Obituary published on Legacy.com by Broussard's Mortuary - McFaddin Avenue on May 3, 2023.
It feels like the end of an era.
Frances Mazzagatti Kushner left this world Monday, May 1, 2023, at age 97. Until recently, she remained a frail but spirited bundle eternally interested.a great member of the Greatest Generation, though deaf and on a walker. She is irreplaceable.
Frances ("Fran", "Dollie", "Cissy") leaves behind son David Kushner (wife Carolyn) of
Elgin, Tx; daughter Beth Kushner of
Smithville, Tx; granddaughters Stacey Siragusa & Sherry Souders of the Houston metro; nephew Robert Murphy (wife Leigh & son Taylor) of
Alpine, Tx; sister-in-law Cora Mazzagatti of
Miami, Fla; friend Helen Williams of Bmt; friend Fr Antony Paulose of Orange; and many cherished family & friends. She is predeceased by husband Joseph Kushner, parents Kay & Domenico Mazzagatti, sister Rose Murphy, brother-in-law Charles Murphy, brother Roy Mazzagatti, and niece Brenda Murphy.
Frances was born Oct 26, 1925, a bright and multi-faceted child of the Depression and WWII. She was
Fran was a substitute teacher at Assumption School in the 60s & did daily volunteer work for the school & rectory with sister Rose & dear friend June Braquet. She loved to dance but mostly gave it up when she married Joseph and his two shy left feet. Dancing was a way she exuberantly merged with music, which she'd so wanted to learn as a child, but money didn't allow for piano or tap-dance lessons (she made sure her kids had those things she couldn't). She could be relied upon to joyfully belt out Amazing Grace, Tennessee Waltz, My Little Playmate, You Are My Sunshine, Cielito Lindo, Oh What A Beautiful Morning, & I'll Hold You in My Heart and when she still could hear, she loved listening to Ave Maria, O Holy Night, Beatles tunes, and many western-swing classics from her Harvest-Club-dances heyday, circa 1942.
Aunt Frannie loved play!-whether cards, dominos, crossword puzzles, or board games (expect to lose at Scrabble), real-deal snowball fights with kids when she was 50 (and the other adults were in the house), planning, hosting, and making Italian goodies for St Joseph altars, beachcombing, impromptu trips, drives to the Port Arthur seawall to "look for boats", going to look at Christmas lights. She loved & responded to the word "Go!".
Frances was a devout Catholic, usually attending daily Mass & Tuesday-night Novenas when she was stronger. She loved her faith. Rosaries, blessed medals & scapulars, crucifixes, and prayer were constant but quiet companions, never pushing away those of different beliefs.
She was a bit complicated, an ironically shy people-person who didn't recognize her worthiness.nor how she was loved nor how talented she was sometimes sad beyond repair. Despite her small stature, she could be a stunningly fierce adversary.
Fran loved all things red, and driving marathon, nonstop distances in her little red car (her driving explained why red cars get higher insurance premiums). She housed a football-player appetite in her 5' 120 lb body, and gobbled pastas and sweets with no blood-sugar consequences-goodies were Dollie-fuel. And like many a songbird, she had plenty vocal volume in her small frame (no one had a problem hearing her). She loved sweetheart roses, green lizards, and growing things. Her vision may have been savant level-it was normal for her to stand in a patch of clover and effortlessly see, then pick, 4- and 5-leaf-clover, one after another, til she had a bouquet of them. She picked up on things even young people with perfect vision missed; as husband Joe would tell their kids, "sneaking anything past Mom is like trying to sneak sunrise past a rooster".
She was a true friend and could be relied upon to give whatever was needed (money, rescue, guidance, and TLC), and to keep confidences. She had healing hands with a touch that cannot be taught intuiting "where the hurt is" & vanquishing it when she laid her hands on the afflicted area. She took such good care of her ailing mother, & the loss of her sister Rose left a crater she couldn't fill.
We feel she had a fairly gentle exit.
And we miss her terribly.
Soar.and be at peace, Mom.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions for Ms. Kushner may be made to The Humane Society of Southeast Texas, 2050 Spindletop Avenue, Beaumont Texas 77705 or Some Other Place PO Box 0843
Beaumont, Texas 77704; or any organization providing aid & comfort.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 10:00 a.m., Wednesday, May 10, 2023, at Our Lady of the Assumption Catholic Church, 4445 Avenue A, Beaumont, under the direction of Broussard's, 2000 McFaddin Avenue, Beaumont. Her interment will follow at Magnolia Cemetery, Beaumont. Masks requested indoors, but not required.