Lee Seeman

[3] Seeman was involved in raising funds to build monuments in Eastern and Central Europe dedicated to those who perished in the Holocaust, including the preservation of one of the largest cemeteries in Wyszków, Poland and markers at the sites of former slave labor camps in Estonia during World War II.

[12] Her mother, Mollie Getzug, was a millinery buyer for stores in Charlotte, North Carolina, Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, and others in the Southeast.

Her great-grandfather Michal HaCohen edited the first Hebrew newspaper in Palestine and founded Nahalat Shiva, the first town outside the walls of Jerusalem.

[1][19]HaCohen was one of the representatives of the Jews welcoming Franz Joseph I of Austria on his trip to Jerusalem, receiving a new printing press from the emperor in appreciation.

[2] In 1953, Lee married Murray Seeman, a lawyer and real estate developer who served as a captain with the US Army during World War II.