All contents of this blog are (c) copyright 2013 by Lenny Goldberg. Nothing in it may be reprinted in whole or part without the express written permission of myself or my heirs. I can be reached at: lennytone@gmail.com
If you are one of my friends or family who are mentioned in my story and you would like me to leave you out, or change your name, just let me know. It is not my intention to embarrass anyone. On the other hand, if I have overlooked you and you want to be part of my story, let me know. That is the beauty of a blog; I can add or subtract at will.
Peace, Lenny
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Saturday, June 29, 2013
ZERO
Confessions
of a Jewish Sinner
(c)2013 by Lenny Goldberg
I’m
dead. Probably. Unless G-d, blessed be He, decided to supernaturally
grant me a little more time, my ashes are either sitting on the
family TV set or have been flung into some large body of water.
As I type these words my
abdomen is stuffed to bursting with a yellow cancerous liquid known
as ascites caused by
a disease known as peritoneral mesothelioma. If that wasn’t enough,
there’s also chronic leukemia, thyroid tumors and
neurofibromatosis or ‘elephant man’s disease’. So yeah, I’ve
most likely gone to meet my glorious Maker, as you read these words.
Unlike righteous Job, however, I deserved all those diseases and
more. In life I was a wiseguy, and people called me mean, even years
after I 'got religion'. Nevertheless, G-d in His infinite
capacity for loving His creatures chose
to ‘save’ me as an example that He is willing to ‘save’
anyone that is interested. What do I mean by the word ‘save’?
Nothing less than blissful, eternal life, undeserved and unmerited, a
free gift of G-d given to a most unlikely recipient.
This is the story about how I, a Jew, came to believe in Jesus as my
Messiah. I’m stating that first thing. I do not want to
be accused of tricking anyone; you might have thought this was a nice
Jewish autobiography and then halfway through you saw the name Jesus
and felt betrayed. Maybe you’re also Jewish, and a well-meaning
friend or relative gave you this website because they want you too to
believe in Jesus. I also want to save you from skimming to find the 'juicy' parts. I left them out. Yes, there was fornication,
adultery, drugs, and depravity. OK, I left most of it out. Why should
I embarrass anyone? No, this is a just a simple telling, Christians
would call it a “testimony”, of how I was born a Jewish boy, then
somehow became a follower of the Messiah who was also a Jew, and what
happened after that. I’m not the first Jew to follow Jesus by any
means; in fact the entire Church was completely Jewish in the
beginning, until Hashem (literally “The Name”) made it clear that
He also loved gentiles and started ‘letting them in’. Some might
disagree when I say that while I am a 'born-again' Christian I’m
also still Jewish. Others might call me a 'completed' Jew,
however it’s not my favorite term as it assumes that most Jews have
missing parts. Some recent polls have revealed that most Jews no
longer believe in G-d. Does this make them incomplete? I don’t
know. If you ask me, most Jews just haven’t met their Messiah. Yet.
If you are Jewish, please allow your curiosity to cause you to read
my meiseh (story).
If you’re a gentile and it helps you to better enjoy this sordid
tale, you can imagine me narrating it in a New York Jewish accent,
bubbeleh.
The story that follows is
absolutely true. That is to say, the facts presented here are to the
best of my memory, and while there has been some embellishment,
either to make a point or to add humor to what otherwise might be a
particularly nauseating anecdote, it is (as I claim) a true story.
For example, I might remark that “G-d said” or “G-d told me”
something, but this is purely in the sense that most ‘believers’
would mean it, i.e. they felt a feeling that an idea that popped into
their head was of spiritual origin. Actually I’m very skeptical of
anyone who claims that G-d spoke to them. My story includes, as
you’ll see, a demonic being speaking audibly to me and claiming
that it is the Creator. That actually happened voice and all. In the
town I live in, there is an organization built on the foundation that
G-d has had conversations with a whole bunch of people.
Unfortunately, a lot of the things that “G-d” has said to them
would contradict the Bible, the word of G-d. So when I, or anyone
else, tells you that G-d has said this or that, look it up for
yourself in Scripture while slowly slipping backwards in the opposite
direction. Who knows, they might be demon-possessed.
Which leads me to another gray
area, since I’ve claimed to have been just that, demon-possessed. Here’s
how I would define it as relating to my story. Demons spoke to me,
although at the time I didn’t know that’s what they were. Their
influence on me grew over time, until (yes I know it’s a dumb
cliché) I did whatever the little voices told me to. At no time did
green smegma ooze from any of my body cavities nor did my head rotate
360 degrees. I never achieved super-human strength and never ran
naked through the streets (that I remember). My pastor had said that
this is typically what demon-possessed people do. On the other hand,
my razor blades never wore out, and I didn’t even need to put them
underneath a pyramid overnight. So I was either possessed, 'demonized' (as some Christians might suggest), a total fool, or
maybe all three.
Before going any further, let me
please clarify the term “G-d”. It is the practice of Jewish folks
to leave a letter out of certain words that are names of deity.
Another example is the word “L-rd”. This is totally a matter of
respect, taking literally the command to not take His name in vain.
How is it taking His name in vain to include the “o”? Well, you
might throw away or destroy the piece of paper or book with Hashem’s
holy name on it, and this is perceived as disrespectful. Jewish holy
books are buried with accompanying funereal services, never
destroyed. Neither do Jewish folks write all over their Bibles as
many Christians do. If you are ‘witnessing’ to a Jew, and they
ask you “where in the Bible does it say what you are claiming?”
you might want to carry an extra Bible with you sans scribbles in the
margins so as not to offend them. Leading a Jew to Jesus, even though
Jews and Christians do worship the same Heavenly Father, can be a
daunting job; G-d had to take me “to Hell and back”, in a manner
of speaking of course, to reach me.
I had a particular Catholic
fellow ‘rake me over the coals’ over my omission of the letter
“o” in our e-mail communications, saying that it was
disrespectful of me to spell that way, and anyway why respect the
people that had killed Jesus in the first place. I answered him with
the usual reply; if Jesus hadn’t died on the cross for his sins
he’d be going to Heck, so maybe he should be thanking us Jews. But
then he added that we ought to be freely using G-d’s actual name
Jehovah or Yahweh; I don’t remember which name he used (pick one).
