Hello, America
Page 1
Hello, America
SIMON & SCHUSTER BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
Copyright © 2005 by Livia Bitton-Jackson
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part or in any form.
SIMON & SCHUSTER BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Book design by Greg Stadnyk
The text for this book is set in Bembo.
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Jackson, Livia Bitton.
Hello, America / Livia Bitton-Jackson.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-689-86755-7 (Print)
ISBN 978-1-4424-4652-6 (eBook)
1. Jackson, Livia Bitton 2. Jews—New York (State)—New York—Biography. 3. Holocaust survivors—New York (State)—New York—Biography. 4. Refugees, German—New York (State)—New York—Biography. 5. Immigrants—New York (State)—New York—
Biography. I. Title.
F128.9.J5J33 2004
940.53’18’092—dc22 2004014495
Contents
Chapter One
NEW YORK HARBOR!, 1951
Chapter Two
MY FIRST DAY IN AMERICA
Chapter Three
BROADWAY
Chapter Four
ARE FAIRY TALES REAL?
Chapter Five
PASSOVER PREPARATIONS
Chapter Six
AMERICAN PEERS
Chapter Seven
MRS. RYDER
Chapter Eight
MY FIRST JOB
Chapter Nine
AM I IN LOVE?
Chapter Ten
TUNA FISH, MILK SHAKE, AND BAGELS AND LOX
Chapter Eleven
PICNIC IN THE LIVING ROOM
Chapter Twelve
MOTHER’S OPERATION
Chapter Thirteen
I AM THE DOCTOR’S ASSISTANT
Chapter Fourteen
END OF A FAIRY TALE?
Chapter Fifteen
WHAT’S THAT NUMBER ON YOUR ARM?
Chapter Sixteen
MOTHER HAS A JOB
Chapter Seventeen
A HOLIDAY IN THE CATSKILLS
Chapter Eighteen
A BLIND DATE
Chapter Nineteen
ALEX IS BACK
Chapter Twenty
OUR NEW HOME
Chapter Twenty-One
THE MOVE!
Chapter Twenty-Two
THE POCONOS
Chapter Twenty-Three
CAMP MASSAD
Chapter Twenty-Four
YISHAI
Chapter Twenty-Five
CULTURE SHOCK
Chapter Twenty-Six
A CHANCE MEETING
Chapter Twenty-Seven
MY AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA
Dedicated to the United States of America and to the young women and men who do their share to defend this most mighty bulwark of freedom and democracy.
I have received literally hundreds of inquiries from young readers about my life in America. Their intelligent questions, eager curiosity and touching concern served as inspiration for this third sequel of my life story. I wish to express my heartfelt gratitude for the wonderful gift their letters have given me.
Simultaneously, I wish to thank VP Brenda Bowen at Simon & Schuster, my editor Alyssa Eisner, and my former editor Jessica Schulte for their brilliant, enthusiastic guidance and encouragement.
Chapter One
NEW YORK HARBOR!, 1951
The day breaks as the SS General Stuart rapidly slices through the mist toward New York Harbor. With baited breath I watch the coastline approach. A moist wind slaps my hair against my cheeks, and my fingers feel numb from the intensity of my grip on the rail, testing reality. Is this a dream, or am I really standing on the upper deck of the ship drawing nearer and nearer to America? Today is Sabbath, just like when we set sail eight days ago. We started our journey on the holy day of Sabbath and we are completing it on Sabbath. God, is this a divine message … an omen?
The waters near the shore are calm, and I feel wonderful. The seasickness is gone. The turbulent ocean with its infinite majesty is behind us, spanning the abyss between our past and our future. Between homelessness in Europe and the promise of a home in America.
America, will you be my home? Will you embrace me as a daughter yearning to belong, an equal among equals, or will I forever remain a stranger, as on the other side of the ocean? Will you grant me my fervent desire of going to school once again? Will you grant me my secret ambition to become a teacher?
Am I dreaming too wild a dream?
Elli, my little sister … always impetuous … always dreaming … with your head always in the clouds. It’s my brother’s voice; I can hear it as if he were standing next to me. My brother Bubi! Oh, I can’t wait to see him! How soon will I see him?
The pier is not too far now, and I can see a statuesque image gradually precipitate out of the fog. The Statue of Liberty! There is no mistake about it: As the boat moves along the pier, she emerges out of the haze in her full glory. How beautiful she is! I can see her clearly now. I can see her right hand holding the famous torch … the torch of liberty.
“Look, Mommy. There. There, on the horizon. Can you see it? The Statue of Liberty! Oh, Mommy! Did you think we’d live to see this sight?”
“Yes,” Mother says softly, and there is a catch in her voice. “I can see it… . It’s so hard to believe. And yet it is true. Thank God for having reached this moment.”
I put my arms about her. “Oh, Mommy. I can’t believe we’ve made it!”
Others have seen the statue too, and a cheer rises among the ranks of refugees storming the rails. Several men whip off their caps and someone begins to sing, and the cheer turns into many different songs, many different anthems—a basket of melodies rising into the mist.
