Friday, March 30, 2012
The Passover Kid
It was only a few weeks until Passover, and our home was buzzing with activity . Every member of our family was caught up in the frenzy of moving, cleaning and cooking that swept like a giant wave through the house.
As a young boy,there were probably a million things I would rather have done than wash the tile walls in our kitchen. But, hour after tedious hour, I perched on a step stool with a bucket full of hot soap suds, a sponge, and an endless supply of clean rags. Preparing for Passover in the traditional Jewish home meant hunting down and killing every trace of "chometz" or leavened products, including any that could have migrated to the walls. This was mega spring cleaning and in our house, it was all- out war against "chometz." Just when I thought I was done,Mom would come over to inspect my work and utter the dreaded words,"You missed a whole section over there." . When I finally finished ,the yellow ceramic tile fairly gleamed. All done until next year!
Oddly enough,though, I really loved my other task, lugging crates and bushels of Passover dishes up from the basement. Once they were on the back porch, I carefully unwrapped the newspaper from the plates, cups, saucers, glasses, pots and pans and began to catch up on what happened the year before. I guess you could call it Jewish microfilm. After reading the front page, comic and movie sections, the paper was discarded, but after Passover, fresh newspaper was wrapped around the dishes, and a new time capsule was created.
To my unbridled joy,the arrival of Passover at our house meant open season on seltzer and soda. For reasons only known to my parents, we weren't allowed to have soda in the house most of the year. I suspect it had to do with the high sugar content and the absence of diet soda in those days. But come Passover, suddenly cases of ginger ale and cola magically appeared, along with my favorite, seltzer in old fashioned siphon bottles. I'm talking about the kind of bottles that clowns used to squirted each other in a circus. Seltzer in siphons also had major carbonation and could produce a burp heard in the next neighborhood. The best part about having soda was that, after Passover, we could return the empties and spend the deposits on comic books and baseball cards.
Closing my eyes, I can still picture our family seders. First, of course, there's Dad, who led every seder with a consummate skill. born of long practice. He made sure we all had equal parts of the Haggadah to read. At the beginning of the seder, he hid the afikomen in impossible places and doled out rewards when we found it.
Sitting next to Dad, I see a much younger me. . As a Hebrew School student and a singer in the synagogue choir, I loved doing the readings in Hebrew and singing the traditional songs. Next to me was my brother, Bob, who, being the youngest, always got the honor of starting the seder with the Four Questions, that began the telling of the Passover story.
Across from Bob sat my sister, Judi, who was quite well schooled in Hebrew and loved to sing all of the songs in the Haggadah. When Judi lived in Chicago for a short while, her husband, Al came to our seders, as well as my nephew Paul, who was just a little guy then.
At the other end of the table, close to the kitchen, was Mom. She joined in on all of the singing and reading, but her specialty was the festive meal. Her chicken soup was heavenly, floating with matzoh balls and carrots. She also served us gefilte fish in jelled sauce, tender roast chicken, sweet matzoh kugel, fresh steamed asparagus, green salad, and fruit cocktail in a fancy sherbet cup. Of course, there was always plenty of matzoh to go around, and lots of dried fruit to counteract the dreaded effects of matzoh. And, as I mentioned earlier, the ban on soft drinks was temporarily lifted.
Next to my mother sat Nanny, my dad's mother. She liked to make jokes with my mother about the matzoh balls. Every year, they were either too soft, or too hard. Nanny had her own recipe for making gefilte fish because Manischewitz from the jar would never do. As a concession to my mother, she chopped, mixed and cooked her homemade recipe in our basement.
Sitting next to my grandmother was Tante, my wonderful great-aunt Hattie. She always smiled quietly, taking everything in and reading every word of the Haggadah in Hebrew.
Passover seders were also a time when the family's treasured engraved silver kiddush cups were taken out of the credenza, polished to a high gloss and used. These cups came from Austro-Hungary with my father's parents, and Israel from a trip Dad had made. My brother, my father and I each had our own cups.Four times during the seder, everyone drank a full cup of sweet kosher wine. Even though the kids portion was considerably smaller, we used the wine as an excuse to act silly, and later it made it hard to stay up past our bed time.
In a place of honor, in the middle of the table, rested a large silver goblet reserved for Elijah. Near the end of the service, my mother opened the front door while Dad chanted a prayer . Tradition had it that the prophet Elijah visited every home and took a sip from his cup. We would stare intensely into Elijah's cup and will the wine to go down. I was absolutely sure the an inch or so of red wine was missing from the goblet and that Elijah had been at our seder.
In addition to the silver wine cups, our family had an antique gilt edged white Passover plate with Hebrew letters indicating the ceremonial objects. Every year, there sprang up a fresh debate about what went where. The problem would be resolved by using a hagaddah as a reference, but then start up again with the question of which translation was correct. Some years, potatoes won out over celery, some years we chewed parsley and made faces. The test always came when it came time to sample the horseradish. My dad insisted that we have the strong white variety ,and it always took the top of my head off.
Finally, next to the seder plate was an ornately hand embroidered matzah cover that held the traditional three pieces of ceremonial matzah used during the seder. Half of one piece was reserved for the afikomen and hidden somewhere for the children to find after the meal . Dad was notorious for stowing the afikomen away in hard to find places,so we had to work hard to get our rewards. One year, my brother and I were very much caught up in the cowboy craze and managed to ransom the afikomen for Long Ranger cap pistols.
Somehow, I'm sure the Masked Man would have approved.
Our seder ended with everyone joining in on traditional Passover songs.By that time, the wine had taken effect, and the kids were struggling to stay awake. When the last piece of matzah had been eaten and the last glass of soda had been consumed, we helped clear the table, wash the dishes and took our exceedingly full stomachs to bed.