So I informed him, and now you, that only the high priest knew how to
pronounce the tetragrammaton, the Y-H-V-H. Jewish people do not try
and pronounce the Name, instead substituting another word such as
Hashem, as I’ve already mentioned. You’ll never see a
Jewish-owned business with a DBA such as “Jehovah’s Plumbing
Company”. I saw a truck with just that name parked at my local
Safeway one day. I was dumbfounded but I realized that the Christian
that picked this name did it purely out of love and respect, and that
“G-d looks at the heart”. Walking down a street in my old
neighborhood of Borough Park, you will see neither “Yahweh’s Dry
Cleaners” nor “The L-rd’s Delicatessen”. You can take my word
for that. At any rate I hope that you will suffer me the use of
dashes. I doubt that many Jewish people will read or ever see
this blog, but please allow me my idiosyncrasies. And when I break
into a Yiddish phrase or expression, please ignore it if it offends.
My main purpose is not to teach yiddishkeit
to gentiles, but to counter the lies of the New Age and the
occult. Of course, many Jews would be included in those categories.
While I’m doubtful that Jews will read a story like this, I hope and
pray that some do. If you are one of those, please hear me out; tell
me what an idiot I am after
you read it. If I’m still alive that is. But if I’m dead,
please don’t harass my wife; none of this is her fault.
When I first thought about
writing a book I considered using a pseudonym. Some of the things
that I’ve said and done in my life are embarrassing, not only to me
but to my family. When I announced to my father that I now believed
in Jesus Christ, his response was ‘so what’s new? Your whole life
is a series of crazy things. This is just the craziest. In fact I’ve
broken all Ten Commandments to some degree. Actually G-d gave Moses
613 commandments; I’m still working on breaking some of those. I
haven’t yet gored my neighbor’s ox. But even keeping the Top 10
has been a formidable task for me. If I were to detail all my sins,
you would not invite me to speak at your church. I’ve done things
that only G-d can forgive, things that I cannot repair, of which I am
eternally ashamed. Still, I decided to use my real name; otherwise
how could I claim that everything in here is true? I have, however,
changed the names of a few innocent bystanders who were unfortunate
enough to have known me
.
.
When I first came to know Messiah
about twenty years ago, I immediately went to work on writing a book
of my experiences. About twenty or thirty pages later, however, I
became so convicted of what an evil person I was, and this is no
exaggeration; the truth was just sinking in. I told G-d that I didn’t
think I could write this book. He said to me (not really, just in my
imagining [see above]), “why don’t you write a short testimony
instead”. So I did that, and over the years have given away
hundreds of them, and it has been published in a couple of magazines
and on the internet. Someday, I imagined I’d write the whole book,
when I’d truly learned to walk and talk the way a Christian ought
to.
But G-d, blessed be He, said to
me (again, He said nothing of the kind) “Lazer,
your story could be useful to the church as I’m rescuing those that
would be rescued out of the occult. Write the book already. Are you
waiting until you’re perfect? That will only come on the day I take
you home; it will be too late then”. And so, here on your screen is
that book. As I’ve said, every detail of my evil life is not in
here, mainly the facts concerning my decline into the service of
demons and G-d’s simultaneous rescue of a soul from destruction.
I’d like to claim that I sought G-d earnestly with a burning desire
to know truth. But I cannot; no, G-d was driving this bus.
Lazer, by the way, is my Yiddish
name, like Lazer Wolf in Fiddler on the Roof. The only people
that have ever actually called me Lazer were my grandmother, when she
was yelling at me, and my Hebrew School teacher Mrs. Gold. She
screamed “Lazer Gold, gold
oif der linkeh zeit!" That’s ‘gold on the left side’ or the opposite of gold. This is
what we might refer to today as 'number two'. See, I couldn’t
have told that story if I used a pseudonym. Oh wait, I could have
written this book under the name Lazer Gold! Duh. Another teacher
threatened me, in Yiddish, that she would ‘break my hands in the
wall’ and to go to Hell. I don’t know about you, but Hell is
where I deserve to spend eternity. I have not confessed all my sins
to you in this book dear reader, however I have confessed them all to
G-d as well as to others. I have suffered in this life, and perhaps have 'paid my debt to society' as it were. But I can never repay my debt
to G-d; there aren’t enough good deeds to do, beads to
count, or whatever in this world to accomplish that.
So
here I am, opposite of gold, and yet when Messiah shed His blood to
save sinners, that even included me. And of course you, too, if
you’re willing. My life was lived in selfish rebellion against G-d
but I have sought, and received, His grace, not through anything I've done, but because of what He did some 20 centuries ago. I pray that you will also seek Him while you may.
- Chapter Zero written March 2003
- Blog began 6/9/2013
Friday, June 28, 2013
ONE
Everyone
was Jewish in my neighborhood. The neighbors, the doctors, the
elderly folks sitting on folding chairs near the entrance to the
building, the storekeepers, the telephone guy, the seltzer delivery
man, were all Jewish. There were a few exceptions, of course, like
the superintendents of some of the neighborhood’s apartment
buildings, who were African-American. We didn’t use that term then;
it wasn’t yet invented. Then, they were schvartzes,
literally 'blacks'. Nowadays, you will rarely hear this term
used, but if you do hear it, it’s usually in reference to a
non-religious Jew coming from the lips of a religious one.
This is not to say that there
wasn’t any diversity in my neighborhood. There were the
Torah-observant Jews in their black uniforms and peyes
(side-burn curls); and there were “conservative”,
synagogue-attending, Ten Commandments-keeping traditionalist Jews.
There were also “cultural” Jews who weren’t religious, although
they might attend shul
once a year during the New Year holidays. In between the religious
Hasidim and
the compromising conservatives, you might find a few so-called 'Orthodox' Jews, who believed in the Torah but not so much the
Talmud, who kept kosher homes but might eat traif
(non-kosher food)
in a restaurant. The
latter is the group that included my family. Presumably you’ve
heard of another classification of Jews, the least observant,
belonging to the Reformed movement. We had none of those. The
synagogues in my old ‘hood were Hasidic, Orthodox or Conservative;
nowadays even the Conservative ones are gone and you’d have to
travel to the old Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem to find as religious a
district.
My mother envied the conservative
Jews who were allowed to attend synagogue co-ed style, men and women
sitting together. Perhaps for this reason, we rarely attended shul
altogether. We might even have slipped down that notch and become
conservative Jews except for the fact that my father’s parents were
Orthodox, and that somehow extended to us as well. My zaydeh
(grandfather), on my
father’s side, was certainly a religious man; attending services
the requisite three times daily. He davened
(prayed) in Hebrew,
and spoke very little English. Christians often wonder in amazement
that Jews even try to keep those 613 impossible precepts of the Law
of Moses. But impossible or not, my grandparents were of the school
of belief that G-d would not ask them to do anything if it was
impossible, and obeyed the commandments to the best of their ability.
