04.03.2019

Dr. Westheimer on her Documentary, “Ask Dr. Ruth”

Arguably no one has done more to single-handedly transform Americans’ attitude towards sex than Dr. Ruth. For years, she offered advice and guidance for almost every intimate issue imaginable, and always with a smile. It’s all recounted in the new documentary, “Ask Dr. Ruth,” and she joined Christiane Amanpour in New York to talk about her amazing life.

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RUTH WESTHEIMER, SEX THERAPIST: I was an orphan of the Holocaust. I was sent with a Kindertransport to Switzerland, otherwise, I would not be here. I would be exterminated with one million and a half other children. And I did — I knew that I’m doing something in education. I remember my grandmother saying, “You should be a Kindergarten teacher, you are so short. You fit in those little chairs.” So I became a Kindergarten teacher in Israel, in Palestine, first when I fought in the Haganah. I was badly wounded, but that’s not why I’m short. I would have been short anyway. But I then was fortunate to get to the Sorbonne in Paris and to get a good education in psychology and came to this country on a visit. And I said, I’m here, let me pick up a master’s, New School of Social Research, a master’s in sociology.

CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR: So you are Dr. Ruth.

WESTHEIMER: That’s why I’m the doctor, is a real doctor. It’s not just something that I made up.

AMANPOUR: And you’re a fighter. I hadn’t realized about Haganah, how you were really a fighter in the resistance against the British mandate from the beginning.

WESTHEIMER: Now, I have never killed anybody. However, I was trained as a sniper and I was very badly wounded. On my 20th birthday, June 4, 1948, cannonball came into the girl’s residence in Jerusalem where I lived. And I did show that in the documentary and wounded me very badly on both legs but that’s not why I’m short. I would have been short anyway. And I was able to get fixed by a surgeon in Jerusalem who came from Germany, was well trained. So I became a super good skier at Black Diamond. And I can dance. I can still dance a whole night if I find somebody to dance with.

AMANPOUR: Well, we’re going to talk about all of this, including a future dancing partner. But let me just remind people and play some clips of some of your early shows. Let’s take a listen.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I’m 22 years old, and have never had sex — I’m still a virgin. And she’s wanting to start a sexual relationship–

WESTHEIMER: She’s willing to?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: She’s wanting to, and I’m very nervous.

WESTHEIMER: Okay. Now I understand why you talk so fast.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I’m 18 —

WESTHEIMER: Yes.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: And I’m a virgin and I want to wait until I’m married. But I’ve just gotten started in a career and I want to be stable in that career before I get married.

WESTHEIMER: Right, right.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: And I don’t think that I can really wait that long.

WESTHEIMER: Hold it.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I don’t mean to — yes.

WESTHEIMER: Hold it. Even if the career, let’s say, takes 10 years, let’s say, where’s it written that you can’t get married during your career? I got my doctorate at the age of 40. Now, I don’t talk about my sex life, as you can imagine, but I can assure you that I already had two children, so something must have happened, right?

About This Episode EXPAND

Danny Danon, Israeli Ambassador to the UN and Diana Buttu, former legal advisor to the PLO, each discuss the upcoming Israeli elections and ongoing peace process. Jared Cohen joins the program to discuss his book “Accidental Presidents.” Dr. Ruth Westheimer escaped the Holocaust and served as a sniper in the Haganah, all before emigrating to the US and becoming a sex therapist.

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