The next morning, instead of going to work or school, we went to services at our synagogue, and then repeated the entire process that evening for the second seder.
Slowly, inevitably, time marches on. Countless Passovers have come and gone.
Sadly,my grandmother Helen, great aunt Hattie, Mom, Dad, sister Judi, and brother-in-law Al have left empty seats at the seder table, with the next generation of our children taking their place, carrying on our tradition for the many Passovers yet to come. The silver is gleaming, the candles have been lit. It's time for me to begin the seder.
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Music for My Father
Just before the onset of World War I, my grandfather, Israel Marder, left the little town of Brode in the Austro-Hungarian Empire to make a new life in America. My father, Sol, was very young at the time. He and my grandmother, Helen,were supposed to join him when Grandpa could afford money for their steamship tickets. Unfortunately, the war intervened, leaving family on both sides of the ocean, not to be reunited until 1920.
When Dad and his mother finally said farewell to Brode, they applied for a joint passport that recounts their trip across Europe to Le Havre, France where they planned to board a boat for the United States. At one border crossing, after learning that they were Jews, the guards began to taunt them and shoot over their heads . Dad was immediately shoved down into a ditch and warned not to raise his head .Shots were fired that sounded like bees buzzing.Heedless of the warning, a boy next to him got to his knees. With a cry, he fell over dead.
The Polish Eagle in Dad's passport is boldly stamped over an entry that documents their stay in a little Polish town called Auswieczem. Twenty years later, it was the site of the infamous Ausweitz death camp. Every time I look at this passport, I am struck with what would have happened if my grandmother and father had stayed there.
Never-the less, they somehow arrived at LeHavre. Dad and Grandma Helen (we called her" Nanny") sailed across the Atlantic to New York City. The very first thing they saw was a little boy eating a banana. Right then and there, Dad decided he wanted one. Somehow, he was able to get that banana, but didn't know that it had to be peeled. After biting into the skin, he started to throw it away. People laughed at him, calling him a "greenie" or "greenhorn."They were right;.he had an awful lot to learn. After a short stay on Ellis Island, both were finally cleared for the long train ride to Chicago, where they were met by my grandfather.
The Marder family settled a few blocks from the famous Maxwell Street Market,, a neighborhood already heavily populated by newly arrived Jewish immigrants. Like many others of their generation, my grandparents wanted their son to learn English and become educated in the ways of their newly adopted country. Dad was soon enrolled in a school near his home. One day, as my dad tells it, he got in deep trouble with his teacher over a remark she made about Grandma. Becoming incensed, Dad took off his heavy shoe and heaved it at the woman. As you might expect, that got him thrown out of school.
Instead of telling his parents, Sol secretly enrolled himself in another neighborhood school, where apparently he did very well . Speaking Polish, Yiddish and German, my father soon added English to his list of languages, and began earning pocket money by tutoring students after school.
As a high school student, Dad attended Harrison High , then Crane College. His goal was to become a physician. The untimely death of my grandfather, however, meant he now needed to support his mother. Instead of attending medical school, Dad chose to become a chiropodist (or as it is now called, podiatrist) because the course of study was shorter. He graduated from the Chicago College of Chiropody and proudly set up his new practice on the west side of Chicago, on the busy corner of Madison and Western. He shared an office space with a dentist with whom he traded professional services, fixing Dr. Stein's feet in exchange for free dental care.
It was about this time that my father met the beautiful, dark haired young woman that he would marry.There is a photo of my parents together at this time at a beach. Mom, slim and lovely, stands with her arm around Dad's waist. He is dressed in a light linen suit, with wavy, slicked down dark hair and a hint of a stylish mustache. What a striking couple they were! Jean and Sol married in 1933 with the blessings of both families.
In 1939 my sister, Judi ,was born.Then, when the U.S entered the World War II, Dad was deferred because he was the sole support of his mother. He felt compelled to do something meaningful while his friends fought overseas, and so he volunteered to become a block warden. He patrolled the neighborhood with a helmet and flashlight, making sure houses were in compliance with air raid procedures, and was a first responder if medical attention was needed.
After the war, my parents decided to go into business for themselves. . Dad closed his practice, but wisely kept up his certification as a chiropodist. Mom had valuable experience working in her dad's clothing store.
Her youngest brother, my Uncle Maury, had just been discharged from the Army, and he generously helped Mom and Dad start a men's work and casual clothing store on the southwest side of Chicago.
One day, as my Grandmother Celia was making lunch for her son-in-law, she asked Dad to buy a raffle ticket. He declined, claiming that he'd never won anything in his life. Despite his protests, Grandma pulled out a dollar and bought the ticket for him. A week later, she was on the phone to my mother, excitedly telling her that Dad had won a new car. This was a big prize, new cars had been impossible to find during the war.
Also, it meant that my parents could drive across the city and visit my grandparents as often as they wanted.
One day, as my Grandmother Celia was making lunch for her son-in-law, she asked Dad to buy a raffle ticket. He declined, claiming that he'd never won anything in his life. Despite his protests, Grandma pulled out a dollar and bought the ticket for him. A week later, she was on the phone to my mother, excitedly telling her that Dad had won a new car. This was a big prize, new cars had been impossible to find during the war.
Also, it meant that my parents could drive across the city and visit my grandparents as often as they wanted.
For a number of years, my parents lived in an apartment in back of their store, with my grandmother watching my sister, Judi. Dad and Mom were devoted to each other, but he also had very strong ties to his mother. At times, I know it must have been hard trying to please the women in his life. Eventually, my family moved to a larger apartment near their store, where hopefully there was more space and more peace.
