he jaw is pure Roosevelt, thrust out
with the kind of patrician confidence that shepherded America
through the Great Depression and World War II.
But in at least one surprising way Joshua Boettiger, the
31-year-old great-grandson of Franklin and Eleanor, is not a
Roosevelt in the classic aristocratic mold. He is studying to be a
rabbi, working with a small congregation, Mishkan Ha'am, in southern
Westchester County and Riverdale in the Bronx. He credits Franklin
and Eleanor's striving for social justice as an inspiration and
believes Eleanor would have particularly given him her blessing.
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"She was a traitor to her class in the best sense and I hope
we're all following in her footsteps," he said.
Indeed, he is not alone among Roosevelt descendants in taking
paths that do not seem to rendezvous with their presumed destiny.
Nearly 60 years after the president's death, his descendants are
spreading in directions that are both wide-ranging and, in some
cases, unexpected.
One grandson, James Roosevelt Jr., spent a year as a novice at a
California monastery of a Catholic order, the Christian Brothers,
though he eventually became a Boston lawyer who made an unsuccessful
stab at a Congressional seat against another dynastic heir, Joseph
P. Kennedy II. Nina Roosevelt Gibson, a granddaughter, is an Arizona
psychologist who has worked with children of drug-addicted and
abusive parents. Dr. David Russell Luke, a great-grandson, is a
mathematics professor who studies topics like nonsmooth analysis.
And Amelia Roosevelt, a great granddaughter, is a concert
violinist.
One grandson, Frank Roosevelt, flirted with Marxism in the 1970's
and has made it a specialty of his economics teaching at Sarah
Lawrence College. But another grandson, Elliott Roosevelt Jr., known
as Tony, is a Texas oilman and has supported President Bush's plan
to overhaul Social Security, the domestic program for which his
grandfather is best known.
These life stories tell volumes about the flexibility of social
class and ethnicity in the United States, where even a Roosevelt can
become a rabbi, but if anyone is responsible for this potpourri of
Roosevelt pursuits, it may be Franklin and Eleanor.
The Roosevelt biographers James MacGregor Burns and Doris Kearns
Goodwin say that Franklin and Eleanor's example gave, in Mr. Burns's
words, "a kind of permission to descendants to move as widely as
they wished." Eleanor's example particularly encouraged many of her
five children and 29 grandchildren to find friends in a variety of
circles and to do battle with social inequities.To be sure, many
descendants of this New York State clan have taken more predictable
paths, studying at prep schools like Groton, working for white-shoe
law firms, running charities, marrying upper-crust names like
Havemeyer and du Pont and taking roles in their Episcopal churches.
But others have veered from those paths, sometimes sharply.
Hall Delano Roosevelt, 47, a grandson, remembered three decades
ago when his father, James, told him they ought to tour "the
campus."
"What campus?" he asked.
"Harvard," the father replied.
But the younger Mr. Roosevelt told his father he did not want to
go to Harvard like his older brothers, Michael and James.
"At that point my hair was down to my shoulders and the only
thing important in my life was surfing," he said.
He enrolled in Orange Coast College, a junior college in
California minutes from the beach. For a time he broiled steaks at a
restaurant, but he eventually found his way into jobs in energy
conservation and is now an environmental consultant. He even picked
up his dynastic calling by running as a city councilman in Long
Beach, Calif., serving from 1996 to 2000. "One thing I learned on my
father's knee is when you get to a point in life where you've worked
hard and gotten yours, we have an absolute obligation to help
somebody else get theirs," he said.
Franklin and Eleanor were fifth cousins and the descendants of
Claes Martenszen van Rosenvelt, who landed in New Amsterdam during
the 1640's. Both Roosevelts grew up with the blueblood trappings of
a Henry James and Edith Wharton novel, though Eleanor was orphaned
at 10. But Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, who has an uncanny likeness to
her grandmother Eleanor and is a board member of the March of Dimes,
said that Franklin and Eleanor both spurned lives of genteel ease
for public service.
Eleanor took uncommon roles for a woman of her time, serving as a
United Nations delegate and newspaper columnist, surrounding herself
with labor leaders and officials of black and Jewish groups.
John R. Boettiger, a 65-year-old grandson of the couple, said
that the five children of the president struggled under the weight
of their parents' achievements. They each married more than once and
never quite felt comfortable in the skin of their careers. Three
sons struggled with alcohol.
"How do you compete with the commander in chief of the Western
world or the first lady of the Western world?" asked Mr. Boettiger,
a retired professor of psychology.
But most members of subsequent generations simply gave up on
emulation. "There is this legacy to live up to, but I'm never going
to win a world war," said Lulie Haddad, the 38-year-old daughter of
Kate Roosevelt Whitney, a granddaughter of Franklin and Eleanor, who
married a tabloid newspaper reporter.
Files at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Presidential Library and
Museum in Hyde Park, N.Y., suggest that the Roosevelt maverick
streak was evident early on. After an expected first marriage to a
reputable stockbroker, Anna Roosevelt, the eldest daughter, took a
loop out of the film "It Happened One Night" and married Clarence
John Boettiger, a working-class reporter for The Chicago Tribune
whom she met as he was covering Roosevelt's first presidential
campaign.
The second of Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.'s five wives, Felicia
Schiff Warburg Sarnoff, came from the "Our Crowd" German Jewish
gentry. And the youngest son, John, seconded the nomination of
Dwight Eisenhower at the 1952 Republican convention. One Roosevelt
granddaughter, Sara Delano Roosevelt, caused a mild sensation in
1953 when she married a piano prodigy who was the son of an
immigrant barber.
But he said that one generation later, he and the other
grandchildren were able to take departures in their careers or
marriages because his grandmother "had a sense of explicitly
recognizing the promise of her grandchildren, whatever their
leanings."
Mr. Boettiger married Janet Adler, the daughter of a small-town
Jewish family from Indiana. It is their son Joshua who is studying
at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in Wyncote, Pa.
Among Jews, Mr. Boettiger is usually asked how he can rationalize
why Franklin Roosevelt did not rescue more Jews from the Nazis, and
did not bomb the railroad tracks leading to Auschwitz.
"On the one hand this was the president most beloved by the Jews
ever - who did more for the poorer Jewish community than had anyone
- a friend of the Jews," he said. "And people are trying to square
that with the fact that he didn't do as much as could have saving
Jews from the Nazi machine. Somehow we have to hold both
thoughts."
Whatever their doubts, the descendants seem unanimous in their
pride in Franklin and Eleanor. Frank Roosevelt, the professor of
Marxism, led the effort to build a monument to his grandmother in
Riverside Park. But they are also proud that the way Franklin and
Eleanor lived their lives made it easier to shape their own.
When he attends the next family reunion, perhaps as an ordained
rabbi, Mr. Boettiger said, "I'll take my place among the other funky
Roosevelts who have taken alternate paths."
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