Archive for the ‘Jewishness’ Category

Heritage

December 19th, 2011 by Suzanne | No Comments | Filed in Damn, evil, Jewishness, other rants, random, those were the days

The optimism (and lack of knowledge beyond Ashkenazi Jews) in this journal entry for my AP Poli Sci class just kills me. This is probably the issue in which my views have most evolved over the last 18 years:

March 2, 1994

I am so disappointed and hurt by the psychotic actions of the crazed Dr. Goldstein* in Israel. How can we ever expect to be taken seriously when we complain about terrorism and then we commit the same heinous crimes that we condemn? It is because of people like Dr. Goldstein, extremists, that other people hate Jews. OK, well, maybe not, but we’ll never solve anything by acting the same way as our enemies. It is for that reason that I am glad that Rabbi Kahane** is dead.

It crushes me when a Jewish person commits an act of violence like that. I realize that no race is perfect, but it still makes me embarrassed to be Jewish. It’s really weird because I usually consider myself proud to be Jewish. Over the last few years. I’ve become very aware of my Jewish heritage. In the past, when people would ask me what nationality I am, I’d say Russian and Polish. But recently I’d begun to rethink my position. True, my family came from these countries, but we don’t have any of their customs. In fact, Jews were never considered to be Russian or Polish or whatever nationality, but Jews. They lived in separate towns (willingly or forced), spoke a different language, and had their own culture. They were a nation of people without a nation, scattered around the globe, connected by religion, culture, persecution, and language. Now when I’m asked what my background is, I say Jewish.

The point of all this is that every nationality needs a nation, and that’s why Israel is so important. I don’t want it to lose respect in the eyes of other nations because of some crazy. We have too much to lose. It just really upsets me that we’ve come this close to peace, and now it may be lost.

*This evil person killed 29 Muslim worshippers in Hebron: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baruch_Goldstein
**I spit on his grave: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meir_Kahane

Atonement

October 7th, 2011 by Suzanne | 6 Comments | Filed in Damn, evil, Jewishness, mortification, other rants

Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement, begins tonight at sundown. Tonight, people will recite the Kol Nidre, an Aramaic prayer that asks God, “May all the people of Israel be forgiven, including all the strangers who live in their midst, for all the people are in fault.” It is a haunting, beautiful prayer, which can be heard here.

As a society, there is a lot to atone for this year, as every year. My top priority is the chasm between the rich and everyone else. I was particularly struck by this last night, when Husband and I received an appraisal for our apartment. (We are refinancing.)

We’ve lived in our place for almost nine years. In the time, the value has increased by more than 200%. In theory, I should be jumping for joy, but I’m actually appalled. When we went to buy a place, we stretched a little, but it was at least feasible. We could never do that now. I don’t understand how anyone can.

Decades ago, my neighborhood was a little microcosm of society. There were wealthy people on Central Park West, middle class people on the side streets, and mixed in with that were single room occupancy (SRO) buildings and halfway houses. My former boss lived in a brownstone on Columbus and 85th Street in the late 1980s, and across the street was a crack den. Homeless people lit trash fires to warm themselves at night. I’m not saying I want the crack dens back, but a studio apartment in that building now rents for $2000 per month and renters have to show the landlord that their yearly income is 40 times that amount before they can sign a lease. It’s a rich people ghetto and it’s morally wrong.

This whole situation is unsustainable. The real estate market is a house of cards. The only way to keep price up is to have inflated salaries in certain industries, like legal, banking, and medicine. But as a whole, we can’t afford that and we should not have to mortgage the future of the country so that an elite class can afford a one bedroom apartment on the ground floor facing the street if they stretch a bit. It’s sick.

I won’t be attending services for Yom Kippur. However, I will be hoping that not only are my family and friends inscribed in the Book of Life this year, but that some true miracle will happen and this nation will wake up and say that everyone deserves an equal shot at more than merely breathing.

Gmar chatima tova.

Elul and Selichot

September 24th, 2011 by Suzanne | No Comments | Filed in Jewishness

In my piecemeal continuing Jewish education, I recently learned about the month of Elul and the practice of selichot. Basically, the month of Elul, which comes before Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, is a time for repentance. At the end of Elul, special prayers for forgiveness called selichot are offered.

When I found out about these concepts from my co-workers recently, I was intrigued. I like the idea of a set month to really think about the things that I’ve done wrong over the past year and the ability to build up to asking for forgiveness for those I’ve wronged. It seems very therapeutic.

