/lie Long toad s taisgi 44nd viii Was Linda McCartney a victim of the gene that increases the risk of breast cancer in Ashkenazi Jewish women? ERIC J. GREENBERG Special to The Jewish News IV hen it came to supporting causes she believed would make the world a better place — protecting ani- mals and the environment — Linda Eastman McCartney was quite vocal. But when it came to her own reli- gious and ethnic heritage, she was extremely private. So many fans never knew that the woman once accused of helping break up the Beatles was Jewish. But an investigation has found for the first time that Linda Eastman McCartney, an acclaimed photograph- er and wife for nearly 30 years of one of the 20th century's greatest com- posers, Paul McCartney, was definitely Jewish, the granddaughter of a promi- nent Jewish Cleveland family. McCartney died last month at the age of 56 after a three-year battle with breast cancer. The probe found that McCartney's mother was the late Louise Lindner, daughter of prominent turn-of-the- century businessman Max Joseph Lindner, who founded the largest women's specialty clothing shop in Cleveland in 1908. Eric J. Greenberg is a sta writer at "The Jewish Week." 5/8 1998 98 Lindner, born in New York City in 1874, was a member of The Temple, the major Reform temple in Cleveland. He was a president of its men's club, according to Cleveland researcher Stanley Lasky. Lindner also was active in the Jewish Welfare Fund and a director of the Oakwood Country Club, the Jewish club. "He was definitely involved with the Jewish community of Cleveland," Lasky said. His wife was the former Stella Dryfoos, born in Fremont, Ohio, in 1872. The couple were married in 1910 in Cleveland by Rabbi Moses J. Gries of The. Temple, according to the marriage certificate. The family was the toast of Cleveland's Jewish community as phil- anthropic clothing manufacturers, according to Arlene Rich, president of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Cleveland. "They were very prominent in run- ning Cleveland's Jewish community," Rich said, noting that Stella's sisters married rich synagogue builders Julius Feiss and Eugene Hays. After selling his company, Lindner became a buyer of women's apparel for the May Company. The Lindners were buried on Aug. 8, 1947, at Mayfield Cemetery, oper- Paul and Linda McCartney in happier days. ated by The Temple. They had one daughter, Louise. She gave birth to Linda on Sept. 24, 1941, in Scarsdale, N.Y. McCartney's father was Lee Eastman, who had changed the family name from Epstein. Eastman was a noted entertainment lawyer for, among other clients, the songwriter Harold Arlen. The family had no rela- tionship to Eastman-Kodak. Louise Eastman died in a plane crash when McCartney was 19. McCartney attended Sarah Lawrence College and the University of Arizona, where she was married briefly and had a daughter. But it was her second marriage that triggered worldwide headlines and broke the hearts of millions of teen rock fans. Her 1969 marriage to the cute Beatle in a brief London civil ceremo- ny started possibly the most successful marital musical partnership in pop history. "Whether or not she was practicing [Judaism] in any way or had any con- ventional religious convictions is something nobody knows because the McCartnevs have always been very private about it," said New York Times music critic and Beatles expert Alan Kozinn. "Basically, the most one can say is that she came from a Jewish family," said Kozinn, an Orthodox Jew and author of The Beatles, a critically acclaimed 1996 biography. The McCartneys named their youngest daughter, an up-and-coming fashion designer, after her Jewish grandmother Stella. There are spare anecdotes about McCartney acknowledging her Jewishness. Kozinn recalled a story from a Jewish friend who attended a Christmas party where McCartney was present. "At one point, he said to Linda, `Here I am the only Jew at an X-mas party.' She said, 'There are two of us here.'" Ironically, she was felled by a dis- ease that appears to target a dispropor- tionate number of Jewish women of Eastern European descent. Geri Barish, a Beatle "fanatic" and director of "One in Nine: The Long Island Breast Cancer Coalition," said McCartney's death is distressing because McCartney was "a prime example of someone who lived right: she avoided animal products, she exer- cised, cared for body and was spiritual in her work." Barish said she was concerned that women at risk for breast cancer would "give up" taking precautions seeing that McCartney was unable to beat the disease. She urged them to continue the fight, and push for more investigation of environmental toxic pollution and its relationship to breast cancer. Barish was shocked when informed that McCartney was Jewish. She said her death raises new ques- tions about breast cancer gene muta- tions, some of which increase breast cancer risk for Ashkenazi Jewish women. "Her death should be the final wakeup call ... for better and more biochemical research, more accurate and safer screening and an all-out effort on prevention." "You can't keep your genetics pri- vate," Barish observed. Paul McCartney, 55, has asked peo- ple to donate money to cancer research, among other charities, in his wife's name. ❑