As a rabbi's wife in New York City, she took a public role in community improvement. She founded a women's organization in her husband's congregation at Central Synagogue; the Central Synagogue Sisterhood of Personal Service helped new immigrants on the
Lower East Side. She was also involved in the New York
Women's Health Protective Association, which sought improved sanitation in the city. As an educator, she was the only Jewish woman to address the
National Congress of Mothers in 1897, on the topic of "Parental Reverence, as Taught in Hebrew Homes." served as a trustee of the
Young Women's Hebrew Association, and was active in New York City politics. During
World War I she worked with the city's Women's Committee for National Defense on placing women in war-related work, and she was a fundraiser for war relief. She became chair of the NCJW's Reconstruction Committee, tasked with aiding Jewish communities in war-ravaged Europe. In 1923, she was a founder and the first president of the
World Congress of Jewish Women, organized at
Vienna. In 1927, she was the first woman to serve as a judge on the
Jewish Court of Arbitration in New York City. and
More Yesterdays (1950), and a biography of her stepson, ''His Father's House: The Story of George Alexander Kohut'' (1938). In the 1930s, she served as an advisor to the New York State Employment Service, and raised funding and awareness for addressing the plight of
German Jewish refugees. "The Jewish woman," she proclaimed, "must choose between a disorganized, chaotic, and insecure world and a world in which there is peace, plenty, freedom, and security." ==Personal life==