Zaydie,
as we affectionately called him, owned a butcher shop specializing in
chickens that he slaughtered according to the rules of kashruth,
the Jewish kosher
laws. Each morning he would select the best live birds from the
wholesale market and would thus eke out a living in his small shop on
the lower east side of Manhattan. Eventually, a competitor opened up
shop, advertising their chickens as being glatt
kosher, or even more
kosher than regular kosher, if that were possible. You’ve no doubt
heard that if you have two Jews in a room you’ll have three
different opinions, or some similarly worded adage. This is
especially prevalent concerning kashruth.
Have you ever noticed
products in the supermarket marked with a letter “K” or a letter
“U” in a circle? These are from two competing organizations that
will certify your product to be kosher for a fee. Some Jews might not
eat one or the others products. The most religious Jews might not eat
from either group. The bottom line to this little story, however, is
that these religiously sanctified guys ran my poor grandpa out of
business with their holier-than-thou chickens, which led to a family
resentment of the Hasidim
(ultra-orthodox Jews) and their false asceticism. One of my Hasidic
cousins and his friend once rode their bikes by my house and upon
seeing me yelled out “there’s my unkosher cousin”. This was not
mere name-calling. When his father died, my dad wasn’t allowed onto
the cemetery grounds, which were too holy for him, although my father
has kept kosher all of his life. The other repercussion of Zaydie’s
poor poultry store is
my dad’s life-long hatred of chicken stemming from the years of
helping to flick the
darn things and then having to eat the unsold birds almost every
night.
My family also had a very
successful cousin named Schmulka Bernstein with a butcher shop on the
lower east side. He sold his own hot dogs (in New York we called them
frankfurters, franks, or frankies, however), and other kosher meats.
I only remember being in his shop once; we bought some whitefish. He
was also the originator of kosher Chinese food. Out here in the
Oregon diaspora one can buy Hebrew National, Sinai 48 and Nathan’s
hot dogs, but in New York Schmulka Bernstein is every bit as famous a
brand name as any of those. I had a couple of other relatives that
owned stores of one sort or another, and this was going to be my
destiny as well.
I imagine that a Jew or two may
get hold of this blog and read my little summation of the variety of
Jewish belief and say that I’m worse than any of them, believing in
Jesus Christ as my Messiah. In fact, as I said my own father has
offered words to this effect. And so we come to another group of
Yid’n
(Jews), the meshumed,
traitors that worship Yeshua (Jesus). We are universally shunned by
most other Jews, who may even believe that it is a mitzvah
(good deed)
to do so. They refer
to Him as “Yeshu”, actually a contraction of Hebrew words that
mean “may his name be blotted out”. Nor do they believe that such
as myself is indeed any longer a Jew, having converted to the
religion of their historic enemy, the Church. In all fairness, the
Church has
persecuted and killed Jews during much of its existence, and its
seeming belief in three G-d’s along with its panoply of popes and
priests is bewildering to Jews, to say the least.
But there is a
point of open ground where the Messianic (Christian) Jew and at least
the Hasidic Jew can meet and sometimes even dialogue. We each agree
with the command to love G-d with all of our heart, mind and
strength. The modern day hasid ('pious one') or haredi ('fearful
one'), as in fear of the L-rd) may have the ‘detested’ Pharisee
as his spiritual ancestor, but nevertheless here is a person that
loves G-d, the very same G-d of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob that the
Church worships. Jews believe that modern anti-Semitism began with
the apparent New Testament accusation that the Pharisees killed
Jesus. But had Yeshua
not gone to Calvary to die no one would be saved, neither Jew nor
gentile. Jesus, of course, died a Roman style death as prophesied in
Hebrew Scripture. But if it should turn out that 'the Jews' indeed killed Jesus, then every Christian surely owes a debt of
thanks to this most persecuted minority. I’ll talk a little more
about 'who killed Jesus' later, but if you’re a Christian you
probably already know that it isn’t 'the Jews', or the Romans.
So who killed Him? Later, I’ll tell you later; and it’ll be the
truth.
From my youth I have been
intrigued by cultures other than my own, and even in grade school
went out of my way to befriend those whom my parents or society may
have proclaimed 'not our people'. My home turf of Borough Park
may have been a Jewish island, but it was surrounded on all sides by
gentiles, mainly Roman Catholics of Italian descent. Both my grade
school, P.S. 164, and my high school, New Utrecht (the one pictured
on the “Welcome Back Kotter” TV show) were located in Italian
neighborhoods, and it was by school chums that I was first
matter-of-factly asked why I had killed G-d. Like the makeup of my
school, my early friends were about half Italian and half Jewish. I
think I enjoyed going to the neighborhood church bazaar’s more than
attending synagogue. Who am I kidding, going to shul
was boring. I didn’t understand much Hebrew, and the services were
long and tedious. How many pages left to go, I’d ask? The prayer
book was heavy and contained hundreds of pages.
My favorite part of growing up
Jewish was the holidays, especially Passover. The pastries at Purim
were fantastic, and the Chanukah gifts equally fantastic, but
Passover or pesach was
the time that the whole family got together, one night at my paternal
grandparents and one night at my maternal grandparents. The latter
was an intimate affair; with Rabbi Shlomo and family being “too
religious” to attend there was just my parents, Grandma Rose doing
all the cooking and Grandpa Shaya reading the haggadah
in English with no
qualms about skipping things here and there, myself and Rochelle
while she was still alive. There was never any doubt that I would
find the hidden afikoman
(matzoh) and get a reward.
On the other hand, Zaydie
and Grandma Minnie’s seder was a boisterous affair. My dad’s
three sisters and their husbands and my numerous cousins were all
there, laughing, yelling, fighting, and eating. This was the
not-to-be-missed event of the year. Minnie did all the cooking for
this crowd, including her “famous” kosher for Passover cupcakes.
