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Every generation . . . makes friends with its
grandfathers Lewis Mumford
When I think of typical fathers
of the last generation, I remember my grandfather. He escaped Rumania in
the 1890’s, and came to Toledo, Ohio, to make a living, and build a home for the
love he left behind: my grandmother. He sent her boat passage in
1900,and presented her with,what she thought,was a castle on Baker Street.
Together they had five children. My grandfather worked all day and, at
night, he came home, exhausted, ate dinner, read the Yiddish newspaper,and went
to bed. My mother,and her sisters,never exchanged one word with him.
His only conversation was with his son, Charlie. He saved every penny to
send the boy to college,and to groom him to be the patriarch of his own
family. My grandpa was not aware his four daughters had minds, much less
what was in them. I do not believe he would have recognized them had he seen
them on the street.
My mother hated her
father. He represented all the deprivations she endured because she was
the child of poor immigrants, and because he favored her brother. She blamed him
because she never had enough to eat; because of him, she had to wear the same
dress to school every day, and get a job, as soon as she got out of high school,
to contribute to the family coffers.
By the time I was born, my
grandfather had mellowed. I was a tiny little child, and I am sure I
reminded him of the girl who captured his heart over forty years before in
Yasse, Romania. He called me “Etala,” and I called him my zadie. I
adored him. I would sit on his lap for hours combing his hair, and he
would stroke my head as he tried to read the paper. His hand reached out
for mine whenever he was about to leave the house, and I would look up at his
lined, and lovely face, and cry “Oh I love you so much, Zadie!” He would
pick me up, and kiss both cheeks, and say nothing. Our bond was so strong
it didn’t need words.
When my grandfather got too sick
to care for himself, he moved into my mother’s home where she nursed him with
much resentment. I would hurry home from school to see him, and entertain
him with happy chatter about my day. He would pinch my cheek, and say
“Vonderful! Vonderful” even though I am sure he didn’t understand one word
that cascaded from my mouth. Every year he gave me a silver dollar for passing
from one grade to the next. He never knew his own children’s progress in
school, and he didn’t care. He thought education was wasted on little
girls.
When I went away to college, I
cried because I did not want to leave him, and after my mother, and I had left
to drive me to Ann Arbor, my grandfather realized we had forgotten my bed
pillow. He made my mother turn around, and drive that pillow back to me
that night, and the miracle for me was that she obeyed. She may not have
liked her father, but his was an authority figure in her life, and she feared
him until he died.
My own father was also a
character shrouded in mystery. He was out of the house all day, and on
weekends he played golf. He, like my grandfather, never carried on a
conversation with me until I was in high school. In contrast to my mother,
I adored my father because I was able to create his character from my
imagination. I fashioned a loving, sensitive caregiver from the raw
materials of fantasy and when, as an adult, I learned some of his fears and
failings, I was so disillusioned by reality, I don’t think I ever
recovered.
God Bless Progress!
Fathers of the millennium make time to spend with their children. At the
jazz festival this year, I met several daddies who help out at their children’s
school, take their daughters to concerts, and plays, and share their own dreams
with their little girls and boys. Those children know they are cherished, and
they cherish in return.
I grieve for my zadie, not for
his death, but for his loss. He had four very interesting little girls
that his neglect transformed into enemies. He never guessed that he could
enjoy these human beings he helped create. And they never knew the gentle,
loving man that I did. They never dreamed that the autocrat they called
Father, had a heart as soft as whipped cream, and a disposition sweeter than the
candy he could never afford to give his family.
Thank heavens children have
fathers these days; real human beings who cry when they hurt, and laugh when
they are happy. These days, our children can be friends with their
daddies . . . and that after all is what makes wonderful children grow
into beautiful adults. It is those adults who will give us our future, and not
be afraid to make the world the happiest place it is possible to be. .
It is a wise father who
knows his own child Shakespeare.
See Lynn
Ruth's website
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