The year I was born, Dad sponsored my great-aunt Hattie, enabling her to emmigrate to the United States. I'm sure it made my grandmother very happy to be finally reunited with her sister after so many long years. In order to accommodate his extended family , Dad and a friend purchased the two story apartment building that would become our new home on Francisco Avenue. Together with my great-aunt, we now had six family members under one roof.
.As a little boy, I remember telling my dad I had a sharp pain on the bottom of my foot. He sat me down at the kitchen table, took off my shoe and sock and carefully examined the sole of my foot. In very simple terms, he explained that I had a plantar's wart and that he had a doctor friend who could fix it. The next day, I was introduced to Dad's friend, Dr. Zipperman, who treated me over the next few weeks. Every time I went there, Dr. Zipperman told me what a great doctor my father was. I was very impressed and extremely proud of Dad. That was the first time I knew that he was a skilled podiatrist.
In the early 60's, two seemingly unrelated events changed my father's career path. Nearby Midway Airport closed, because its small runways couldn't accommodate the new jets that needed to land there. This took away a large amount of business from my parents' store, because the Midway ground crews had always shopped there. As luck would have it, a nearby podiatrist announced his retirement and was searching for someone to take over his practice. Dad took a calculated risk and bought out Dr. Lloyd, who had a substantial patient following. Dad's practice soon began to thrive. I know it meant a great deal to him to return to his chosen profession. My mother began to take on more responsibility, and business slowly improved.
When I was a junior in high school, I was running on a cinder track in during gym class. Someone in back of me gave my back a deliberate shove and I sprawled on the ground. Because I used my hands to break my fall, they were the only things that were hurt badly. There were guys in my class no one wanted to mess with, so I said nothing to anyone. When I got to my parents' store, my mother took one look at the gravel embedded in my hands and told me to go to Dad's office.
This was the first time I became my father's patient, With infinite care, Dad cleaned me up, then sat me in
his examining chair with a bright light above it. Pulling on rubber gloves, and using a magnfier over his glasses, he began to pick out each piece of gravel with a probe and a tiny pair of tweezers. After he finally finished, he applied an antibiotic cream and gave me a couple of aspirin for the pain. No one could have treated me with more skill or kindness. I saw Dad in a whole new light after that.
When I was a junior in high school, I was running on a cinder track in during gym class. Someone in back of me gave my back a deliberate shove and I sprawled on the ground. Because I used my hands to break my fall, they were the only things that were hurt badly. There were guys in my class no one wanted to mess with, so I said nothing to anyone. When I got to my parents' store, my mother took one look at the gravel embedded in my hands and told me to go to Dad's office.
This was the first time I became my father's patient, With infinite care, Dad cleaned me up, then sat me in
his examining chair with a bright light above it. Pulling on rubber gloves, and using a magnfier over his glasses, he began to pick out each piece of gravel with a probe and a tiny pair of tweezers. After he finally finished, he applied an antibiotic cream and gave me a couple of aspirin for the pain. No one could have treated me with more skill or kindness. I saw Dad in a whole new light after that.
Like Mom, Dad was very involved in Jewish causes. He served on our synagogue board and was a charter member of the local B'nai Brith men's lodge . I have a vivid memory of Dad editing a monthly bulletin on our dining room table that he mailed to local members. He also served as an advisor to high school boys who belonged the Bnai Brith Youth. Eventually, he took office as president of the Midwest Region. Through Bnai Brith, my father worked with prominent Chicagoans like Mayor Daley and Cardinal Joseph Stritch. One summer,on a mission to Israel, he was honored to meet with David Ben Gurion. Finally, my father was always a strong voice against anti-Semitism and an active member of the Anti-Defamation League.
While I've inherited the love of good literature from my mother, I know Dad strongly influenced my passion for music.
He loved to listen to Hebrew recordings of Cantors Jan Pearce and Richard Tucker and soundtracks from musicals like " Fiddler on the Roof." Every Passover, Dad led our family seders, chanting the songs from the Hagadah in beautiful, flawless Hebrew.I can see him now at the head of our dining room table, in a crisp white shirt and striped tie, holding up his silver wine cup as he sings the holiday Kiddush. My place was always on his right, and as I got older, I was able to sing some of the service with him.
Dad urged me to join our synagogue choir, made sure that I practiced my accordion in grade school, was delighted that I took up the bass clarinet and saxophone in high school, and really loved hearing me play guitar. When my first guitar was carelessly broken on a high school trip, Dad took me to a studio in the Loop and replaced it because he knew how much I love to play. My junior year, with the help of my parents, our Jewish youth group organized a "hootenanny" or folk concert.
When my two friends and I appeared on stage sing and play guitar, sure enough,there was Dad sitting next to Mom. smiling and clapping along with the music.
There is much more to tell about my relationship with my father, but it's a story for another time and place.
When Dad's health failed, he moved to a retirement home. He loved to take me to the old fashioned ice cream parlor there and treat me to a dish of my favorite coffee ice cream. When my daughter, Julie, was a toddler, Dad's eyes would light up when we took her to visit.
Just a week before the Jewish New Year in 1990, Dad passed away. Our rabbi wisely told me that, although I would be in mourning, he would allow me to sing in the High Holiday services, He said that it would help me get through the grieving period. He was right. The songs I sang were, as always, for my father.
He loved to listen to Hebrew recordings of Cantors Jan Pearce and Richard Tucker and soundtracks from musicals like " Fiddler on the Roof." Every Passover, Dad led our family seders, chanting the songs from the Hagadah in beautiful, flawless Hebrew.I can see him now at the head of our dining room table, in a crisp white shirt and striped tie, holding up his silver wine cup as he sings the holiday Kiddush. My place was always on his right, and as I got older, I was able to sing some of the service with him.