Many have tried to duplicate these amazing treats, but I guess she
never told anyone exactly how to prepare them. There was the
potatonik, the
egg soup, and of course, chicken. Zaydie
chanted the entire
hagaddah in
Hebrew, leaving nothing out. When it came time for the youngest male
child to chant the feir
kashes, the Four
Questions (actually one question, “Why is this night different from
all other nights?” with four answers) every unmarried kid present
had to do it in turn. Most of us couldn’t understand Hebrew and
were constantly asking what page he was on. And most years, no one
could get the afikomen,
the hidden half of the
center matzoh which represented the sacrificed Passover lamb, because
he protected it in the folds of his clothing. While this seder
may have seemed long to some of us, it was shorter than the gala
affairs the Chasidim
throw, which can last in the wee hours. And occasionally ours was cut
short by Zaydie
if boxing was on TV.
I suppose that the highlight of
Passover for me though was the wine. Not only were we allowed to
drink it, we were commanded to drink four cups. If the rules are
followed exactly, no one will get very intoxicated. Each glass must
be drank at a particular time during the reading of the haggadah,
the 'telling' of
the story of our redemption from slavery in Egypt. The amount of wine
need only be the volume of the size of an olive. Four of those
wouldn’t even cause a buzz. Plus the special Passover wine was 30%
sugar to make sure kids did not get high. In our family, however,
there was a tradition to also have on the seder table, 100 proof
fire-water known as Slivovitz. Why? Because we could. All grain
alcohol was forbidden on Pesach,
but brandy, made from fruit, was allowed. Before the midway point of
the seder, when the meal was served, and some years even before the
seder began, certain relatives already had red noses. It was as fun
to watch them as to drink the wine ourselves. I still try to host or
attend a seder every year, trying to recreate the atmosphere of those
early ones. Of course most of our attendees are Christians so we try
to reach a balance of temperance and freedom. One year, though, while
leading a seder at church, someone substituted real wine for my cup
of grape juice. I don’t think anyone found out. Except you just
did.
An important component of the
Passover seder, although it’s delicious all year so why have it
only once a year, is gefilte fish. It’s basically just chopped
fish, usually whitefish and carp but any fish can be used, shaped
into balls or oblongs. We always ate it with beet red colored
horseradish. The hottest horseradish is the freshly shredded variety,
available at Pesach time in Jewish neighborhoods. At first I wondered
why the seller had a fan on his counter aimed away from him, but as
we got closer to him it was obvious that he was blowing the fumes
away. Everyone waiting their turn on line was crying. You can’t
find horseradish like that out here. One year folks in New Jersey
tried to change the state fish to the Gefilte Fish. It didn’t make
it to the ballot box, unfortunately, after the gentiles found out it
wasn’t an actual fish. This past Passover, my daughter shredded a
raw horseradish root, and while she may have cried tears of joy, by
the time it reached the seder plate it was no longer strong enough to
my abused taste buds, so she quickly whipped up some wasabi and that
did the trick. This has become the great Japanese contribution to the
seder meal, at least at our house.
I was more a child of 1950s
culture than of the synagogue. Yes, I believed in, and feared G-d.
And I feared my dad, too. Mostly he was the liberal product of Dr.
Spock’s book, but when it came to ‘religious’ matters, he was
to be feared. One time when I was hanging out with friends on Yom
Kippur eve on the steps of the shul across the street from our
apartment building (O.K. you know now that shul and synagogue are the
same thing, so let’s consider it an English term, like bagel, I
wouldn’t italicize bagel, and I’ll save the italics for more
unfamiliar words), and I was dressed inappropriately in my usual
street garb; he came over there and dragged me all the way home by my
ear in front of the other kids. If I put on my suit, could I go back
downstairs? No, he said, it was too late. I argued that I did have my
sneakers on (observant Jews don’t wear leather on this day), but he
said I wasn’t wearing sneakers out of piety, which was of course
true.
And eating unkosher food was
something that had to be done in secret. And if it was done outside
the home, it could certainly not be done inside. Oy,
that day my mom and I
were “busted” was a day to remember; she was caught with shrimp
cocktails, and I with sliced ham in our otherwise kosher
refrigerator. I was actually not home when the said bust occurred,
but I understand the wrath of Dad was poured out. I was a very poor
eater; I’d take white bread and jam sandwiches for school lunch
because I didn’t like much else. Add some potato chips and soda and
it was a meal. But during a school field trip to the Brooklyn Museum,
I discovered ham. It was so pink and pretty, and I’d never seen it
before. I asked my teacher, “what is it?”. What is this
heretofore unseen yet delectable appearing sandwich meat? She told me
it was similar to bologna, a meat I was familiar with the kosher
variety of. Once I’d tasted it, I couldn’t wait to get home and
tell my mom about my exciting discovery; I’d found a new food that
I liked! And that’s how ham wound up in the fridge. I don’t know
about the shrimp cocktails; I guess mom & I forgave the hapless
pig for not chewing his cud, and the scavenger who’d eat anything
found on the ocean floor, kosher or not. All we knew was that they
tasted good. Later on, my dad did allow me to eat the pork in Chinese
restaurants. He wouldn’t eat it, but he confessed to perhaps
not-so-fond memories of having consumed Spam while in the army.
Please don’t get the impression that either of my parents were strict or undesirable in any way; they were fantastic, loving parents. Within reason, they gave me my heart’s desire. Yes, they spoiled me due to my having a heart murmur. They didn’t know if I would live to puberty or not. Whether it was toys, games, records, comic books, or hip clothing; they were very generous, although we were barely middle class. Our apartment rented for $50. a month, under New York’s rent control program, and our furniture was old. After my sister was born, we shared the only bedroom. Are you picturing The Honeymooners? No, we almost lived in luxury compared to Ralph and Alice, but I’m sure my parents could totally relate to that sitcom. I guess we fell somewhere in between the Kramden’s and the Norton’s.
We did have
a washing machine and a black & white TV. I remember when the
first color show was broadcast; I waited with rapt anticipation while
the network switched to color, but it didn’t change on our TV! My
dad gave me the bad news; we would need a separate color TV, and he
swore never to get one. Between the cost of it and the dangerous rays
coming from it, it’d be literally decades before he’d give in. By
then the color sets were purported to be safer than the monochromatic
ones, dangerous ray-wise, and I was long out of the house. Another
modern invention we did without was the air-conditioner. We had an
electric fan. Many were the nights I suffered with hay fever,
enduring the brutal New York summer humidity. Oh those difficult days
before the invention of Claritin (r).
