TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 9月13日 07時40分


For most of her life, Edith Windsor was a private citizen who, like most Americans, had a name that was largely unknown to the wider world. But a late-in-life decision ensured that the LGBTQ activist, who died on Sept. 12 at 88, as her wife Judith Kasen-Windsor confirmed, would find her name a solid part of American history. After all, it's her name in the 2013 Supreme Court case "United States v. Windsor," which overturned key parts of the Defense of Marriage Act. (Two years later, the Supreme Court would rule that same-sex marriages must be recognized in all states.) In the wake of that decision in 2013, TIME named Windsor a finalist for Person of the Year, describing her as "the matriarch of the gay-rights movement." During an interview at her Greenwich Village apartment, Windsor shared photo albums of her first marriage and reflected on her life with late spouse, Thea Spyer, and spoke about the meaning of gay marriage. "I think the truth is that if you really care about the quality of somebody's life as much as you care about the quality of your own," she said, "you have it made." Video by @paulmoakley for TIME


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