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Looking for Me

Page 3

by Betsy R. Rosenthal


  “It’s not good for two women

  to be in one kitchen,” she says.

  But if only she would invite

  my other bubby—

  Mom’s mother—into her kitchen,

  maybe she could learn a thing or two

  about cooking!

  Keeping Kosher, Maryland-Style

  Most of the kids are Catholic

  who live on our street,

  so they don’t worry much

  about what they eat.

  But we aren’t allowed

  to mix milk with our meat,

  or eat bacon, shrimp, crab,

  or pickled pigs’ feet.

  And we use separate dishes

  for milk foods and meat

  and paper plates for crab cakes

  (’cause sometimes we cheat).

  Trying to Be Polite at Eunice’s House

  Eunice and I mostly go

  to my house after school

  because she thinks it’s more fun

  than a circus.

  But today we go to Eunice’s

  for a change

  (which I like because it’s nice and quiet).

  She asks if I’m hungry,

  and of course, I say yes

  because I love to eat

  (maybe too much).

  She offers me kielbasa,

  a Polish treat,

  and I say, “No thanks,”

  even though my stomach

  is growling for it.

  “How about a ham and cheese?” she says,

  lifting her eyebrows.

  “No, thank you,” I say,

  and worry she’ll think

  I’m the pickiest eater

  in all of Baltimore.

  “Don’t like ham and cheese either?”

  she asks,

  with her hands planted on her hips.

  “Nope,” I say,

  willing my stomach to hush up.

  “What do you like?” she asks.

  “Everything else,” I say,

  and I don’t try to explain

  why I can’t eat pig,

  because I came over to Eunice’s house

  to play.

  I don’t want my Jewish eating rules

  to get in the way.

  My Dumb Neighbor

  Peggy Schmidt,

  this new girl in the neighborhood,

  is coming over to play

  for the very first time.

  I open the front door

  and find her staring up

  at our doorjamb.

  “What’s that thing?” she points.

  “It’s a mezuzah—

  a Jewish thing,” I tell her.

  Then we go down to the cellar

  to cut out paper doll clothes

  and she’s looking at me

  with eyes wider than bicycle tires.

  She comes right up to me

  and starts poking her fingers

  through the black curls

  on the top of my head.

  “What are you doing?” I ask.

  “I’m looking for your horns,” she says.

  I’m not usually a shouter,

  but I’m sure you could hear my voice

  in the next county

  yelling, “WHAT?”

  Mom told me

  that there are dumb people who think

  that Jews have horns.

  Only I never thought

  I’d meet one

  in my own house.

  After School

  Jimmy Lenchowski chases me

  like an angry storm

  and calls me “Jew bagel”

  and screams at me

  about how I killed Jesus Christ.

  When he comes after me,

  my stomach starts jumping rope

  and I run like a rabbit

  to escape his attack,

  run all the way home

  and never look back.

  Maybe I Should Be More Like Marian

  Say what I feel,

  do what I want,

  act on a dare.

  Maybe I should be more like Marian.

  Go where I want,

  Make myself heard,

  never be scared.

  The Memory Dance

  Bubby Etta comes to visit

  and I ask her to tell us a

  how-it-was-in-the-old-country story.

  First she closes her eyes,

  to see the past better, I guess.

  Then her body starts to sway

  like she’s doing a memory dance

  and the words,

  in her old-country accent,

  come

  tumbling

  out.

  "In Russia I was a midwife.

  One night a man knocked on my door.

  ‘The baby’s coming; the baby’s coming' he yelled.

  "I rushed to his house with him.

  It vas outside of our village,

  where no Jews were allowed.

  "I brought out the baby from the mother

  and then I brought another baby from the mother

  and then I brought the third baby from the mother.

  "The man was so shocked

  he fainted.

  "I brought thousands of babies into this world

  and never lost even one.

  "They trusted me

  with their babies,

  but they called my people

  zhyd.