I’ll bet that apartment is a
desirable one today, if it’s been kept up at all. It had high
ceilings with crown molding and large rooms other than the kitchen. I
loved the closet in the bedroom with its many shelves and would climb
up to the tallest shelf if I needed to hide for any reason, for
instance if the doctor made a house call to give me a shot. Once I
heard the doctor say as he left, “if he can hide that well he’s
probably not really too sick”. Most of the shelves held my
collection of games and my clothing, but the highest ones had
miscellaneous old stuff. One time I found my dad’s old pay stubs
from after he got out of the army. I was shocked to see that he only
made thirty-five cents an hour then and began to fear that he really
couldn’t afford to spoil me in the accustomed way. I suppose they
really couldn’t afford it, but they were great parents and felt
sorry for me.
I was on the sickly side, in general. Having been born blue-faced and feet first, I visited the doctor often in my early years. My heart murmur was exaggerated by our physician as being life-threatening, and so I was subjected to endless blood work, x-rays and barium-swallowing. My parents were told to discourage physical exercise on my part. Eventually a heart operation was suggested, so finally at the age of 13 a second opinion was sought. My new doctor revealed the minimalism of my condition, and told me, “Lenny, you will die someday but it won’t be anytime soon, and not caused by anything wrong with your heart”. He noted my condition as “A-1”, which years later worried me when I brought my doctor’s note to the army physical; “A-1” sounded too close to “1-A”, the classification for receiving the famous “Greetings” letter from the draft board. The night before the physical, my girlfriend and I were beginning a game of Scrabble. The first seven letters I drew from the bag spelled out V-I-E-T-N-A-M! I spent the rest of that evening worrying about my impending death. I didn’t think of myself as combat material, and neither did the armed forces, sending me home after the physical with a “1-Y” classification. At 111 pounds, I turned out to be too sickly for them even with my “A-1” heart. Of course, these days, as a church-going, conservative-voting, talk-radio listening guy, I’m ashamed at not having served my country. But in those ancient times, the fear of death consumed me, like a character in a Woody Allen film. But I’m getting way ahead of myself.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
TWO
I
was born February 26, 1948 at Beth Israel Hospital in Manhattan, just
over the bridge from our flat in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. When I
turned 50 years old, the hospital mailed me a certificate to proclaim
that fact; how they found me, with my unlisted number 3000 miles west
of there, is a mystery. As I remember my mother telling the story, it
was a very snowy winter, but what really worried her was not whether
she could get to the hospital, but whether I’d be born on the 29th
of the month and then only have a birthday every four years. At the
hospital I was presented with my very first toy, a rubber Bugs Bunny
bought by Grandma Rose. I slept with Bugs, along with many more
rubber toys, until I was at least 12, and maybe beyond that! My
parents bought a combination radio and phonograph which I destroyed
at the tender age of one or two. They never fixed it or replaced it. You can see it in the upper right of the photograph.
In
those days, Williamsburg was still a Jewish neighborhood. We lived on
the first floor of an old brownstone, my mom, dad and me, and my
maternal grandparents and their young daughter. My aunt Rochelle,
only eight years older than I, was more of a sister to me, and I
idolized her as such. An older couple lived above us, and I don’t
remember a basement apartment but there must have been one. Rochelle
was no doubt responsible for my early interest in popular, and then
rock music. I remember visiting her the first of 1955 and finding her
sad over the death of R&B star Johnny Ace, which became the first
death to impact my life. A few years later, I would mourn Chuck
Willis’ demise as well. These two stars are mostly forgotten these
days, while actual churches have sprung up to immortalize and grieve
for others like John Coltrane and Nirvana. Johnny Ace met his end purportedly during a game of Russian roulette, a story told in great detail in label mate Bobby Bland's biography.
Another time I remember Rochelle &
I harmonizing to the Dells’ latest hit record, “Oh What A Night”.
I used to sneak in her room just to look at her school music book, a
scrapbook of songs that is now in my possession. Another time, she
visited me in Borough Park and we walked to Jaynel’s record store
together; she bought a 45 of “This Is My Story” by Gene &
Eunice, I purchased “Story Untold” by the Nutmegs on a 78 (they
were out of the 45).
But
I was already singing Johnny Ray songs, and imitating his style at 2
or 3 years old, as well as listening to the Weavers’ hits. No
doubt, this had been mainly Rochelle’s influence, and I’ve been
involved with music ever since. My parents were musical as well; I
don’t think they ever played any instruments, but they sang around
the house constantly. My dad wrote two songs during the war, and
later had an audition for the Amateur Hour radio program. In
Kramden-esque style, however, when his name was called he completely
forgot the lyrics of his song, and so his musical aspirations came to
a close. There is a photo of him singing one of his tunes on my radio show on KPFA that is posted below. That hippie in the photo is, of course, myself.
Rochelle attended Lincoln High, the school that gave us Neil
Sedaka and the Tokens. When Sedaka left that group to pursue a solo
career, my aunt dated one of them during the brief time when they
were deciding on a new name. I remember her excitedly telling us all
the funny names they’d considered before choosing Darrell and the
Oxfords. Their record, “Picture In My Wallet” became a large
regional hit, but they were soon back to being the Tokens and their
version of an earlier Weavers song became their biggest national hit,
“The Lion Sleeps Tonight”. But by then, my wonderful 'sister'
was no more. After she passed away I dreamed she was sitting in my grandparent's house, and she comforted me by saying she was fine now and not to worry.
My
grandma Rose (they were ‘grandma’ and ‘grandpa’ on my
mother’s side, rather than the old world zayde
and bubbe
of my dad’s side) certainly had a difficult and painful life.
Rochelle was only 19 when she succumbed to ileitis. My mother, like
Elvis, was only 43 when she died. Rose’s father had died young as
well, stoned to death by some “Christian” kids who accused him of
killing G-d. Yes, stoned, just like in Bible days, back in the
“really old” country. Only her youngest child Shlomo
(Stanley), who decided
at five years old that he would become a rabbi, outlived both his
parents. Rose had plenty of her own health problems; I always
remember her myriad bottles of prescription medicines, her operations
and hospitalizations. But in the earlier, happier days when both my
parents were working, looking forward to affording their own
apartment, Grandma Rose and Grandpa Shaya were like second parents to
me, and we were that close all of their lives. Whatever bitterness
they felt due to their hardships was never shown to me. I knew only
love, patience, forgiveness and generosity from them, as well as from
my parents. Too bad I was born “in Adam”, a sinner according to
New Testament theology, or born with “an evil eye” according to
Judaism. But so are we all.
I
can’t say what sin, weakness or predilection any of the other
characters in my story were born with. Jewish people generally
believe that we are born pure, with a “clean slate” so to speak.