Dad urged me to join our synagogue choir, made sure that I practiced my accordion in grade school, was delighted that I took up the bass clarinet and saxophone in high school, and really loved hearing me play guitar. When my first guitar was carelessly broken on a high school trip, Dad took me to a studio in the Loop and replaced it because he knew how much I love to play. My junior year, with the help of my parents, our Jewish youth group organized a "hootenanny" or folk concert.
When my two friends and I appeared on stage sing and play guitar, sure enough,there was Dad sitting next to Mom. smiling and clapping along with the music.
There is much more to tell about my relationship with my father, but it's a story for another time and place.
When Dad's health failed, he moved to a retirement home. He loved to take me to the old fashioned ice cream parlor there and treat me to a dish of my favorite coffee ice cream. When my daughter, Julie, was a toddler, Dad's eyes would light up when we took her to visit.
Just a week before the Jewish New Year in 1990, Dad passed away. Our rabbi wisely told me that, although I would be in mourning, he would allow me to sing in the High Holiday services, He said that it would help me get through the grieving period. He was right. The songs I sang were, as always, for my father.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Sing a New Song
As a young boy with a high voice, and a real passion for singing, I tried out for the choir at our synagogue. You just needed to sing on key , carry a tune reasonably well and do a passable job of reading Hebrew. A number of my friends were already in the choir, so I was eager and proud to join them.
At first, I only sang at Friday night services, which were only a little over an hour long . I thought it was fun being up near the altar, singing my heart out in a long black robe with a funny white collar. Our quirky choir leader, Mr. Squire,was an elderly man with a tuning fork and smelled like menthol He muttered under his breath when we were out of tune. I belonged to the boy alto section; Mr. Squire affectionately called us his "little cockaroaches" if we weren't on key or paying attention. Despite his grumbling, I think old Mr. Squire really like teaching us to sing. When we were at our best, he'd nod his head and smile.
To conclude each Sabbath service, it was customary for a choir boy to chant the "Kiddush" or traditional blessing over the wine. When it eventually was my turn, I had to ignore about a million butterflies in my stomach. Walking slowly from the choir section, I nodded to the rabbi who smiled and handed me a silver goblet brimming with wine. I climbed up the step under the podium, then,.taking a deep breath, I began to sing into the microphone. Much to my amazement, my voice soared over the congregation. I looked up and saw my mom and dad beaming with pride.
I did a good job of completing the prayer without a hitch, and then raised the full cup to my lips. As I took a big gulp, the fumes immediately went straight to my head. The congregation laughed as my face and ears turned as red as the kosher wine. I put the cup down. The rabbi looked at me as if to say" Next time, ask for grape juice." Thanks, I'll remember that.
The year I turned ten , I became a member of the select High Holiday choir. We rehearsed during the last weeks of summer, in preparation for the Jewish New Year in the early fall . Our synagogue was not at all air conditioned, so we sweated as much as we sang. Also, we never knew from year to year who the synagogue would hire as a cantor; we had to adapt to a new person's habits each time. One distinguished gentleman sported a fedora and smoked foul smelling black Parodi cigars, claiming they soothed his throat. Imagine someone doing that at choir practice today! Each cantor brought a special style to our choir and I learned something from all of them.
Singing for the holidays meant standing around a podium for at least three hours on both days of Rosh Hashonah and Yom Kippur. Because it was often very warm, we were allowed to wear t-shirts under our robes. Even so, most of us came equipped with packets of Wet-wipes to cool us off. An even bigger challenge came on Yom Kippur, because upon turning thirteen you were obligated to fast from sunset to sunset. Younger boys would rush home between the afternoon and evening service and grab a light snack to keep them going. For our efforts, the synagogue honored us with a small stipend ,depending on our years of singing in the choir. I honestly don't think the money made that much of a difference to me. I just loved the intricate , sacred melodies and being part of the service.
Then, just before I entered high school, my high alto voice dropped an octave, and I had to learn to be a tenor. Mr. Squire had retired, and our leader was Mr. Sher, a skilled choir master who had a more modern outlook. Instead of just using prayer books, he gave us complicated arrangements on sheet music. This took some getting used to, as I struggled to gain control over my new ,lower voice. Thanks to my friend , Art, a tenor with a beautiful voice and a college major in music, I was soon able to sing the new part with confidence. I remained in Peter Sher's choir until end the of high school.
I regret to say that I never joined a choir in college; looking back, I guess I was too wrapped up in playing folk music on my guitar.It wasn't until much later,as an adult, that I once again lent my voice to a synagogue choir. For a number of memorable years, I sang in the Sabbath evening and High Holiday choirs in Buffalo Grove. We were led by a cantor with a rich, beautiful voice, who had come to our synagogue complete with his family of singers. Each of his sons had real talent, and Cantor Aberman wisely built the choir around them. Also, the cantor was married to a woman with a gorgeous voice. Even though our choir was all male, no one ever objected to Sandy's clear soprano from her seat in the front row. Eventually ,each of the cantor's sons married,, had children and moved to the city. Finally when the cantor and his wife moved to be closer to their sons and many grandchildren, the choir was disbanded. I felt lost without a place to sing.
When our family considered joining a new synagogue in Northbrook, one of my first questions was "Do you have a choir?" The answer was no, but that didn't deter me. I told the rabbi that I had some vocal experience, and he said that with practise, I could lead part of the Saturday services. After a few months, I thought I was ready, and we set a date for my debut as a soloist. Besides having to memorize all of the melodies, I had to be sure I pronounced the Hebrew correctly.
Fighting the old familiar butterflies, when the time came, I think I did fairly well.
Except, that is, when I had to return the Torah scroll to the ark while singing.
Leave it to me, I started to make a wrong turn and would have ended up singing to a wall, if it weren't for a friend who tapped me on the shoulder and turned me around.
