As
single mom, Facebook's Sandberg 'leans in' for Mother's
Day
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[May 09, 2016]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Facebook Inc's
No. 2 executive, Sheryl Sandberg, paid a Mother's Day
tribute to single moms, acknowledging she never fully
understood the difficulty of raising children without a
spouse or partner until her husband died last year.
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"I did not really get how hard it is to succeed at work when
you are overwhelmed at home," she wrote in a weekend message
posted to her own Facebook account, adding that the death of her
husband, Dave Goldberg, "has redefined what it is to be a
mother."
Sandberg, 46, who joined Facebook in 2008 as the chief operating
officer for the popular social media platform, lost her husband
to a treadmill accident while they were vacationing in Mexico in
May 2015.
The couple, married for 11 years, had two children together, a
son and daughter.
"Before Dave died, I had a partner who shared both the joys and
responsibilities of parenting. Then, without warning, I was on
my own," Sandberg wrote.
She also called for greater public and corporate support for
single, working mothers, citing data showing the number of women
raising their children alone in the United States has nearly
doubled since the 1970s, and that 40 percent of such families
live in poverty.
The United States is the world's only developed economy lacking
paid maternity leave as a matter of national policy, and 35
percent of single U.S. mothers experience food insecurity, she
said.
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Sandberg's message did not mention Facebook's own parental
leave policy, which provides four months of paid leave to all
full-time employees when they become new mothers or fathers.
"I realize how extremely fortunate I am not to face the financial
burdens so many single mothers and widows face," wrote Sandberg,
whose net worth Forbes magazine places at $1.4 billion.
She also acknowledged how some critics had complained that she gave
short shrift to the difficulties faced by single, working women in
the bestselling 2013 book she co-wrote, "Lean In: Women, Work and
the Will to Lead."
"They were right," she said. "I will never experience and understand
all of the challenges most single moms face, but I understand a lot
more than I did a year ago."
(Editing by Mary Milliken)
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