The problem is that I’m not very good at granting forgiveness on a macro level, not that the people who have wronged me (*cough*Republican Party*cough*Netanyahu*cough*for example*cough*) want my forgiveness. They wronged me – and millions of other people – in their ideological quests to do what they believe is correct. They probably want me to ask them for forgiveness for my values and beliefs. Since I don’t think those are wrong, I’ll not be doing that any time soon. Which is sort of a conundrum, isn’t it?

Still, the idea is nice. I continue to be amazed by how little I know about the religion in which I was semi-raised. Since I am not likely to grant or achieve forgiveness this year, my fervent hope is for a peaceful, healthy, and happy new year for those near and dear to me.

Triggers

July 4th, 2011 by Suzanne | 7 Comments | Filed in Damn, family, Jewishness, other rants, sadness, writing

Saturday morning we went out to breakfast with a family friend. She told us about her husband’s experiences as a ten year old who carried messages for the Dutch resistance during WWII.

“Oh,” my dad said. “My father never spoke about his life in Warsaw except when he told me how he left.”

I froze mid-chew. How many times had I asked my father what he knew about his father’s life in Warsaw or afterwards and he said he didn’t know anything?

“He left Warsaw with a friend,” my dad continued. “As they ran trough the forest, the Germans were strafing it with bullets. His friend was killed right next to him. I think he was decapitated.”

I fought, uselessly, against the rage and despair that flowed through my veins. Getting angry or crying would not help. “Why didn’t you tell me this before? I had no idea that he left with a friend. I thought he was alone.”

“Oh no,” Dad replied. “I guess I forgot. He was with his best friend.”

It would have made a difference to know this while I was writing my thesis. I asked so many questions in as many ways as I could to find out what I could. And my dad had this crucial, heartbreaking detail stored away in the back of his brain all along. My mom also had heard that story and forgot.

I don’t know what to do to unlock these important memories. The brain is complicated and it is not my dad’s fault for not remembering, although at the same time I cannot understand how one would forget that his father watched his best friend die as they fled Warsaw. It is frustrating beyond belief. I am on the verge of tearing my hair out.

I’m angry at other people for forgetting or for not saying anything in the first place. I’m angry at myself for not pushing for information while I still had a chance, even though it probably would have done more harm than good. I’m angry at archives for not being helpful and again at myself for only speaking English and not being able to read some of the few works that are out there.

I want to know what happened. I want to know so badly that it leaves a coppery taste in my mouth when I think about it until that taste is replaced by the saltiness of my tears that result from the futility of it all at this point because what can I do?

Tags:

Yom HaShoah 5771

May 2nd, 2011 by Suzanne | 2 Comments | Filed in family, Jewishness

In Ashkenazi Jewish culture, we name our children after deceased relatives as a way to memorialize and honor those who are gone. Generally, a child is not given the exact name as the departed. This permits a child to capture the best aspects of the person for whom she is named, but not be entirely in his or her shadow. It also allows a female infant to be named for a beloved male relative and vice versa. Sometimes families use the first letter of the dead person’s name to create a new one. Other times, parents play on the meaning of names, so that a girl might be named Aleeza (“gift of joy”) after an uncle named Isaac (“gift of laughter”). However, children are never named for living relatives, for the Angel of Death is easily confused and might take the young person rather than the older one by accident.

My younger sister, Dana, was named in honor of my grandfather’s sister Doba. I did not know very much about Doba until recently, and even now I have only the barest facts. She was born in 1897 to Hersh and Pesa Rajsman. At some point, she married a man named Icchak Srodogora. They worked as grocers and lived at Franciszkanska 12, in the Old Town/Miranow district of Warsaw. In 1923, Doba’s daughter Beila Basia was born. Icchak believed that Doba was deported to Treblinka in 1942 or 1943, according to paperwork he filed in the 1950s seeking an official death certificate for his wife. The request was denied.

My father told me that Doba was my grandfather’s favorite sister. Dana is soft-spoken and generous. I like to think that Doba passed these qualities on to her. I decided to memorialize her kindness in the book that I am writing based on the precious few facts I have about my grandfather and his family. Doba wears a sheytl, the wig that married women are required to wear in Hasidic culture, and it is always a bit askew because she is in constant motion and flustered. She is the person that my grandfather turns to when he needs help and to share stories of his exploits as an “enlightened” Jew. She always listens, half horrified by her heretic brother’s antics and half amused.

