RBG rewarded Elizabeth Salas, her long-time housekeeper, for friendship and loyalty with $40,000.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s will included an unexpected and touching detail, as reported by the Independent. While the majority of her estate was left to her children, Jane and James Ginsburg, she also set aside $40,000 for Elizabeth Salas, her housekeeper of 22 years. The gesture was a heartfelt acknowledgment of Salas’s loyalty and friendship over two decades. Salas, who shared a unique bond with Ginsburg, was seated beside President Joe Biden when Ginsburg lay in state at the U.S. Capitol—a historic first for a woman.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg leaves belongings to kids, longtime housekeeper: report https://t.co/PpCCDgkPJd pic.twitter.com/rsIbFDdKwJ
— 1010 WINS (@1010WINS) May 25, 2021
The siblings, who RBG made executors of her will, will reportedly receive a majority of the late justice's personal property, including but not limited to any cars, furniture, books, art, sculptures, paintings, photographs, silver, porcelain, jewelry, and clothes in her possession. As for Salas, who is a Bolivian immigrant, she is said to have shared a close bond with Justice Ginsburg. "The last thing she told me is that she did not want me to work anymore," she told Univision Noticias in an interview last year, indicating that RBG always defended and protected her.
Elizabeth Salas, una inmigrante boliviana, trabajó como empleada doméstica para Ruth Bader Ginsburg durante 22 años. La hispana aseguró que la jueza siempre la defendió y protegió. pic.twitter.com/kZ6bmxjucv
— Univision Noticias (@UniNoticias) September 26, 2020
Salas's revelation was very telling of RBG's character. Amanda L. Tyler, UC Berkeley law professor and mentee of Ginsburg's who co-wrote Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue: A Life's Work Fighting for a More Perfect Union, revealed in an interview with E! News that RBG frequently put the needs of others ahead of her own. "She was always in my corner, she helped me land jobs, she was a source of great support during very difficult times," Tyler said. "She was something of a North Star in my life, and I think a lot of her law clerks would say that."
Recounting her final phone call with RBG, Tyler said the 87-year-old asked how her kids were doing. "She was worried about them and she wanted to know whether they would be going back to school in person or online, because of the pandemic," Tyler recalled. "And then she expressed concern for all children who were being so profoundly affected by the ongoing pandemic. And I just, I keep thinking back to that conversation because it really was a window into who Justice Ginsburg was. Here she was at the end of her life and she was thinking about others, she was thinking about other people, and she was thinking about the future."
"She talked a lot about how much progress she had seen in her life, on so many different planes," the author said. "When you think about, in her 87 years, the progress that was made with respect to race, and the progress that was made with respect to gender, it was dramatic. And that's not to say that there isn't still a huge amount of work to be done. She knew that, she wrote about that as a Supreme Court justice, she saw it in her life, but she believed in the promise of America. She believed in all that it could be."
This article originally appeared 3 years ago.