Somehow, the concept of ‘original sin’, so clear to the
Christian, does not appeal to the Jewish sensibility. Perhaps the
lifelong struggle of resisting the call of Messiah is challenge
enough to any Jew coming into this world, a world that hates the Jew
perhaps above anyone else. Why are we so hated, judged corporately
rather than individually? Why did Germany under Hitler try to totally
annihilate us, and why are the other Middle Eastern nations trying to
force Israel out of our G-d given homeland? As a race, surely we have
left our mark on the world in medicine, entertainment, technology and
education. The Ten Commandments and
Jesus Christ are of Jewish origin.
Noted
Bible scholar Arnold Fruchtenbaum explains the hatred this way. Jesus
said that He would return at a time when the Jewish leaders would cry
out to Him, “Blessed is He that comes in the name of the L-rd”,
Baruch Habah B’shaym
Adonai”. While our
enemy ha-satan,
the adversary, was
defeated by the death of Jesus in the sense that the sins of
believing humankind were forgiven at the Cross, if the evil one can
stop the Jews from crying out that phrase to Jesus, by
killing us all, then
Jesus will not come, and Satan will not be thrown into the Lake of
Fire. We know from Scripture that, in fact, “all Israel shall be
saved” and indeed the end times events will take place as planned.
But the Devil certainly is going to give his agenda his best shot. He
surely has done an excellent job so far of turning the world against
the Jewish people, with this hatred even infecting the church, the
“guests” of Israel so to speak, according to Romans chapter 11.
From that quarter we presently endure such anti-Semitic indignities
as “replacement theology”, amillennialism and preterism that
teach, among other things, that G-d has utterly rejected us. Many
churches wrongly teach that all the covenants to Israel are now to
the church only. To be fair, most Christians are still great
supporters of Israel and the Jews, but suffice to say there are other
world religions that feel less kindly towards us. But whatever
misunderstandings we might share concerning the lofty truths of G-d,
we know that Satan, G-d’s most powerful created being, understands
theology all too well, and is happy to pit us all at each other’s
throats to serve his purpose.
Now,
I’m not a preacher, nor do I hold any office in G-d’s economy.
I’m only one depraved sinner from birth who has found grace at the
Throne of mercy. I can attest that unlike perhaps some others, I was
clearly born in sin, not so much because of my saintly parents’
sin, but because of Adam’s, as the Word declares. To be as polite
as possible, I’ll just say that according to my earliest memories
(and they go way back) as well as the recollections of the adults in
the house, my most particular weakness was an obsession with sex. I
imagine that there are those who are liars from birth or gossipers
from birth. My problem was lust; the “lust of the eyes” says
Scripture, but mainly the lust of the libido. When I hear someone
say, “I was born that way” or even “G-d made me that way”, I
agree and identify, until they add “so it’s not a sin”. I’ve
learned that everything the Bible calls sin, is. From your ox goring
your neighbor’s ox, to sleeping with your father’s wife, with
cheating, lying, jealousy, pride, (especially pride) and all the rest
along the way. The Bible tells us that anyone who says he doesn’t
sin (and she,
as well), is a liar. That’s so we’re all included; we all sin and
all need a savior. Oh, we can change our behavior somewhat; we can
change our programming. But we can’t stop sinning, and I’ve done
them all (goring excluded), and I’ve specialized in lust. If the
weakness you’ve been born with is merely gossiping, I’m jealous;
because lust is worse. There I go, the sins of covetousness and pride
in the same sentence! I’m only on chapter two and sinning up a
storm! A Jew might say to all this, ‘G-d, blessed be He, only
expects us to try our best’, to which Rabbi Sha’ul (the apostle
Paul) might reply, “all have sinned and fallen short of the glory
of G-d”. If we’ve fallen short, we won’t make it without the Messiah. By the way, “Saul” didn’t change his name to “Paul”.
There is no “sh” letter in the Greek alphabet, so they couldn’t
write Sha’ul. Either way, he was a Jew that wrote about a third of
the New Testament.
My
earliest actual real memory of my life was sitting in my highchair
being fed some mush at around a year or so of age. My grandma is
saying, “open the hangar, the plane is coming through” and I’m
clamping my lips as tight as I can to avoid the sinister ‘banana-ry’
cargo. I could only speak gibberish at that point, but I remember
understanding the English language clearly. But the greatest event of
those years for me was the arrival, in 1953 if memory serves, of our
first television set. I lived for Uncle Fred Sayles “Junior
Frolics” program, with its ancient black & white cartoons,
Popeye, Felix, Farmer Gray, Koko the Clown and the rest. I suffered
through the grown-ups shows like “I Remember Mama” (my cue to
find some toys to play with), but I was intrigued by “The
Goldberg’s”; I wondered how we got our own TV show, and would we
ever be on it? (Once again I’m glad I didn’t use a pseudonym!)
I was two years old when my parents were swayed to have my tonsils removed, at the recommendation of a doctor. In those days the government was supposedly looking for peacetime uses of nuclear radiation and was experimenting with our armed forces by exposing them to radium. Yes, radium was all the rage, and for several years children were unnecessarily dosed with it after tonsil operations, even those with healthy tonsils. It was said that these were vestigial organs of no use. The doctors and nurses that administered the radium, without proper protection, are long dead. I first heard about all this when one of the editors of an underground comic book died. That was about twenty years ago. I imagine that this was the cause of most of my medical problems; why G-d chose to allow me to live two decades longer than this other fellow I cannot imagine. I was subjected to a lot more radiation in the future, including about 20 CT-scans or PT-scans. I'm amazed that I don't glow in the dark. I can't blame my parents for those scans; perhaps I'm a masochist for placing so much trust in the medical industry.
I was two years old when my parents were swayed to have my tonsils removed, at the recommendation of a doctor. In those days the government was supposedly looking for peacetime uses of nuclear radiation and was experimenting with our armed forces by exposing them to radium. Yes, radium was all the rage, and for several years children were unnecessarily dosed with it after tonsil operations, even those with healthy tonsils. It was said that these were vestigial organs of no use. The doctors and nurses that administered the radium, without proper protection, are long dead. I first heard about all this when one of the editors of an underground comic book died. That was about twenty years ago. I imagine that this was the cause of most of my medical problems; why G-d chose to allow me to live two decades longer than this other fellow I cannot imagine. I was subjected to a lot more radiation in the future, including about 20 CT-scans or PT-scans. I'm amazed that I don't glow in the dark. I can't blame my parents for those scans; perhaps I'm a masochist for placing so much trust in the medical industry.