When Dana had a son, she named him Marcus after our grandfather. The man we knew as Michael Reisman began his life on October 26, 1911 in Warsaw as Motel Rajsman. In the past few years, I learned that after he fled Warsaw in 1939 he lived for a short time in Bialystok, a Polish city with a large Jewish population that was occupied by the Soviets. He was arrested in 1940 and imprisoned in a gulag (which saved his life, for the Nazis seized Bialystok a year later) until 1942. He worked on a collective farm for two years before moving to the steel mills of Magnitogorsk, where he met and married my bubbe.

Grandpa never told us much of this, although Dana and I spent much time with him when we were growing up. Instead, we played Bingo, with Grandpa as the caller. “OH 65!” he bellowed as if we were in a 2,000 square foot hall full of hearing impaired senior citizens rather than a foot away from him on the other side of the marble coffee table. We quietly colored on the back of envelopes formerly containing Social Security checks while Grandpa read the newspaper or played solitaire in the dining room. We watched professional bowling on television. When the picture rolled, Grandpa dashed in from his seat at the polished dining room table to pound on the top of the faux wood box to still it. He engaged us in rousing games of “Go Pish,” his version of the children’s card game “Go Fish.” We found this version hilarious, and his green eyes flashed joy whenever we laughed at his jokes. Grandpa also made us hot chocolate and picked the bones out of smoked fish for us and cut up slices of fruit and cheese, even when we weren’t hungry.

Marcus turned two years old this past Friday, April 29. At his birthday party, he laughed as he pretended to put my old koala bear puppet in a small box, then admonished Fuzzy Wuzzy for being so silly. He warned the picture of the dinosaur on his party plate that the food on it was “my pizza,” but when he was done, he moved a piece near the dinosaur’s mouth. Marcus grabbed us all in big hugs many times.

My grandfather lost his family in the Holocaust. I hope it comforted him to see his sister in my sister. I miss my grandfather dearly, but it comforts me to see him in Marcus. We will never forget.

Tags:

Repenting

April 21st, 2011 by Suzanne | 3 Comments | Filed in Damn, evil, fuck, hilarity, I love New York, Jewishness, mortification

That little joke I made yesterday (but somehow did not publish to my blog until a few minutes ago) about eating lobster rolls over Passover? I am definitely sorry. It was not funny to joke about endangering my soul, although I am not going to lie: I really, really wanted a lobster roll for dinner. (Instead, I ate a crisp bread sandwich of herbed turkey and cheddar – not exactly kosher for Passover, either, I know – and plain microwave popcorn.)

Now that I have semi-repented for my sacrilegious ways, I hope that the plagues will stop raining down on me. Last week I developed an annoying rash which continues to annoy me (the allergist thought it was a mild case of hives). Husband and I were forced to kill to water bugs/roaches on Sunday. This morning the third plague revealed itself.

I swore that I saw something dash from the kitchen pantry under the stove while I made breakfast, but was not sure if it was a shadow, a figment of my imagination, or something small with multiple legs. Regardless, it would not hurt to put out more MaxForce insect killer, I decided. When I opened the pantry door, I was surprised to see shredded parts of a bag of pita chips on the ground.

“That’s odd,” I thought as Maurice the Brain Hamster began running faster on the wheel that powers my brain. “Roaches don’t tear things up…”

Right. As I picked up the bag of pita chips (something that does not belong in my home over Passover anyway), I surprised the little gray mouse nibbling on a chip behind it. We both screamed (OK, I screamed loud enough for both of us), and he/she ran out of the pantry under the stove while I stood in place screaming.

The irony of this Passover plague saga is two-fold. First, if I had cleaned out the chametz, the mouse would not be eating it. I suspect the mouse would starve to death because matzah and other pre-packaged Passover foods are gross. Second, when Husband and I attended a lovely Seder on Monday night, someone shared a story of finding a mouse stuck on a glue trap in her apartment and how awful it was. Of course I thought that I was glad that I never had had to deal with mice. Of course.

I don’t even want to know what comes next.

Tags: ,

The Lobster Roll and My Soul

April 21st, 2011 by Suzanne | No Comments | Filed in Damn, hilarity, Jewishness, random, yummy eats

A few days ago, I looked up which Jewish holidays specifically forbid working. While discovering that there are 13 days impacted by these holidays, I also learned about karet. It seems that breaking certain Jewish laws are so heinous that transgressors are “cut off from the people” and their souls are in mortal danger.

