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Selma Litman

“I think that what has made our marriage last 61 years is our responsibility to each other. I believe that you have to be friends and respect each other, and understand that your opinion is not the only one that counts. You have to have a lot of understanding. And what I'm so happy about is that I also see it happening with our children. Like I've said a million times, we are blessed.” – Selma Litman

Selma Litman, noteworthy saleswoman at her family's bridal shop.

Courtesy of Joan Roth

A devoted mother and wife and an influential saleswoman, Selma Litman was born in 1917. Although her father, one of the few Jews in Russia to have gotten a college education, died when she was just 20 months old, Selma was raised on stories that her mother and siblings regularly shared about him. As the youngest girl in the family, Selma was encouraged to pursue a commercial course of studies to prepare her for the work world. After working as a secretary, Selma married her high school sweetheart, Harry Litman, in 1940, and became the leading saleswoman in Sonia's Bridal Shop, her husband's family business. Sonia's provided Baltimore brides from many different ethnic groups with wedding dresses before becoming popular in the Jewish community in the 1960s. A devoted mother to Dana and Jeffrey, Selma balanced working at the store with caring for her children and managing an active household that included frequent entertaining and vibrant Jewish holiday celebrations. Selma Litman passed away on May 25, 2002.

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How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Selma Litman." (Viewed on December 25, 2024) <https://jwa.org/communitystories/baltimore/narrators/litman-selma>.