“The American anthem,” I shout. “Who can sing the American anthem?”
But no one hears me. No one knows the new anthem of our new homeland: The refugees keep singing the anthems of their hearts in different languages, a cacophony of tongues. The deck is full now … men, women, and little children … singing, faces red from the wind and wet with tears. It is one song—the song of the refugees coming home.
“Oh, Mommy. I can’t believe we’ve made it!”
“Not yet. We haven’t made it yet.” Gently she frees herself from my embrace. “Elli, let’s go and gather our things,” she says cheerfully. “Let’s hurry. We shouldn’t be among the last to step ashore.”
I nod. “Let’s hurry and be among the first!”
We go below to pack our things, and as we maneuver our luggage toward the upper deck, Mother is caught up in a human tide sweeping her toward the gangway.
“Mom, wait! I can’t go yet. I can’t leave without saying goodbye to Captain McGregor and Steward McDonald.” Pushing against the current, Mother and I manage to reach the staterooms. But the officers are nowhere to be seen. As we drag our luggage toward the mess deck, I hear a familiar voice in the crowd.
“There you are! Look at you! All recovered.” The captain’s eyes sparkle with playful good humor. “All peachy pink and ready to go!”
“Yes, I’m fine now. The seasickness was gone as soon as we slowed down for landing.”
“I know, I know. It’s the nature of the beast. Where are you heading?”
“We have family in Brooklyn.”
“Brooklyn? Do you have a
passport? You have to cross a bridge to get to Brooklyn, and for that you need a special passport. Brooklyn is foreign territory.”
“Oh, no! We have no passports at all. Our status is ‘stateless.’ None of the refugees have passports!” Tension tightens my stomach.
The captain’s eyes now have a dark, wicked glow. “Then you cannot get to Brooklyn. You’ll have to stay right here!”
Seeing my panic, he locks me in a bear hug. “Oh, I was only kidding. May God be with you wherever you go, Miss Friedman. Thanks for your help. You did a hell of a job. I’ll miss you on my next crossing.”
What does kidding mean? I hope it means he was not serious about Brooklyn being a foreign land.
As Captain McGregor holds me in his arms, I remember our first meeting.
Was it only a week ago Thursday that the exciting news rippled through the ranks of the refugees in the Bremerhaven transit camp that our boat had arrived and we would be boarding on Saturday morning? But Saturday is Sabbath, when it is forbidden by Jewish law to board a ship! Mommy and I were faced with the agonizing problem until early Friday morning when I proposed a solution: I would volunteer to work as an interpreter on the ship and request permission for the two of us to board on Friday instead of Saturday. Although delighted with the idea, Mommy was dubious. But the captain miraculously accepted my offer and bade us to board immediately together with the crew.
And now here we are, ready to step ashore in America, the land of freedom. Far behind us is the bloodsoaked soil of Europe, the graveyard of all I had loved—my family, my friends, my childhood.
It has been a long journey. When did it begin? Did it begin when young American soldiers liberated me, a fourteen-year-old skeleton, from the German prison train, offering us, walking corpses, the gift of life … of hope?
Or did it begin before the war, when Papa clutched in his hands the Czechoslovak passport that promised to transform his dreams of America into reality? But as the shadows of war loomed ever larger, America was beckoning from an ever-receding horizon, until Hitler’s march into Prague sent the U.S. Embassy packing, delivering a final, fatal blow to our hopes. And so instead of America, my father’s journey ended in a mass grave in Bergen-Belsen.
The three of us, my mother, my brother, and I, dazed survivors of the empire of death, continued the journey. My brother left for America four years ago on a student visa, while Mother and I wandered through Europe, moving from one refugee camp to another in the American Zone of Germany, getting ever closer to the American dream. Until that memorable Friday more than a week ago when in the port of Bremen a small ship bobbing on the waves came into view, the name SS General Stuart clearly visible on the bow.
Belowdecks, no sooner did Mom and I arrange our bedclothes under the pillows and tuck our luggage neatly under the bunk than a trimly uniformed marine officer appeared and bade me to follow him up the companionway to the captain’s office.
Captain McGregor greeted me jovially and pointed to a desk in the corner with an old gray Olympic typewriter among stacks of paper.
“Here, Miss Friedman, is your office, complete with typewriter,” he said crisply. “First we have to compose special lists according to nationalities. Here is the passenger list. Nationality is listed next to each name. Please sort the names by nationality groups and type up a separate list for each. We also need a list of children below the age of fifteen—for the children’s dining room. You’ll find ages listed next to names. Your skills as interpreter will be needed to sort out those who require a meatless diet. Those passengers will eat in the meatless dining room. We’ll compile that list after the passengers board early tomorrow morning. That list can be typed up then and immediately posted with the kitchen crew.”
“I can sort out those who require a meatless diet,” I remarked carefully. “But I can’t type up the list tomorrow morning. It’s part of what I mentioned this morning about Sabbath observance. I’m not allowed to type on the Sabbath.”
“I understand. No problem. One of the stewards will do the typing. Can you get the information from the passengers and dictate it? Is that okay?”