One year, there actually was a holiday choir in the synagogue. We sang in the orthodox service, led by a cantor with a marvelous, high voice. Much to my dismay, this was a one time occurance. When the synagogue hired a new cantor, he sang by himself, but asked for volunteers to join him in the brief service that ended Yom Kippur. A group of us came up and we had an impromptu choir. This tradition continued from year to year, but wasn't nearly enough to satisfy my passion for choral singing.
Just recently ,my wife suggested that I search for a real choir to fill the void.. I scoured the internet for Jewish groups in our vicinity and found Kol Zimrah , a choral group in the northern suburbs. Getting up my courage, I arranged for an audition. The director gave me some scales to sing, asked me to read sheet music, then had me sing a song I had prepared from a prayer book. He must have liked what he heard, because a few minutes later he introduced me to the choir as the newest second tenor. I was delighted!
I sat down in the tenor section and immediately, the men on both sides of began to fill me in. Looking at a thick folio of music I was both impressed and overwhelmed at the complexity of the pieces I needed to learn.
Before I knew it, Richard, our director, raised his hands and fifty men and women instantly filled the room their amazing voices. Michael, the tenor on my right, held up the score so I could see it and traced his finger over the notes he was singing. Slowly, I caught on, and before too long, began to softly follow his lead.
After a little while, I grew more courageous, and sang a bit louder. There was a tricky rest in one song that demanded everyone to stop singing for a beat. I , of course, blasted right through it. The director held up his finger as if to say, "that's one...." After restarting the measure, I did it again. Richard shook his head and whispered, "That's two..." The third time, I got it right. Everyone clapped, and, like a little kid, I pulled my kippah over my red face in embarrassment. From then on, I paid much closer attention to the director.
Each time we began a new song, Richard patiently worked with us to ensure we understood all the nuances in it: rhythm, breath control, dynamics and the secret of blending into one beautiful voice.. This was hard work for me, but I really enjoyed it, and began to smile while I sang.
At the end of the evening, I was tired, but happy. As we packed up our music , a woman from the alto section came over to me. "Stuart, remember me?" she said, putting her arm around my shoulder. Her face was familiar, but I couldn't quite place it. " I'm Myra...I sang at your wedding." I laughed in amazement and hugged her.
When we were married in August of 1976, my wife's friend brought her guitar and her sweet voice to our wedding. Myra sang and strummed and softly in Hebrew as we walked up to the chuppah, adding just the perfect touch to our wedding ceremony.
After Maxine left her job as a social worker, Myra assumed her position. The years went by, and we lost touch with her. Now, a lifetime later, she was back and in the choir I had just joined.
I strongly believe that everything in life is for a purpose. I know that this seemingly chance reunion with Myra is a sign I've found a wonderful new place to sing,
Monday, February 27, 2012
Finding My Way
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The gargoyles atop Altgeld Hall |
Unlike some of my friends, I never had any doubt about where I wanted to go to college.Northern Illinois University was far enough away from home to make me feel independent, yet close enough to jump on a Greyhound for a weekend trip back to the city. By the middle of my high school senior year, I had been accepted and was proudly wearing my N.I.U Huskie sweatshirts to class.

That July,along with about 40 other members of the class of 1969,, I attended orientation in Neptune Hall, a large dorm in the middle of campus. We listened to talks from counselors, sweated over our fall class schedules, and wore down our number 2 pencils taking hours of placement tests.
Finally, after being treated to a less than spectacular dorm lunch, we were left on our own to roam around the campus. I met up with two high school friends and we walked over to the Student Union to buy t-shirts for ourselves and assorted souvenirs for our families. As we wound our way back to the dorm, one of my friends remarked how easy it would be to get lost.
That fall, my dad drove me and two of my friends to college. Our car was fully loaded, because we all were moving into the dorms on the same day. About half way to DeKalb, the car got a flat tire. In order to get to the spare, of course, we had to unload the trunk. We were quite a sight, with three large footlockers and assorted junk piled up by the side of the road. Nevertheless, with all of us pitching in, and my dad supervising,we got the flat off, the spare tire on , the luggage reloaded, and we were on our way in record time.
When we arrived, the campus was pretty busy, even though classes didn't start unil the following Monday. We found Lincoln Hall,my new home for the coming year, and when I got to my room., the lower bunk was made, there were books on the shelves, clothes in one closet, but my roommate was nowhere to be found.
I unpacked, put my clothes away, made my bed, stowed the rest of my belongings, and hugged my dad goodbye. He told me to study hard and watch out for "party girls." Um...ok.
After he left, I unpacked my guitar and started to play. In a little while , there was a knock on the door, and a short, slightly built dark haired guy stuck his head in.
"Hi, I'm Joe, "he said," and I'm looking for Brett, your roommate."
I told him that I hadn't seen him, and stuck out my hand to say hello.
Joe's eyes lit up when he saw what I held in my other hand.
"Do you mind?" he asked, reaching for my guitar.
I was curious to hear him play and told him to go ahead.
Joe began strumming and singing Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind."
I had a new friend!
We swapped my guitar back and forth for a while, then Joe said," I live off campus.
We could walk over and get my guitar, maybe get something to eat."
With no plans at all ,and the prospect of spending the rest of the day in an empty dorm, I was happy to go along. I left a note for Brett, and we started off to Joe's apartment. It only took about ten minutes to get there, and since I had been most of that way before, I didn't pay too much attention to where we were going.
Not, that is, until we approached the eastern edge of campus. There was old Altgeld Hall, looking for all the world like a haunted castle. Joe told me Altgeld had been the first building on campus back when Northern was a teacher's college before the turn of the 20th century. The castle was topped with towers and fierce, ugly gargoyles that spouted water when it rained. Joe told me the story about the ghosts of old students who still roamed the upper towers. .As we continued walking, I glanced over my shoulder. The gargoyles glared back as if to say " What, you never saw a gargoyle before?"