The
following year my folks got their own apartment at Shore Haven in a
new section of Bensonhurst that Jews were moving into. I don’t
remember my room there, but I had one, nor do I remember much of our
apartment at all, except for the large patio that we shared with our
next-door neighbors, the Zimmerman’s. I do remember their apartment
somewhat though, as their pretty daughter and I were allowed to take
baths together. Whether this is more advice from Dr. Spock or not, I
don’t know, but this practice was my best memory of the place, next
to the wonderful gift I received for my 5th
birthday, a shiny new, red 20” bicycle. I didn’t learn to ride
the thing until eight years later, when amazingly enough, growth
spurt be darned I still fit into it. I clearly remember the day my
dad took it out of the box and painstakingly (accent on pain)
assembled it. At 13, when I rode it into a hedge for the first time,
I understood the great gift of freedom and mobility my father had
given me. I also got my first stamp album at that 5th
birthday party, and soon afterwards my worst memory of our short
dalliance there, the Mumps. I also spent a term at kindergarten;
wooden blocks, clay, small containers of milk with cookies and story
time. That was the life!
The
next year, we wandering Jews wandered to an old but attractive and
well-built, rent-controlled apartment in one of America’s most
Jewish neighborhoods of all (and it remains so to this day), Borough
Park. We would spend the next ten years there, until my dad would
once again venture forth to a new building and a new neighborhood. The
building, at the corner of 15th
Avenue and 47th
Street, had the vestiges of a faded glory. The outside was covered in
vines, and there was a large empty lobby with a bricked up fireplace.
Other buildings in the neighborhood with smaller lobbies still
contained some furniture, and we often wondered what exquisite
furnishings might have once graced that room. Its front doors were
massive things such as those of a palace; the apartment ceilings were
high, the walls dressed in fancy moldings. There were electric lamps
built into the walls in the shape of candles. The ones in our
apartment were painted over in many coats, but we heard that some
still worked in other apartments. The walls were thick, and the only
outside noise came from the clothesline bedecked courtyard, if your
windows were open.
All
of the apartment entrances had mezuzot
fastened to the right
doorposts, small torah-shaped containers with the Sh’ma Yisroel
prayer hidden inside. This would typically be surrounded with
stickers denoting a yearly donation to a charity, the Heart Fund,
March of Dimes, or more typically Hadassah, (the Hebrew name of Queen Esther) the women’s Zionist
organization. Similar to today’s bumper stickers advertising
political campaigns of year’s past, but for some reason never
removed from car bumpers, these Hadassah stickers, each year a
different color, but with the same picture, would remain on the
doorposts.
Another
interesting feature of the common hallways were the incinerator rooms
where we’d dump our garbage. Occasionally, the fire would be
burning, and I loved to watch the flames while the trash door was
open. The night deposit drop at our bank reminds me so much of it,
but I hope never to see any flames in that thing. Teddy and I, I’ll
introduce him shortly, never tired of running around the hallways and
roof of the building looking for fun, finding it in the endless task
of picking the old peeling lead paint from the walls. “Good
pickings over here!” one of us might exclaim.
On
the ground floor with a separate outside entrance was a doctor’s office, in
this case an eye doctor. I was an especially shmutzy
kid, loving to dig in
the dirt, hating to wash my hands. I received a “U” in health at
school each quarter for dirty fingernails. Once a teacher asked me
“who died”, although I didn’t understand the connection; the
black bands on my nails signifying death. This dirt inevitably found
its way into my eyes from hay-fever itching, and so visits to the eye
doctor to treat the resulting sties were inevitable as well. Once, a
sty had grown so large that an entire eye was glued shut with mucous,
and had to be pried open by the good doctor. There was a whole lot of
crying, and candy bribery, going on that day.
To the right of our building was the private residence of an esteemed rabbi who’d been rescued from Germany by his followers during the war. On the corner of 48th Street was another doctor’s office, in a private brick home, well almost every building was brick, where my mother was treated for boils. I recall singing the popular Jerry Vale tune “You Don’t Know Me” in the waiting room, while impatient with the long wait with mom. Some of the patients applauded at the end of the song, I suppose because my whiny arrangement was finally over. The entrance to the building had an inviting “stoop”, and kids would often hang out on it and even play stoop ball in between the coming and going of the building’s clients.
A
“stoop”, incidentally, is a row of usually concrete stairs at the
entrance to a building. There might be a store or apartment in the
basement, and the number of stairs could vary. On the sides of the
stairs there might be concrete lions, flower boxes, flat slabs for
sitting, or nothing. Stoop-Ball consisted of throwing a pink Spalding
ball against the stairs causing it to pop up in the air and then
someone would catch it. If there were more rules than that, I don’t
remember them.
Rochelle at Sam's Bungalows
Charles 'Yeshayahu' Eisenblatt
Pop singing "Try And Remember" on KPFA
The beautiful Rochelle
Rochelle at 16
Grandma Rose Eisenblatt in Williamsburg
Lenny Fifth Birthday
Borough Park was an easy hop on the BMT train to Coney Island. My first memory of the place was at a year or two of age. The fireworks scared the life out of me and I cried all through it. But once I realized that they were actually fun, albeit loud, I relished my time on the beach. I loved the peddlers that maneuvered around the tightly packed sun worshipers selling their wares: Shatzkin's knishes (best ever)and orangeade, one hot bag and one cold bag in hand. Connoisseur's argue over which knishes were tastiest in those days, but Shatzkin's, greasy fried on the outside, pillowy inside had no competition as far as I knew. Mrs. Stahl's were a distant second.
Once I was of age and could travel to the beach with my friends, food took a back seat to the rides. Although a trip to Coney Island was incomplete without Nathan's famous greasy french fries, Steeplechase and the other attractions became the reason for going. Steeplechase had an ancient metal horse race ride; at the exit two clowns were posted and shocked us with cattle prods! George C. Tilyou's amusement park also featured the mildest of three roller coasters. One of my favorite rides in Coney was the Virginia Reel, another antique that had spinning cars in a roller coaster like setting. I came home with my back bleeding from that one. There were many others that no longer exist and others that have survived, but the rides ruled for sure.
