Rita Myerson- Wife and Mother


Children
           Jeff was born in 1947, the first Gaffen grandchild and the first grandson in the Myerson
           family.  He has always been  a fun loving happy person, involved in the building
           industry  and enjoyed  his golf. After Israel’s 1967 War he joined a group of
           volunteers to work on a kibbutz in the Golan Heights.

           Ronnie was born in 1949. As a little boy he viewed life quite seriously. He would 
           choose  to read rather than join his brothers at play. He and Pam enjoyed a great
           friendship and  they were meshugah religious. He did military service in Israel as a
            paratrooper and  then came back to SA to marry Elana.

Unfortunately Ronnie was a very sick baby. He had an abscess in the kidney that was caused from the Bris. He spent 3 months in hospital. He was called Hugh Ronald, and his name was changed from Hugh to Ronald for good luck. They had wonderful doctors, and the 'saving grace' was when they managed to get through to a famous pediatric neurologist in America who suggested trying a new drug called Chloromycetin which was going to be used for Typhoid Fever. It had just been released and a child dosage was sent to the Fever Hospital in Johannesburg. They tried it on Ronnie, and it was the first thing that seemed to control the infection. Ronnie was the first baby to survive this kind of illness in SA.

Brian was born in 1952 (Dec. 24th, 1 day after Cecil's birthday). He was Gran's smallest baby, born with a smile that was always present. At the age of 11 Brian developed diabetes. The implications and complications of this disease have impacted on the life that he has lead and the choices that he has had to make. Brian achieved at university a degree in Town Planning and an MBA and after working in Canada and South Africa settled in Australia. Because of inadequate medical care in his early years, Brian required dialysis. After 3 years, the time had arrived for a transplant that miraculously occured on 19 June 1999. Today Brian is well and contributing wholeheartedly to ShareLife- to increase organ transplantation is Australia. Through all Brian's trials Steve has been there. The care and attention that he has always displayed to Brian illuminates the bond that they have for each other.
           When the children were growing up Rita was always there, at bath time, at feed time, and
           for the first year of a child's life. Rita never left them. Everything else was set aside, "my
           babies came first". There were also nannies that helped.

When the children were very young, Cecil and Rita would select a movie that would be suitable for the children, pack them all in the car, and take them to watch drive-in movies. Before it started they used to get supper (hot-dogs and hamburgers, or go to the 'Pic'n chicken' after), and then watch the movie. Rita remembers how they would all fall asleep quarter way through…

Work and Zionist Activity

As a teenager, Rita became involved in Zionist work, which continued throughout her life. Before she married, she was chairman of a youth-group, and they raised enormous funds during and at the end of the war for Zionist funds. They couldn’t send anything but they were building up…

While Rita had the children she continued with the Zionist work, and in 1963 became chairman of Oaklands Branch of Johannesburg Women Zionist League (Wizo Johannesburg). She occupied the chair for a long time, and in 1970 was elected to the Women Zionist Council of SA. She did a course of public speaking, which helped her go out to the various societies around the Transvaal, to talk to them. She was the editor of the magazine 'News and Views' for 7 years. Rita did a tremendous amount of fundraising, until she moved to Australia. "I think in the last function that I did, we made about 250,000 Rand. One shot. That was a huge undertaking. It was a play, a cocktail party, and an auction sale of very good items- art and antiques."

Dr. Cecil Myerson
Cecil worked as a GP, he graduated from Witz Medical School in 1941, where he studied with Jo Newman and they were good friends. After the war he set up a practice in Hillbrow, Johannesburg. He started from scratch, just put his board up, and it really didn't take him long until he had quite a number of patients, which just grew and grew. In 1952 he was contacted by his friend Isadore Kaplan, and he was appointed the doctor to the Oppenheimer family. That lasted until he retired from practice in 1989. He had another famous patient- Gary Player and family. Player was South Africa's very good golfer, who won many many overseas tournaments, one of the best golfers in the world, at his particular stage. When Rita and Cecil moved to the farm, he had a small practice out at the farm.