Joe's "apartment" was in a home a mile or so off campus. Freshmen who didn't get a dorm assignment were put up in private housing .This house had been subdivided and Joe's tiny room was actually in the basement. He had use of the communal kitchen, dining area and bathroom, and could watch t.v. in a small living room on the first floor. I thought it was kind of quaint, but really couldn't see living there all year. Joe was quick to to point out one major advantage this place had over dorm living. You could have beer whenever you felt like it. His housemates had chipped in and the refrigerator was well stocked. In those days, beer was really inexpensive, so all you needed was someone with an ID to make a run to a liquor store. Looking in the fridge, I saw cases of Schlitz and Grain Belt, equally tasty and cheap.
Both of us were hungry, so heading to a supermarket in town, we got the makings for hamburgers.
Instead of broiling the burgers, Joe fried them in a skillet. I have to admit that although they were greasy, they turned out really well. With a bottle of cold Grain Belt, potato chips and a pickle, we sat down to a feast.
Until late that night,we drank beer, watched t.v., played our guitars, sang folk songs, told stupid jokes, talked about girls, and speculated about what classes would be like the coming week. Joe laughed when I admitted that I had two classes in Altgeld and cautioned me about the ghosts.
Eventually, Joe fell asleep on the couch, so I decided to find my way back to my dorm.
I really thought I knew where I was going, until I stopped in front of Altgeld Hall. It was full dark by then and a million crickets were chirping, and the cheap beers I had earlier were doing a number on my head.
Looking up, I saw the ugly gargoyles on top of the towers glaring down at me. They seemed to be saying, "Hah! You're back! Congratulations, Stuart, you are totally lost." And they were right...I was. The campus seemed unfamiliar, and I started to panic. I had no clue how I was going to make it back.
I circled the old castle building a few times. Suddenly, I could clearly see the lights from the the new high rise dorms in the distance. Putting one tired foot in front of the other, I found my way to Lincoln Hall and my roommate, Brett, who was patiently sitting on his bunk, waiting for me.
After introducing ourselves, he asked" Where the heck ya been? I was gonna take a shower and warsh my hair"
. Brett was from Peoria, so I was going to have to get used to his downstate twang.
I told him about Joe and how I'd spent the evening. When I got to the part about Altgeld Hall, he looked at me and said,"Heard that old castle's just plain haunted. I was you, I'd plan on stayin' far away."
Too tired to respond, I climbed up onto my bed and fell asleep listening to the crickets chirping in the late summer night.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Tramps and Thieves
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"I can get it cheaper." |
By the time I entered high school, I was putting in regular hours at our clothing store. I would come home from classes, have a snack, then walk a few blocks north to 63rd street and a mile to the store. When the weather turned ugly, I rode the bus from school and got off only a few steps from work.
There were times at our store when a fairly large number of customers needed help at once. That's when I kept a sharp eye out for shoplifters. Whether on the sales floor or putting away merchandise, I tried to stay near front of the store. From there, I had a good view of everything that was going on. Most of the time, I was successful in preventing our stock from disappearing.
One day, while my mom was busy with a customer, a number of scruffy looking boys came in to check out at the expensive full length Italian leather jackets on display near the front door.I recognized one of them who had come in an hour before to look around.
He examined at the price tags on the jackets and sneered,"That's real sharp,but I can get it a whole lot cheaper,"
" I don't think so, " I said," these are imported. Can I show you something a little less expensive?"
He didn't answer. Instead, he and his friends picked up the entire rack, and ran out the door,leather jackets and all. I was dumbstruck.
. Mom immediately dropped what she was doing and called the police. Without a second thought, I ran out the door and started chasing the thieves. As I started to gain on them , they dropped the jackets on the ground. For a split second, I thought I had won. Then, one of them shoved the jackets off the rack, pulling off a long, heavy metal section from its socket. He swung the pipe in two hands and came down hard on my shoulder .When he realized I wasn't giving up, he aimed for my head. I jerked backwards and beat a hasty retreat down the block.
Breathless, I ran back into the store. My mother was furious, both at the brazen shoplifters, and at me.
"Don't you EVER pull a stunt like that again," she said, her eyes blazing.
"The jackets are insured. Either the police will get them back, or we'll get money for them. But.. you aren't replaceable." Then she began to cry.
We never recovered the jackets, but were reimbursed for them. I kept looking for the kids who stole them, but they never came back.
Monday, February 20, 2012
Mmmm ..Chipped Beef on Toast!
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Includes a yummy recipe! |
When I joined the Army Reserves, I was assigned to the 374th Convalescent Center on the southeast side of Chicago. After being sworn in,they offered me the choice of two specialties: field lineman or cook. . Being a lineman meant climbing tall trees and telephone poles and stringing heavy lines under enemy fire. How much trouble could I get into in the kitchen? Without a second thought, I became a cook.
After eight challenging weeks of Basic Training at Fort Leonard Wood, everyone was more than ready for a change. Finally, things seemed to be looking up. Our drill sergeants were gradually morphing from merciless monsters into human beings. On the night before we graduated Basic Training,, they surprised us with a party, complete with all the beer we could drink. When Taps was played , we staggered to bed.,expecting to be woken at the break of dawn. Instead, we were allowed to sleep undisturbed until 8:00 the next morning,probably because the sergeants had as much beer as we did.
The next day, slightly hung over, but in full dress uniform with our newly earned rank sewn our sleeves, we marched in the graduation parade. With heads held mostly high, we strode past the reviewing stand. The platoon leaders gave the order ,"Present arms!" Up came our hands in perfect unison. Just like that, the toughest eight weeks of my life were over. Things were bound to improve.