I nodded and settled down at the ancient typewriter. Conscious of the limited time at my disposal, I plunged into work. At noon the captain stopped at my desk.
“Young lady, I’m sorry to interrupt your work, but it’s lunchtime. I’m here to invite you and your mother to join me and the rest of the crew at my table for lunch.”
“Oh. Thank you, Captain,” I replied awkwardly. “I wish we could join you. But my mother and I, we eat kosher food only.”
“Whadd’ya know!” he exclaimed. “Our first couple of meatless customers! No problem. I’ll tell the cook. He’ll take care of you.”
The jolly company, cold salad, cottage cheese, and canned corn made for a delightful lunch. And something else: dessert. A frozen, dark brown brick painstakingly sliced into squares by the cook. “What is it?” The crew was greatly amused to discover that I had never seen or tasted chocolate ice cream. One by one they generously piled their portions of the frozen delicacy on my plate. Only later did I find out that they all hated this chocolate ice cream, and were delighted to find easy prey!
As the afternoon wore on, a gentle tap on my shoulder startled me. It was Mother.
“Elli, it’s sunset. Time for Sabbath. You must stop typing.”
“Okay, Mom,” I reassured her. “I will join you below deck as soon as I’ve delivered the lists to the captain.”
When I arrived belowdecks I found that Mother had fashioned a small table out of a footstool and arranged the two candles she brought along, using bottle caps for candleholders. Her face took on a special glow as she lit the candles, and then, covering her eyes with her hands, she recited the Hebrew blessing over the flickering lights. Our dark little corner below deck was transformed into a circle of radiance.
The sound of hurried footsteps broke the spell. Taken aback at the sight of the candles, the first steward mumbled an embarrassed apology. “Sorry, Miss, but you’re needed above to meet the kitchen crew and explain to them about kosher.”
Captain McGregor introduced me to a large group of marines I recognized from lunch. To my surprise they listened avidly to my talk on the rules of kashruth and asked penetrating questions, and the hour was quite late by the time First Steward McDonald broke up the discussion. As the marines dispersed with cheers and catcalls, Captain McGregor chuckled. “Hey, young lady, you were quite a hit!”
It was past midnight when I finally joined Mother in the bunk and dropped into bed exhausted yet exhilarated from my remarkable experience in the ship’s kitchen. Mother listened quietly to my story about the marines’ reaction to my talk, then remarked wryly, “I would have never imagined that a lecture on kosher food would make such an exhilarating topic.”
At dawn Steward McDonald appeared at my bunk. “Miss Friedman, our customers are boarding. We need an interpreter to issue directives.”
“I’ll be with you in a minute,” I mumbled hoarsely and climbed off my bed. Thank God I was too tired the night before to get undressed. In less than a minute I was ready to follow the first steward.
“As you know, we are accommodating them by ethnic groups. Hopefully this will make for a more successful passage.” He whispered as we climbed the metal stairs, confiding, “Our last passage with refugees was dismal.”
Masses of refugees ascended the gangplank. From the lists I’d put together I knew that they spoke Slovenian, Czech, Ukrainian, Yiddish, German, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, and Italian. Hungarian, German, and Yiddish were easy. And my knowledge of Slovak helped me to communicate also in Slovenian, Czech, Ukrainian, and Polish—all Slavic languages. But I could speak neither Romanian nor Italian. What was I going to do?
“Do you have a pad and a red pencil?” I asked Steward McDonald.
Steward McDonald produced a red pencil and took my dictation in large block letters: CHI PARLA ITALIANO? “What does it mean?”
“I hope it
means ‘Who speaks Italian?’ Italian would help us also with Romanian.”
I raised the pad above the crowd, and almost instantly a voice called out, “lo parlo Italiano.”
The voice belonged to a young Serb from Zagreb, who besides Italian and his native tongue also knew German, spanning a linguistic proficiency in the three main language families—Germanic, Slavic, and Romance—a perfect combination for communicating with the refugees.
The young man from Zagreb, his name was Stanko Vranich, seemed to have phenomenal organizational ability, and with his help the boarding proceeded smoothly. Stanko’s support boosted my sense of competence, and the two of us had all the refugees settled in their respective quarters in less than three hours.
“I should hire you on a permanent basis,” the captain chuckled. “We could do with such orderly boarding on every passage.”
“Meet my senior partner.” I introduced the slim young man whose narrow auburn mustache partially concealed a harelip. “This is Mr. Vranich. I couldn’t have done it without him.” As the officers saluted him, Stanko courteously bowed his head.
The rest of the morning kept me busy dashing up and down between the hold, the staterooms, the kitchen, and the mess deck, conveying requests for extra blankets, cots, buckets, food items. It was almost noon as I was climbing up the companionway to the upper deck right behind Captain McGregor, when suddenly an incomprehensible surge of nausea sent the contents of my stomach up my throat. Luckily there was a bucket of sand nearby and I managed to direct the charge into it, and continued up the stairs without the captain noticing. Wow! It must have been the canned fish I had for dinner. Or that mountain of chocolate ice cream! Thank goodness the captain didn’t seem to notice!