Jack Rudinow
1919-2004
Jack Rudinow, long time Santa Rosa resident, died
Wednesday morning April 28 after a long struggle with cancer. Born
in Odessa, then Russia and now the Ukraine, on August 14, 1919, he arrived
in the U.S. with his parents and younger sister Naomi in 1930. Jack
was the loving husband of Mattie Rudinow, devoted father of Joel
Rudinow of Sonoma, Ann Rudinow Saetnan of Trondheim, Norway, and
Dita Rudinow of Hayward. He cherished his grandchildren Lindsey
Urbina of Berkeley, and Eli Saetnan and Bjorn Saetnan of Trondheim,
Norway. He loved his sister and brother-in-law Naomi and Stanley
Cohen of Oakland and their children and grandchildren, who also
survive him. All of us will miss his warm smile, his loving concern
for our well-being, his ready wit and his outrageous puns. The son
of singers who graduated from the Conservatory of Music in Odessa,
Jack, though not himself a musician, loved music all his life. Following
graduation from UC Berkeley with a B.S. in Soil Chemistry in December
1941, Jack expected to become a farm advisor. But WW II began and
Jack went to work instead at the Kaiser Richmond Shipyards where
he became an administrative assistant and ultimately head of the
Progress Department responsible for tracking completion of vessels
being built there. When the war ended, Jack chose to follow his
heart to a farm rather than accept a management position at Kaiserąs
Willow Run auto factory then starting up. Neither did he opt to
join his friend and colleague Hans Goldschmidt in a venture producing
a home workshop tool for which Jack had assisted Hans in securing
a patent. This was the Shopsmith which made Hans wealthy and would
have done for Jack too. Jack never felt regret about the path he
took. That choice brought Jack to Santa Rosa where the family lived,
farming when that provided a livelihood and Jack seeking employment
elsewhere when it didnąt. When he retired in 1977, Jack was chief
Right of Way Agent for the Sonoma County Water Agency, responsible
for negotiating easements or acquisitions for the aqueducts supplying
water to the communities served by the agency and for flood control
channels. His enduring commitment to making the world a better place
led Jack to join in establishing the Sonoma County chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union and to serve for some years on its
board. In 1951 Jack and Mattie helped found the Santa Rosa Cooperative
Playschool, a parent participation nursery school which met initially
in the First Presbyterian Church. He participated in campaigns for
nuclear disarmament, joined the struggle to save the lives of Julius
and Ethel Rosenberg. He lent a hand to an effort to open a Consumersą
Cooperative Market in Santa Rosa. Jack was a long time supporter
of the Sonoma County Peace and Justice Center and active in its
affiliated group, Pledge for Peace in Central America. He strove
with others to keep the Community Hospital a public entity and when
that effort failed he joined HealthWatch which sought to monitor
how Sutter Health which now operates the hospital fulfilled its
obligations to Sonoma County. The family is grateful for the comfort
and care provided by Hospice of Petaluma. We thank the many thoughtful
friends who sought to help us in the last difficult weeks and his
physicians and the staff of the Infusion Center at Kaiser Santa
Rosa who treated him earlier in his illness.
Memorial Service
A celebration of his life will be held on Saturday
June 19 at 7 pm at Congregation Ner Shalom, 85 La Plaza,
Cotati. Donations in Jack's memory may be made to the Jack and Mattie
P. Rudinow Peace Scholarship Fund at the Santa Rosa Junior College
Foundation, 1501 Mendocino Avenue, Santa Rosa, CA 95401-4395, or
to the Sonoma County Peace and Justice Center, 467 Sebastopol Avenue,
Santa Rosa, CA 95401.
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