That afternoon, everyone packed their bags and climbed aboard buses for advanced training as drivers , engineers, infantry, mechanics, medics and cooks. Reserve and National Guard soldiers would train only for eight more weeks and then return home. Those men who had enlisted or had been drafted into the Regular Army faced the strong certainty of a thirteen month tour of duty Viet Nam. Some of these soldiers would never see home again.
The ride to cook school took all of ten minutes. We were all prepared for the same harassment that we had experienced in Basic, but, to our delight, no one met us when we got off the bus. Wandering around the company area, we saw large, wooden two story building shaded by tall pine trees. In truth, the place looked more like a campground than an Army compound. After a bit, we found the orderly room and reported in for duty.
Inside, with his feet propped up on a desk, sat the company commander. He looked up, took our salutes, then offered each us a glass of cold orange juice. Was this a trick? Thumbing through the blue
folders that contained our records, the major glanced up at my name tag.
"Says here you're a college grad, Marder. That true?"
By now, I was tired of answering the same question that gotten me in trouble too many times.
"Truthfully, sir, I am," I said, bracing myself for the inevitable consequences.
"So you want to learn to cook, do you?" he demanded.
"Yes, sir, I do," I answered..
"Well , soldier, you've a little bit of grunge on your belt buckle, but other than that, you'll do fine."
I stood there, dumbstruck.
"That's all," the major said. "Go get yourselves settled. Chow is at 1200 hours You'll find it's better here than in Basic."
We saluted, did a quick about face, and beat a hasty retreat.
After drawing clean cook's whites, sheets, pillows and blankets from the supply sergeant , we walked over to our new barracks. It was a veritable five star hotel compared to the ones we had just left. The squad bay was wide and airy. A number of ceiling fans were doing a decent job of dealing with the Missouri heat. The washrooms were down the hall, rather than down the block. And, wonder of wonders, the toilets were in private stalls and the showers had curtains. Wow! What did we do to deserve this?
Soon the room began to fill up with new arrivals . After a while, out the corner of my eye, I saw a drill sergeant standing in the doorway. He had a smile on his face and his hands on his hips. Someone yelled "Attention!" and we froze into the position.
Now, I thought, we're in for it.
The drill sergeant looked us over, put us at ease and said," For the last eight weeks, you learned how to
be a soldier, now we're going to teach you how to cook. You'll go to classes every day. After six weeks, we'll assign you to work in a company mess hall somewhere on the base. There's a lot to learn, but you'll have the best instructors. They're all civilians, retired Army mess sergeants . Pay attention to what they have to teach you.
From now on, we expect you to keep yourselves clean. You'll have plenty of time to shower and shave every morning. You'll draw fresh whites every day. Get a haircut once a week and keep your hands clean and nails clipped. You will need to pass my inspection before you set foot into the classroom or kitchen. And by the way, you can talk to me, I promise I don't bite."
The next morning, we awoke at 6:30 AM, and were told to report outside in fatigues. For the next fifteen or so minutes, we jogged around the area, singing at the top of our lungs. Everyone was amazed at how easy this was. After being dismissed, we ran to the showers, then changed into our cook's whites. Our drill sergeant inspected us carefully, then said, "You've got a half hour before chow." He left the barracks and in two seconds we were all asleep.
For three hours in the morning and three in the afternoon, we attended classes.There we learned how to read and follow recipes that had been in the Army since World War II. We were lectured about sanitation, safety and fire prevention. After every class session, we went into the kitchen and were split into groups of four. Each group prepared the same dish. Our instructors judged how closely we followed the recipe and how we prepared it and how we presented the final product. Everything we made we ate. .The chipped beef on toast, or S**t on a Shingle was the most unappetizing dish we had to prepare and swallow. .Undoubtedly, you'll want to read more about this delicacy. Only the very bravest soldier would dare eat it.
Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast
Special Nostalgia Recipe
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Jean
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Jean Rasenick Marder- circa 1933 |
Jean Rasenick Marder was born in 1919, the daughter of Russian immigrants, Henry and Celia Rasenick. Her family first lived at Taylor and Paulina on the near west side of Chicago and later moved to the more prosperous Austin neighborhood. Mom had eight brothers and sister, only a small number of whom I remember today. Her family came from Motele, Belarus, a town that was utterly destroyed during World War II. My grandmother, Celia Cycz, was first cousin to Leonard and Phil Chess, the blues impresarios who ran Chess Records in the '50's and 60's in Chicago.
When she was sixteen years old, Jean left Austin High School to work in Grandpa Henry's store. There, she did tailoring and catered to the customers who came to buy all varieties of men's work and casual clothing. When she was 18 years old, she met my father, Sol, who was preparing to become a chiropodist, or podiatrist as they are called today. They became engaged, and in the winter of 1933, entered into a long and happy marriage.
My mother never finished high school, but in spite of that, set out to educate herself. She was a voracious reader. Any spare time she had, when she wasn't working hard in our store, raising her family of three, or involving herself with Jewish causes, my mother read. My fondest memory is of mom sitting at the kitchen table after supper with a cup of coffee and a book. The kids cleared the table and made a bee line for the t.v. in the living room. Likely ,my dad was stretched out on the couch, trying to get a nap while we bounced around on the cushions. Mom would stay in the kitchen, reading until she later joined us in front of the television. She cautioned us to let Dad nap and shooed us off the couch.
Mom had an eclectic taste in reading material. She would read the Sunday newspaper from cover to cover, making sure to check the advice of Ann Landers and the gossip of Irv Kupcinet who had grown up with my dad. Next came Parade Magazine and then finally, the comics, which she read aloud to me, until I could read them myself when they were spread on the kitchen floor to keep us off after it was washed.
