Vera Beaudin Saeedpour
Vera Marion Beaudin Saeedpour (pronounced sah-EED-por; née Fine; March 27, 1930 – May 30, 2010) was an American researcher and scholar who specialized in the study of Kurdish people. She founded the Kurdish Heritage Foundation of America, the first library and museum in the United States dedicated to the subject. The foundation was located in the Prospect Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City.
Early life[]
Saeedpour was born Vera Marion Fine in Barre, Vermont on March 27, 1930, to Jewish immigrants from Russia. Her father sold scrap metal and rags for a living.[1]
She grew up in the only Jewish family in the town.[2] At age 17, she eloped with Marcel Beaudin and moved to Brooklyn, where she worked at a bakery.[1] She later spent eight years working as an assistant to New York City real estate developer Seymour Durst.[2] The couple had four sons, Marc, Paul, Adam and Jeb, and one daughter, Rebecca.[1] Their marriage ended in divorce.
At age 40 she enrolled at the University of Vermont, where she earned a bachelor's degree in sociology and a master's degree in philosophy. After her divorce from Beaudin, she enrolled at Teachers College, Columbia University, where she earned a Ph.D. in 1976.[1]
While at Columbia, she moved to an apartment in Harlem. When her home was robbed, she called out to a man in an apartment across the street to ask if he had witnessed the burglary.[1] That man, Homayoun Saeedpour, a 26-year-old Kurd from Sanandaj, later rang her doorbell and offered cake and flowers.[1] They married soon after.[citation needed]
Kurdish interest[]
After her marriage to Saeedpour, Vera developed an interest in the plight of the Kurdish people. She was unfamiliar with the Kurds and their history when she first met her husband, but a decade later she felt she got to "know the Kurds better than any Westerner living". At one point, in need of a bone marrow transplant to treat his leukemia, her husband's doctor refused to treat him, believing that he was Persian.[1][3]
They were married 5 years. Following her husband's death, in 1986, Saeedpour opened the Kurdish Heritage Foundation of America with a library in her Prospect Heights, Brooklyn brownstone. The museum, opened in 1988,[1] was the first museum with a focus on the Kurds in the United States.[4] The library contained more than 3,000 texts in Kurdish and other languages, as well as Kurdish artifacts, art, costumes and maps.[5] After her death the collection was donated to the Binghamton University by her children.[5]
For 15 years Saeedpour published a comprehensive and insightful quarterly on the middle east called Kurdish Life and edited the International Journal of Kurdish Studies as part of the Kurdish Program she established together with anthropologists at Harvard University and Cultural Survival.[6] Before the Gulf War, she organized a speaking tour for Kurdish politician Jalal Talabani, later to become President of Iraq.[6]
Death[]
A resident of Fort Plain, New York, Saeedpour died at age 80 of a heart attack on May 30, 2010, in Schenectady, New York. She is survived by her five children and two grandchildren.[1]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Martin, Douglas (2010-06-07). "Vera B. Saeedpour, Scholar and Archivist of the Kurdish Culture, Dies at 80". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-06-08.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Martin, Douglas (1991-04-27). "About New York". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
- ^ "NY: Kurdish Museum curator hopes her museum won't soon be history". New York Daily News. 2008-05-23. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
- ^ Baldwin, Deborah (2009-04-10). "The Home as Cultural Refuge". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
- ^ Jump up to: a b de Rouen, Aynur; Green, Jean (2016). "From Brooklyn to Binghamton:The Vera Beaudin Saeedpour Kurdish Library & Museum Collection at Binghamton University" (PDF). The Reading Room. p. 12. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Obituary: Vera Beaudin Saeedpour". The Burlington Free Press. 2010-06-05. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
External links[]
- 1930 births
- 2010 deaths
- American Jews
- Teachers College, Columbia University alumni
- Kurdish culture
- People from Barre, Vermont
- People from Brooklyn
- People from Harlem
- People from Fort Plain, New York
- University of Vermont alumni