My Life, My Words
by T. Alan Hurwitz
Just a few generations ago, deaf people only dreamed of going to
college. I know, because I was one of those dreamers. But unlike
many of my friends, I had an indomitable mother who stood ready to
make that dream come true.
Juliette Ruth Kahn was
born in 1916 in Kansas City, Mo. She was deaf, too. I remember
her telling me that Louisa May Alcott’s
Little Women opened her imagination to the wonder of books when she
first read it at the age of 18. Our home was filled with books, and
as an only child I had the luxury of having my mother read to me
every day. Once I mastered reading, she still made sure that I read
on my own—an hour a day before I could play with friends. Her
enthusiasm for learning was contagious. She was an excellent seamstress
and gardener and loved to travel. She loved to tell stories from
the books she read to her friends.
During the school year,
I attended a residential school for deaf students 500 miles from
home. When I went home each summer, my mother would ask her employer
for a leave of absence so that she could be home with me. Each
time it was denied. So my mother would quit that job and find a
new one in the fall. Ten jobs in 10 years—amazing!
All so that she could stay home with me. Her last job was a radio
assembler and tester, which she kept for 25 years until her retirement.
She encouraged me to get a job, so at 14, I began delivering newspapers.
I also worked as a restaurant busboy and a furniture upholsterer.
I spent summers chasing turkeys on a farm and washing cars.
My mother showed me
what the “real world” was like for
deaf people, introducing me to local bakers, seamstresses, assembly
workers, farmers and mechanics who were deaf. She took me to picnics,
sporting events and deaf social club meetings to talk with other
deaf people.
She showed me newspaper
articles about successful deaf people—a
rarity back then— who were chemists and accountants. She told
me, “If they can do it, you can, too.”
I decided that education
indeed was my ticket to success. I worked hard during high school,
without interpreters, tutors or notetakers. I did the best I could
in class and then spent hours at home studying every subject and
rereading my textbooks. I left high school with a clear idea of
what I wanted to do. I earned a bachelor and masters degrees in
electrical engineering and worked at McDonnell Douglas Corp. before
joining the National Technical Institute for the Deaf in 1970.
When I received my doctorate, Mom was in the audience cheering
me on. I’ve since been a teacher, an administrator, a dean
and president of many of the same deaf organizations to which my
mother exposed me years ago. One of my most humbling moments was
having my father attend the ceremony during which I became a college
dean in 1998. My mother had passed away in 1991, and she would have
been so proud. It’s been 40 years since I graduated from college,
but it seems like yesterday that my mother and I sat together at
the dining room table, talking about everything from first-grade
jitters to long-ball hitters. I will never forget her belief in the
power of education and how she inspired me to become who I am today.
T. Alan Hurwitz of Pittsford
is vice president of Rochester Institute of Technology and dean
of the National Technical Institute for the Deaf. He has a bachelor’s degree from Washington University
in St. Louis and a master’s from St. Louis University, both
in electrical engineering, and a doctorate in teaching and curriculum
from the University of Rochester. He and his wife, Vicki, have two
children, Bernard of Rochester and Stephanie of Maryland, and two
grandchildren. He has lived in the Rochester area for 35 years.
Reprinted with permission
from the Democrat & Chronicle: My
life, my words: T. Alan Hurwitz www.democratandchronicle.com