Lorraine Blumenfeld Hertz carried her characteristic optimism throughout her 100 years of life.
As a young woman, she waited in Minnesota for her husband to return from a prisoner of war camp in Germany during World War II, particularly perilous as he was Jewish. After his return, Hertz eventually became a teacher while raising three children and rising to a state government role. After retiring, she advocated for stricter gun control. And when her late husband suffered from Alzheimer’s, she cared for him.
Near the end of her life, she also battled Alzheimer’s and went blind. But she kept her positive outlook until she died, on Dec. 6. She even continued meeting with her friends for their weekly get-togethers at Sholom Home in St. Paul “almost to the end,” said Yelva Lynfield.
“She would come down in her wheelchair, and she would sit with us as we played Scrabble,” said Lynfield, who called Hertz her best friend. “You can imagine how difficult it was to be blind and have Alzheimer’s, but she managed.”
Years ago, when the two women went out in St. Paul, Lynfield recalls her friend running into people she knew every time.
“I would be a little bit annoyed because I’d want to move on,” Lynfield said, with a laugh.
Son Robert Hertz recalled his mother’s generosity in helping immigrants and giving money to family members.
“She was always very generous to people who were in trouble,” he said.