  "They trusted me

  with their babies,

  but they wouldn’t let the Jews

  study at university

  or vote

  or learn Russian in school

  or live where we wanted.

  "They took us from our homes

  in the middle of the night

  and marched us through the streets,

  and sometimes they beat us...

  "but they trusted me

  with their babies"

  Bubby stops swaying,

  opens her eyes,

  wipes the wetness from her cheeks,

  and says,

  "Here in America, I can bring babies into this world

  and I can live where I want

  and I am not afraid

  to be who I am."

  Even in America

  Today after school,

  when Jimmy Lenchowski

  starts yelling

  about how I killed Jesus Christ,

  I think about the story

  Bubby told me yesterday

  and how in America

  she doesn’t have to be afraid

  to be who she is.

  Well, neither do I.

  So for the first time

  I yell right back at Jimmy,

  “I couldn’t have killed Jesus,

  because I wasn’t even born then,

  but my brothers are going to kill you

  if you don’t leave me alone!

  And believe me,

  I have a lot of them.”

  Jimmy’s eyebrows shoot up

  and he stands there

  looking like he just got punched.

  Then he turns and runs

  as if my brothers are at his heels.

  And after that,

  I’m not one bit scared

  of Jimmy Lenchowski

  anymore.

  Maybe I’m Not Cut Out to Be the Good Little Mother

  There’s always someone in this family

  who needs something from me,

  always someone pestering me.

  I’m just trying to do my homework

  at the kitchen table

  when Annette asks me to cut a kaiser roll

  for her.

  Eager to get back to my homework,

  I snatch the knife

  and slice more than the kaiser roll.

  Suddenly blood’s gushing out

  of my finger

  and a piece of it’s dan
gling

  like a yo-yo on a string.

  Annette’s pointing at it,

  screaming, “Blood!”

  like my head’s been chopped off.

  Then she runs for Raymond,

  who rushes me to the corner druggist.

  The druggist wraps my finger

  tightly in cotton

  and holds it

  till the blood stops spurting.

  I think I’ll stay

  far away from kaiser rolls

  for a while

  (and maybe little sisters

  who need me to do things for them, too),

  at least until my finger

  stops hurting.

  Raymond Gets into Trouble

  A postcard comes home

  from Hebrew school.

  “Raymond Paul absent for a week,” it says.

  “Where were you?” Dad asks him.

  Raymond tells him the truth.

  “I was watching the serials

  at the Roxy Theatre.”

  “I’ll fix you, Raymond,” Dad says.

  Then he tells me to go upstairs

  and get my brightest dress.

  I come down with the rainbow one.

  Dad makes him put it on

  and go outside

  when it’s time for his buddies to gather

  in the back alley.

  That fixes Raymond, all right.

  He decides he looks much better

  in Hebrew school

  than in my rainbow dress.

  Not Everything Can Be Mended

  I’m squished in bed

  between Marian and Annette,

  thinking about Ray

  and how his friends were all snickering

  when they saw him

  and how I wouldn’t want to be Ray.

  And even though it’s really late,

  I just can’t sleep,

  so I go downstairs.

  Mom’s sitting in the overstuffed armchair,

  staring right through the picture

  on the wall

  of her father in Russia.

  She has a threaded needle in one hand,

  a button in the other,

  and a crumpled shirt on her lap.

  A pile of clothes lies next to her,

  waiting to be mended.

  And I don’t know why,

  but she starts telling me

  this story that I never heard before

  about Bubby Etta,

  about how she divorced Mom’s father

  and married Jacob,

  about how she put Mom in a baby basket

  and left her on Mom’s father’s doorstep

  in Russia,

  while Bubby Etta sailed for America

  with her new husband, Jacob,

  and promised to send for Mom

  as soon as she had the money for a ticket,

  but it took thirteen years

  before Bubby sent the ticket.

  That’s when I make up my mind

  to stop talking to Bubby Etta

  for at least

  thirteen years.

