profoundly European. For her, language is a rich
treasure, whatever the language. With People & Stories, she not only
read the stories, she taught the people how to hear them. She wanted to
give them back their literature, their verbal arts. She succeeded in
reaching and conveying the excitement of their own literature and art.
It has been an amazing way of life, and it is ongoing.”
Indeed. Although no longer a hands-on
coordinator, Mrs. Hirschman continues to be very active in compiling the
bibliography for the program, which in English has included the works of
James Joyce, Eudora Welty, Jamaica Kincaid, and Langston Hughes, among
others. She is especially involved with the Spanish bibliograpy and
works closely with the coordinators in Gente y Cuentos.
Her own reading continues undiminished;
the fact that she is able to read and converse in four languages offers
her many more opportunities than most of us have. “I read a lot in
French and Russian,” she reports. “I’m continually re-reading the
Russian classics, especially Dostoevsky, and I read Chekhov every night.
I also just re-read all of Montaigne in French. The only nice thing
about old age is that you can read from scratch all over again, and it
will seem like new, as one’s memory fades.”
Mrs. Hirschman shows no sign of that
particular problem; her vitality and energy belie her years. She is a
regular visitor to Princeton University’s Firestone Library. “What I
really like best in Princeton is Firestone Library. I can find books
there in all my languages. When my husband retired from the Institute
some years ago, we thought about moving to Paris. Our daughter lives
there, and we have grandchildren and great-grandchildren there. But I
just couldn’t leave Firestone. I am fortunate to have a card there.”
Amazing Growth
Mrs. Hirschman is very close to her
daughter Katia, who traveled from France to attend the “Bud” Vivian
Award reception. She was also very close to her daughter Lisa, who died
nine years ago.
As she reflects on People & Stories/Gente
y Cuentos and the honor of receiving the “Bud” Vivian Award, Mrs.
Hirschman is astonished at the amazing growth of her program. “My
initial desire was very, very modest. I just wanted to share my love of
reading and enjoyment of literature with people who had not had the
opportunity to read. Also, it was finding a way of communicating with
people whom I never had had a chance to know.
“From that came all kinds of unexpected
consequences; from the conversations came emotions and pleasures. And, I
not only had the pleasure of communicating with people, but the
conversations became critical discussions, a way of developing the mind
in a less scholarly way. All kinds of subjects came up; there was give
and take, and all kinds of people were able to voice their ideas and
listen to others. It became more important than I had ever expected.” If
ever there was an example of one person making a positive difference in
the lives of others, Mrs. Hirschman must surely be the model.
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