It also turns out that eating leavened products during Passover is one of the things that merit karet. In theory, I am not terribly worried about this, as I am atheistic and not too concerned about God punishing my soul. On the flip side, it strikes me that I am a really terrible Jew for wandering if it would be so terrible to eat a lobster roll over Passover…

Passover: April 19, 1943 and April 19, 2011

April 19th, 2011 by Suzanne | 3 Comments | Filed in Jewishness, sadness

Hear, O German God,
How the Jews, in the “wild” houses pray,
Clenching in the fist a stick, a stone.
We beg you, O God, for a bloody battle,
We implore you for a violent death,
Let our eyes not see, before we expire,
The stretch of the train tracks,
But let the precise aim of our hand, O Lord,
Stain their livid uniforms with blood,
Let us see, before the mute groan
Shreds our throats,
Our simple human fear in their
Haughty hands, in their whip-wielding paws.
From Niska, Miła, and Muranowska Streets,
Like scarlet flowers of blood,
Sprout the flames of our gunbarrels.
This is our Spring! Our Counterattack!
The intoxication of our battle!
These are our partisan forests:
The alleys of Dzika and Ostrowska Streets.
“Block” numbers quiver on breasts,
Medals of the Jewish war.
The cry of six letters flashes in red,
Like a battering ram bellows the word: REVOLT
………………………………………….
………………………………………….
And on the street, the bloodied.
Trampled packet:
JUNO SIND RUND.
-Władysław Szlengel, “Counterattack”

Passover began last night, much as it was about to begin on April 19, 1943 for the thousands of Jews left in the Warsaw Ghetto who had managed to avoid deportation to Treblinka Extermination Camp in 1942. On that Passover, 68 years ago, the Germans entered the Ghetto planning to deport all remaining persons within three days. Instead, they were greeted by Molotov cocktails and hand grenades lobbed by members of the Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa (Jewish Combat Organization, or ŻOB) and Żydowski Związek Wojskowy (Jewish Military Union, or ŻZW).

The dream of my life has risen to become fact. Self-defense in the ghetto will have been a reality. Jewish armed resistance and revenge are facts. I have been a witness to the magnificent, heroic fighting of Jewish men in battle.
-Mordechai Anielewicz, leader of the ŻOB

Passover is the holiday in which Jews celebrate our ancestors’ liberation after generations of slavery in Egypt. How bitter it must have been in 1943 to know that there would be no generations left if they waited again for God’s help. No, after all those years of thanking God at Seders, this time, it was up to the people to save themselves, to smite the first born (or any born Nazi), and part the Red Sea to exit the Warsaw Ghetto to freedom. Although they were grossly outnumbered and out-armed, the fighters held out until May. The resistance was only destroyed as the Nazis systemically set fire to every building in the Ghetto, forcing people from their bunkers or burning them to death. Everyone caught was deported to Treblinka.

Do not go willingly to your death! Fight for life to the last breath. Greet our murders with teeth and claws, with axe and knife, hydrochloric acid and iron crowbars. Make the enemy pay for blood with blood, for death with death. Let us fall upon the enemy in time, kill and disarm him. Let us stand up against the criminals and if necessary die like heroes. If we die in this way we are not lost.
-ŻOB leaflet, December 1942

Tonight, as I stuff myself with a delicious meal, surrounded by people I love, I will think about my cousin Beila Srodogora, who was twenty years old in 1943. I learned last May, almost 67 years to the day that the Nazis declared the end of Jewish Warsaw, that she was deported to Treblinka in 1943. Did she join the resistance, or go to her death quietly, like so many others?

I like to believe that she took up arms. I like to believe that even as she was loaded into a cattle car with hundreds of other doomed humans, she knew that somewhere out there her uncle Motel Rajsman – my grandfather – remembered her. I like to believe that she knew that he would never forget her, even if the pain of his loss was so great that he could never bring himself to say her name again. I like to think that my grandfather knew that I would somehow find out who Beila was and I would do what he could not.

This Passover, I remember Beila and say her name for him.

Tags: , ,

Plagues

April 17th, 2011 by Suzanne | 4 Comments | Filed in Damn, evil, fuck, hilarity, I love New York, Jewishness, mortification

Passover begins Monday night at sundown. During Passover, Jews celebrate our liberation from slavery in Egypt. Last year, I wrote about how my family observed Passover when I was growing up, and I spent some time exploring the ten plagues: (blood; frogs and lice; flies and dead livestock; boils and hail; locusts and darkness; and the death of the first born. After the tenth plague, Pharaoh more or less really let the Jews free, except that he changed his mind, had his troops chase them to the Red Sea, and they wound up drowning.