  Staying Mad

  After school the next day

  I’m on my way past

  Bubby Etta’s house

  on Baltimore Street.

  I think I smell her chicken schmaltz soup

  with pieces of challah floating in it

  that she makes special for me

  when I stop by,

  or maybe she’s baking her pirogen

  with raisins and nuts,

  soaked in so much honey

  that when I take a bite,

  it drizzles down my chin.

  She’s probably wearing her housedress

  that looks like a flower garden,

  and if I went inside,

  I bet she’d wrap me in her hugging arms

  the minute she saw me.

  I’d stay in those arms

  for a while,

  since it’s hard to get hugs in my house.

  Then she’d want to know all about

  what I’ve been doing,

  and she’d listen hard,

  like I was the only grandchild she had.

  I’d talk for a while

  because good listeners

  are hard to find in my house.

  But I won’t stop in

  on Baltimore Street

  today.

  No.

  Today

  I’ll walk right by.

  A Bad Sign

  When I finally get home,

  my head still filled with thoughts

  of all I’m missing at Bubby’s,

  I see a sign posted in front

  of our row house—

  AUCTION.

  I go inside to ask Mom what it means,

  and she tells me

  that our house will be sold

  because Dad loaned some money

  to Bubby Etta’s husband, Jacob,

  and he couldn’t pay Dad back.

  “How can we lose our house

  just because Zayde Jacob

  couldn’t pay Dad back?”

  I ask.

  Now I’m even madder

  at Bubby Etta.

  First she leaves Mom in Russia

  and now her husband

  leaves us without a house.

  My insides feel like I swallowed

  a whole bucketful of needles,

  and I try not to cry.

  “Where will we live?” I ask Mom.

  But I don’t get any answers.

  That Night

  Dad writes a letter

  to President Roosevelt,

  asking for his help.

  And I start picturing all of us kids

  being sent to an orphanage

  or sleeping in the diner.

  So I go inside and start praying

  as hard as I can

  that we’ll get to keep our house.

  I never prayed for anything before,

  but this sure is worth praying

  my heart out for.

  Somebody Listened

  It’s only been ten days

  since Dad sent the letter

  and I prayed my heart out,

  so I don’t know

  who answered our prayers first,

  God or the president,

  but when I get home from school today,

  the auction sign is gone

  and the house I’ve lived in

  my whole entire life

  is still ours.

  I feel tons lighter

  and want to hug and kiss somebody,

  maybe even President Roosevelt,

  who has become my family’s

  hero.

  An Explanation, Sort Of

  When Mom gets home from work,

  before she starts cooking dinner,

  she takes me aside.

  “Bubby Etta tells me

  you haven’t stopped by

  to see her lately,” she says.

  “I don’t want to see her,” I say.

  “She left you in Russia,

  and Zayde Jacob almost

  left us without a house.”

  “Edith, you must stop

  being mad at Bubby Etta,” she says.

  “But how could she leave you behind?”

  I ask,

  getting mad all over again.

  “I was a baby, too little to travel.

  Many making that journey

  died on the way,” she says.

  “Bubby did the best

  that she could.”

  “Would you ever leave me behind?”

  I ask Mom.

  “I would never

  leave any of my children

  behind,” she says.

  And I believe her.

  Disappearing Act

  Today I take the long way home

  so I won’t have to pass

  by Bubby Etta
’s house

  since I’m still not

  ready to forgive her.

  When I get home,

  Melvin runs to greet me,

  his eyes as wide as potato latkes.

  He grabs my arm with his sticky hands.

  “Come ’ere!” he yells

  as he pulls me toward the parlor.

  “What is it, Melvin?” I ask.

  Then I hear a tiny voice cry out,

  “We’re here inside!”

  “Where?” I call back.

  “In dere,” Melvin says,

  pointing to the folded-up bed,

  and all I see sticking out...

  is Jackie’s puny head.

  They’re Lucky I Found Them

  Lenny, Sol, and Jack

  said Mom left them sleeping

 

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