Mom also read current best sellers, and kept a modest collection of paperbacks in her bedroom. On her bookshelf, you could find Herman Wouk's Margery Morningstar next to Exodus by Leon Uris. One day when everyone was at work and my grandmother was napping, I introduced myself to Nelson Algren's
gritty The Man With the Golden Arm. I took the book from the shelf to my bedroom and began to read. I never told mom about the book, instead going to an encyclopedia for answers about heroin addiction.
From then on, I read whatever was on my mother's bookshelf , age appropriate or not. I was probably the only kid who read Payton Place twice.
My passion for old movies and t.v shows comes from my mother. We would scan the T. V Preview to see what shows were on Saturday night and pick a classic movie. We watched" From Here to Eternity" and "The Best Years of Their Lives" so many times, we could recite the dialogue. During the week, Mom was home on Wednesday nights, so she'd do the ironing while we laughed at Red Skelton and later, Carol Burnette.
My mother was also very involved in the Jewish organization, B'nai Brith. She took an active leadership role in the women's chapter that met in our synagogue, and helped found another chapter on the southeast side of Chicago. Mom's proudest possession was her Bnai Brith president's pin, a sparkling diamond menorah with a gold gavel. There were many evenings when dozens of women crowded into our apartment. They all had wonderful things to tell me about my mother, as I struggled to avoid their lipstick kisses on my cheeks.
While mom fed us boring, but filling lunches of macaroni and cheese, tuna and egg salad or baked halibut, she truly excelled at making excellent Sabbath meals. After lighting candles and saying the blessing over wine and challah, we would settle in for the evening. There was homemade chicken soup with plump, tender, matzo balls, roast chicken, veal, or brisket of beef, noodle or potato kugel,(a kind of pudding), fresh salad with my dad's favorite garlic dressing, and some kind of frozen vegetable. Mom never failed to notice that my slim sister Judi,"ate like a bird."
Because we kids were allowed a small glass of heavy, sweet kosher wine, half way through the meal we struggled to keep awake for dessert. Our choice was limited to non-dairy items: there was a plate of cookies, the inevitable baked apple, kosher jello that never quite made the grade, and my favorite, fruit cocktail with a prized ,genuine maraschino cherry.
Please notice that mom did not believe in soda with a Sabbath meal. She said that it would only fill you up and "pollute you." You figure that one out, because I never could. We could have juice or water only when we proved that our plate was clean. As a teenager, I finally convinced my mom that diet cola would do us no harm.Now, I 'm not so sure, considering the kind of sweeteners they used then.
My mother worked long and hard to develop the family business. When my father returned to his podiatry practice in the early '60's, mom took over running the store herself, with Dad pitching in on week-ends. This worked out very well, because my mother was savvy enough to carry the kind of shoes that fit the custom appliances that Dad prescribed. When his patients asked about these shoes, they received a flier from our store. Both the practice and the store benefited from this referral.
When I was in high school, I took an Advanced Placement world history class with an exceptional teacher. His class was both interesting and challenging. One day, Mom started reading my text book and I had to practically beg for her to return it to me. Up to that point, I was doing well in the class, getting low A's on my tests and quizzes. Mom decided that wasn't good enough, because I needed to get a high grade on the AP test. Starting that week she became my study partner, reading the chapters and testing my knowledge. I began getting 100% on all of the quizzes and tests. Mr Coleman complimented me and I told him about Mom's help. He joked that his tests were too easy, and said my mother could probably write harder ones. She laughed when I told her this and said,"Probably."
I expected my mother to always be there for us. When I entered the Army for a summer of training, I called and wrote whenever I could. One day, she told me had been diagnosed with diabetes. I remember the sun beating down on the phone booth near the barracks, but my skin turned icy cold. I had no idea what that diagnosis meant for mom, but I knew it wasn't good. She assured me she was fine, not to worry, that I'd be home soon.
That's when Mom's health started its long, slide downhill. There were no electronic glucometers then.
Monitoring blood sugar was not nearly as effective as it is today. My brother, Bob, was then a resident at Rush Hospital, and made sure to get the best kind of advice and care for Mom. Still, diabetics are prone to infection, and she underwent one surgery after another.
One day, I walked over to Rush after doing reserve duty in the Veteran's Hospital.,self conscious in my Army hospital whites. Mom was recovering from an operation, but had a gleam in her eye. When her nurse walked in, she introduced me as her son, and made it known that I was single. Then I noticed that my mother was shivering. As covered her, I became chilled myself, even though the room was quite warm. I knew then how little time we had left together.
One day, I walked over to Rush after doing reserve duty in the Veteran's Hospital.,self conscious in my Army hospital whites. Mom was recovering from an operation, but had a gleam in her eye. When her nurse walked in, she introduced me as her son, and made it known that I was single. Then I noticed that my mother was shivering. As covered her, I became chilled myself, even though the room was quite warm. I knew then how little time we had left together.
All too soon, in the spring of 1975, my mother was diagnosed with leukemia. She passed away in December, only 62 years old. She desperately needed a platelet transfusion and I spent hours on the phone trying to find donors. None of my relatives responded. Maxine barely knew my mother at the time, but she immediately volunteered, despite her overwhelming fear of needles. The next day, Mom was gone.
The night before Mom left us, I had a vivid dream. We were in the bathroom of our house on South Francisco and I was crying bitterly. The radiator was steaming hot, and on it was a white cotton t-shirt. My mother slipped the warm shirt over my head and comforted me."Don't cry. I know you're sad that I'm leaving. But think about how I must feel." I woke up, went to work, and and hour later, Bob was calling with the awful news.
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