Today, however, two plagues seem to have struck my home. First, I broke out in an insane heat rash a few days ago. The itchiness is killing me. I’ve been using generic Benadryl, which helps, and smearing cortisone cream over my body as though it were sunscreen. While I’ll gladly take the rash over lice and/or boils, it is still really unpleasant. Nothing but cold showers for me in the foreseeable future. Ugh.

Then Husband and I were visited by the six-legged plague of many a New York apartment, and I am not talking about locusts or flies. As I rubbed cortisone onto my back, I heard Husband scream, then seem to stumble. I ran out of the bathroom and found him pressing his shoe into the ground? “Did you trip? Are you OK?” I asked. “No, there’s a roach!” he yelled. A ginormous waterbug had run across the hallway. “Get a paper towel!”

The problem with one roach is that there is never one roach. We sprayed raid, I spread more Maxforce gel, and replaced old bait stations with new ones. Then I scratched my itchy skin a lot. We didn’t have to wait long. Husband yelled and I smashed the vile critter with an empty Kleenex box.

Whatever I need to do, I will do it. Just end these plagues and don’t send more my way!

Tags:

Speculating

April 6th, 2011 by Suzanne | 2 Comments | Filed in family, Jewishness

A few weeks ago, I ordered a genealogical DNA kit from Family Tree DNA, which works with the Jewish genealogy site JewishGen. I picked the Family Finder package, which uses autosomal DNA to look at five generations of genetic information and matches it to other people in the database, even though it was beaucoup dollars. I figured that this was the best way to find potential missing relatives, although I debated having my dad take the test since I was most interested in finding relatives on his side of the family since I know my mother’s side.

The kit arrived within a week and the directions were easy enough. As I scraped the inside of my cheek with the paper wand-scraper thing, I reminded myself not to expect much. The odds of finding missing relatives from my father’s father’s family were pretty much zero in general, plus I would only find out about other people who used Family Tree DNA. I sent the test tubes back and waited.

Last night I received my results. The test located a batch of 3rd and 4th cousins, which was interesting. I’d never heard any of their names or their family names. The test also pointed to one person as a potential 2nd cousin.

At first, I didn’t think too much of it. The whole cousin relationship issue has long confused me (what’s the difference between a first cousin once removed and a second cousin?), so the implications of a second cousin escaped me. But when I looked up a “cousins chart,” I learned that second cousins share a great grandparent.

Again, I was initially not too excited. Then, as I was going to bed, I thought about it. If this person shares a great grandparent with me, then it must mean that their grandparent is a sibling of one of my grandparents. I am 99% sure that I know all of my grandma and grandpa’s (my mom’s parents) nieces and nephews (they are my mom’s first cousins), and I know all of my Bubbe’s nieces and nephews (my dad’s first cousins). The only people I don’t know are my grandfather’s (my dad’s father) nieces and nephews. It seems that this person, then, would be one of them.

If the DNA test is right and that is true – and I have goosebumps while I am writing this – then it means that one of my grandfather’s sister’s children managed to survive the Holocaust. It that is true, and this person replies to my email, then I might not only have one relative from my grandfather, but I might also find out more about his family.

I hate speculating about this because it is too much to think about. I have wanted to find someone from my grandfather’s side ever since I was a girl. Maybe the test is inaccurate. (Jews have a lot of genes in common since we tended to intermarry all the time; a New York Times article that came out a few months ago said that basically all Jews are 5th cousins at worst. The test also indicated that 100% of my genes are from Jews who came out of the Middle East at some point.) Maybe I am not fully understanding the “cousins chart.” Maybe this person will not reply to my email, which would devastate me. Maybe a lack of response would devastate me even more than hearing from the person and learning that we are not really related after all. Maybe, depending on whether or not I get a response and what it is, I should throw down another $300 and see if my dad matches this person as a first cousin. Maybe, maybe, maybe.

It’s the closest I’ve come to finding an answer since I learned through Yad Vashem in 2004 that my grandfather’s sister’s husband Icchak (whose name I had never known) survived the Holocaust. When I tracked down his surviving relatives, I was very happy to meet them, but unbearably disappointed when they told me that he tried to tell them about his family killed in the Holocaust but that they didn’t want to hear it, so they knew nothing about my great aunt. I have to tell myself that this is probably what will happen again, but in the meantime, all the maybes are boosting my hopes.

My fingers are crossed.

Tags: , ,