Cecil was a very good golfer and loved the game. He had a passion for farming. He had a collection of silver, he was passionately fond of and he studied it. Everything he did, he did thoroughly. He had a tremendous general knowledge, he spoke 5 languages (English, Africans, a black language, Italian and Yiddish), and he had a very receptive brain. He was very chatty and liked talking to every person he came across.

Rituals and Tradition
When the kids were young, going to Ramsgate every July was a ritual. (steve: "there was no other place that I'd ever been besides Ramsgate until my first flight to Israel at the age of 16!"). They stayed in the same block of flats every time, Rita used to bring 2 maids with, and she used to make her fruit cakes and take them down, and Cecil used to play golf twice a day, he spent every single day on the golf course. He'd wake up, practice, swim, eat lunch and back to play a round of golf. The kids used to go with to the golf course, or stay and play. The routine was very similar. Maybe once a week they'd go for a drive to the Petrified Forest and the Pont.

The Jewish aspect was an important part of the Myersons life. Granny, Cecil's mother, used to want all the boys to say Kiddush one after another. Rita always lit candles after she was married (her mother didn't). Rita used to take the four boys to shul on Saturdays, with Pam. She used to drop them off, pick them up for lunch at Granny, and they'd have fried fish balls and Tziballa-Kuchen (small flat rolls with onion on them). On Holidays Rita and Cecil always went to shul, and always had seats at Oxford Shul (an orthodox shul, with Rabbi Norman Bernard most of the time).

Travels and Hobbies

Rita and Cecil loved travelling. The first trip they took was to London. Rita left Steve at the age of 16 months and the other 3 boys with Goga and Norman who moved into the house to take care of them. Cecil went over to do post-graduate medical studies, in London, and Rita was with him. After he finished they travelled through the whole of England and Europe. They went to Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, France and Italy. In Italy they were visiting some small village. They happened to drive in there at siesta time and they were standing in the town square. At 4 o'clock all the windows opened, and one of the inhabitants recognized Cecil. "All of a sudden- it was like a bush telegraph- the whole town came out to welcome him. There was one child who during the war had been injured playing when one of the mines exploded. This poor child was badly injured, and Cecil stitched him up. This boy came and took off his clothes to show Cecil where he'd been sewn together again. In two minutes they got a party together, and there was great celebration, we ate and drank and they danced around him, and it was really one of the most wonderful experiences."

They were away for 5 months, and Steve didn't know her when they got back… he wouldn't come to Rita, and Goga had to stay for an extra week, for Steve to get used to Rita.

In 1963 they travelled to America for 3 months. They went to NY, Boston, Chicago, Detroit (for a medical conference), and then they crossed to San Francisco, and took a motor trip all the way down the west coast. They stopped at Pebble beach, one of the most famous golf courses in the world. Rita played caddy for Cecil while he had a round of golf. Then they went to LA and to Las Vegas.

In 1967 they went as a family to Israel. Jeff was there as a volunteer, he left after the six-day war to volunteer on a kibbutz at the Golan Heights (just outside Kunetra). Israel was rejoicing after the six day war, they were able to go to the Kotel, it had been opened up. "We had to walk across a lot of rubble, and we all prayed".
In 1970 Rita came to Israel to the SA Zionist conference, and she was elected to the council. Cecil and Goga accompanied her. In those years they travelled every year to a different destination. They travelled to the far east- Thailand, Hong Kong and Japan. The next year they did a trip to Australia and New-Zealand. In other trips they visited Alaska, Canada, Scandinavia, London, and travelled often to Israel. Ronnie was in Israel at the time (1971) and he once stayed with them at the King-David Hotel.

When they were in America in 1963 they happened to be in NY when Kennedy was assassinated. "It was doom and gloom, we walked up and down 5th Ave. Everything was closed, and every shop windows was just a huge picture of Kennedy and black curtains. We happened to go into the Cathedral on 5th Ave. just to see what it was like- absolutely packed, and thousand of candles burning. It was the most moving time. Sad."

Rita's hobbies until today are playing bridge and being with her children and grandchildren, always a very close bond.