This 80-year-old Montrealer just celebrated her bat mitzvah for the first time

Ruth Cooperstock explains how she got here.
At 80, Ruth Cooperstock celebrated her bat mitzvah for the first time, flanked by her grandsons Teva (left) and Shalev (Photo by Cantor Heather Bachelor)

Ruth Cooperstock had just turned 80 years old when she became one of the oldest Canadian women to ever have a bat mitzvah. The celebration wasn’t common for girls in 1950s Winnipeg, where Cooperstock grew up; but this year, she was determined to make up for lost time.

Cooperstock first studied on her own, then with an adult b’nai mitzvah class class at Congregation Dorshei Emet, as part of the Reconstructionist movement’s program marking the 100th anniversary of the first bat mitzvah in North America. Despite losing her voice for four months and working with a speech therapist to get it back, not to mention the trials of living through the pandemic, Cooperstock is finally answering the call—68 years late. She joins to share her story of inspiration and perseverance.

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