Our Family History

Leah Joan Chernoble

Female 1934 - 2019  (85 years)


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  • Name Leah Joan Chernoble  [1
    Birth 17 Aug 1934  Brooklyn, NY, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Death 16 Dec 2019 
    Person ID I4890  Rothschild_Bloom
    Last Modified 13 May 2020 

    Father William David Chernoble,   b. Russia Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Mother Sadie Rebecca Engleman 
    Family ID F4220  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Herbert Dickstein 
    Children 
     1. Jan Stuart Dickstein
     2. Daniel Paul Dickstein
     3. Steven Glenn Dickstein
    Family ID F3484  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 20 Feb 2012 

  • Photos
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  • Notes 
    • Joan from Joseph feinstein

      “My mom, who went to Erasmus Hall HS and Brooklyn College had wanted to be a doctor since she was like 8, so in the early 1960s she took premed courses while a teacher at PS110 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. She was accepted to Meharry in Nashville and wait listed in Louisville. When I was 1.5 in 1966, we left Brooklyn and drove to Nashville. Within a few days of arriving, a spot opened in Louisville, in which the class schedule would enable her to spend more time with me. (She was 32). So, we moved to Louisville.”

      “Dr. Leah Joan Dickstein, 85, former president of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA), Vice President of the American Psychiatric Association, and Founder and President of the Association of Women Psychiatrists (AWP) passed away after a short illness on December 16, 2019 in Cambridge, MA.

      Born on August 17, 1934, in Brooklyn, NY, to William David Chernoble, an immigrant from Russia and printing press operator, and Sadie Rebecca Engelman, a teacher, she developed an early interest in mental health as she helped care for her own mother who struggled with depression, and her younger sister Renee, during her father’s service in the Navy during World War II, which included almost three years without any communication. Leah graduated at 16 from Erasmus Hall High School. At Brooklyn College, she was told she had no scientific ability and should not consider attending medical school. Instead, Leah earned MA in teaching. She married Herbert Dickstein, another Brooklyn native, in 1955, and helped him complete medical school in Ghent, Belgium, which he attended due to restrictive quotas on Jews in U.S. medical schools. When they returned to the U.S., Leah spent seven years as a sixth-grade teacher at PS 110 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY and had her first son, Stuart.

      It was then Herbert’s turn to help realize Leah’s dream of becoming a physician, as Leah completed premedical courses at Queens College, NY. The family moved to Louisville because Leah was accepted at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. Leah graduated in 1970 as one of only six women in a class of over 120.

      “Dr. D” as she became known to her patients and students then spent the next 37 years in Louisville as a Psychiatrist, Professor, and Administrator at the medical school, where she treated, mentored, and befriended thousands of medical students, medical residents, faculty, staff, and others. She served as Associate Dean of Faculty and Student Advocacy, Associate Dean for Student Affairs, and Director of the Division of Attitudinal and Behavioral Medicine and Arts in Medicine Program. Decades of medical school graduates will remember her as the Co-founder and Director of the Health Awareness Workshop, an innovative weeklong orientation event that sought to develop physician physical and mental health before it was en vogue. She had two more sons, Daniel and Steven, and the entire family helped in Dr. D’s nationally recognized program that taught generations of future physicians how to maintain their humanity during their careers. As a clinician, Dr. D was available day or night, giving out the family’s home number to all patients in an era when there were no cell phones.

      Leah was a regional and national leader, including the above roles. She loved attending professional meetings nationally and worldwide, developing a large cadre of physician women leaders whom she helped break the “Lexan ceiling”—a term coined by her husband, Herbert, to describe the barriers that women faced which were even harder than glass. She also helped mentor men, too, as she felt that “men of good conscience”—were essential to stand up for what was right, regardless of if it was to advocate for women or for men.

      A highlight of her travels was when she decided during the First International Conference on Women’s Health in Shanghai that those who were interested should be able to participate in a Passover Seder – which she led in a government office that she was told by her Chinese hosts was, at one time, a synagogue. For several decades beginning in the 1980s, she became a researcher of The Holocaust, which lead her to lecture, write, and conduct video interviews of survivors, both Jewish and Catholic, in the US, Europe, and Israel. In all of these professional adventures, her family was by her side, serving as cameramen or schleppers.

      She served on many local boards, including Adath Jeshurun, JFVS, the JCRC Yom HaShoah Commemoration, U of L Hillel, U of L Medical School Alumni Association, St. Francis School, and Planned Parenthood. She was a member of the American, and Kentucky Medical Associations, Greater Louisville Medical Society, and Friends of the Kornhauser Library.

      Survivors include her husband of 64 years, sons Stuart (Dr. Nancy Shapiro) of Cambridge, MA, Dr. Daniel (Dr. Elizabeth Jacobs) of Barrington, RI, and Dr. Steven (Dr. Elissa Nelson) of White Plains, NY, and adored grandchildren Zev, Gefen, Jacob, Yona, Maddie, and Hannah.

      Funeral: Friday, 10am, at Cedar Park and Beth El Cemeteries, 735 Forest Ave, Paramus, NJ. In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy may be made in Leah’s memory to the Association of Women Psychiatrists, associationofwomenpsychiatrists.com , PO Box 570218, Dallas, TX 75357-0218.” [2, 3]

  • Sources 
    1. [S253] Stuart Dickstein, Re: Family Tree of the Jewish People: Pauline MOLEVSKY.

    2. [S259] Stuart Dickstein, Two More MILEVSKY Updates.

    3. [S492] Herman Meyer and Sons, Funeral Director, Dr. Leah Joan Dickstein, 85.