Rochelle at Sam's Bungalows
Charles 'Yeshayahu' Eisenblatt
Pop singing "Try And Remember" on KPFA
The beautiful Rochelle
Rochelle at 16
Grandma Rose Eisenblatt in Williamsburg
Lenny Fifth Birthday
Borough Park was an easy hop on the BMT train to Coney Island. My first memory of the place was at a year or two of age. The fireworks scared the life out of me and I cried all through it. But once I realized that they were actually fun, albeit loud, I relished my time on the beach. I loved the peddlers that maneuvered around the tightly packed sun worshipers selling their wares: Shatzkin's knishes (best ever)and orangeade, one hot bag and one cold bag in hand. Connoisseur's argue over which knishes were tastiest in those days, but Shatzkin's, greasy fried on the outside, pillowy inside had no competition as far as I knew. Mrs. Stahl's were a distant second.
Once I was of age and could travel to the beach with my friends, food took a back seat to the rides. Although a trip to Coney Island was incomplete without Nathan's famous greasy french fries, Steeplechase and the other attractions became the reason for going. Steeplechase had an ancient metal horse race ride; at the exit two clowns were posted and shocked us with cattle prods! George C. Tilyou's amusement park also featured the mildest of three roller coasters. One of my favorite rides in Coney was the Virginia Reel, another antique that had spinning cars in a roller coaster like setting. I came home with my back bleeding from that one. There were many others that no longer exist and others that have survived, but the rides ruled for sure.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
THREE
Teddy, on 16th Avenue in Borough Park, late 1970's
Ted, me, Kelly & Diana pose in front of my old apartment building, late 1970's
Ted, me, Kelly & Diana pose in front of my old apartment building, late 1970's
Borough Park, Brooklyn, also known as Boro Park, the latter
spelling an acceptable one but the former one preferred, was a Jewish
“ghetto” in the best sense. Here, Jews ruled as kings and queens
over their destinies, a wonderful amalgam of religious and secular
people completely in their comfortable element. Indeed, you would
have to wander several blocks away at least, to gaze curiously at the
seemingly out-of-place Catholic Church. On 13th
Avenue, BP’s main shopping strip, our “adopted” people, the
Chinese, waited to serve us their exotic food. Hey, we loved America
and always will, taking and adopting from each culture the best it
has to offer. From the Chinese-Americans, not only eggrolls but Mah
Jongg, from the Latin-Americans cha-cha-cha and other 'dirty' dancing (clean as a Jewish kitchen on Passover morning compared with
now-a-days), and from the Italians, well let me just say (and I say
this with pride, however misplaced) that many of our lads served with
them in America’s underground economy. Bugsy Siegel’s monetary
contributions, for example, towards the eventual liberation of our
motherland are well-known (speaking of Israel, here, not Borough
Park).
People
of color were admittedly scarce in BP (note: I’m being lazy here,
BP is not
an acceptable name for Borough Park) as I’ve already mentioned. The
superintendents of the apartment buildings on the three corners of
our block were all Caucasian to a point,
until our
building hired a black 'super'. He and his family, in fact, were
the first African-Americans (still referred to as “Negroes” then,
and worse) I met up close. If it weren’t for Amos & Andy being
part of my TV addiction, along with Buckwheat on the Little Rascals
and Rochester on the Jack Benny show, I might have been oblivious to
the varieties of pigmentations common to human life forms on this
planet. Cantonese cuisine will always ‘reign supreme’ with us.
And then there was the Alan Freed radio & TV show and Dick
Clark’s “American Bandstand”, the cultural icons that truly
first taught me the incredible contributions to the entertainment
industry made by Black America. Surely, Rock and Roll has been a, if
not the, major force in the war against bigotry and prejudice. It was
Rock & Roll, not Borough Park or my family that helped me to grow
up “color-blind”. Although I can credit Borough Park in one
sense; what little Bible I was willing to learn at the Chaim N.
Bialik Yiddish Folk School on 16th
Avenue, showed me that G-d created us “perfect”, the Hebrew says,
out of the red dirt of the earth. Even Adam & Eve were not 'white'. Our division over such an immutable fact of birth as
skin color is a hideous anomaly. The Bible taught me that much, even
back then; G-d created a single race of humans.
But
my concern at six years of age, beyond squeezing my parents for money
to buy the latest rock & roll 45, was that most of the girls I
was interested in were Italian. Besides the very real problems that
couples made up of different religions face, Jewish people believe
that intermarrying can eventually decimate Judaism as much or more
than Hitler did, if allowed to go unchecked. Religious Jews have such
large families for that reason, our survival as a people. And as I’ve
said, if there are no Jewish leaders to cry out that phrase to G-d at
the opportune moment, Messiah won’t come. But G-d’s promises must
come to pass or He is a liar. The Jewish people will never disappear
from this Earth. None of this mattered to me, however, while I was
lusting after these six-year-old Italian Catholic sweeties.
The
first “real” object of my lust was my first grade school chum
‘Mary’ (OK, her name I’ll change; she’s probably still alive,
why embarrass her). Previously my flame had been Vera-Ellen in the
movie “White Christmas” but my dad assured me that when I became
marriageable age she’d be too old for me. But he took a little more
seriously my desire for Mary, who I announced to him my desire to
marry. Italian girls were treif
(unkosher), forbidden, ‘not for us’. Not that Mary ever returned
my glances; still my fantasy life changed that year. I mainly
fantasized that I was a teenage gang leader named “Lee”, but now
I had a fantasy “moll” at my side. In the second grade I had my
eye on the slimmer of two Italian sisters and invited them both to a
party at my place. I remember one of them bringing along a little
book, a catechism to study while at my house or perhaps it was more a
charm to protect her against Lenny the ‘G-d killer’? I was a cute
little kid back then, but no Romeo. While handsome, I was short, weak
and puny.
Plus I had an embarrassing
(although not to me) bad habit, of grabbing myself in the crotch. I
don’t know where I’d picked this up from; had I seen an older kid
do this? Or was it just an outgrowth of my earlier habit of sleeping
with my covers tightly between my legs? I’ve heard that Jewish boys
become sexually stimulated at an earlier age than most due to their
circumcision at eight days old. Dear reader, I would have left this
out of my book if it were not integral to my story of ‘sex, drugs
and rock & roll’. I am picturing many of you returning this
book to the Christian bookstore at this point and angrily demanding a
refund. Please feel free; I can only clean my story up so much.
Actually I can remember seeing Jewish doo-wop street singers with one
hand raised toward Heaven, and the other ‘copping their groin’.
Yes, even in Borough Park.
I’ll never forget my first day
of school at P.S. 164, and it is easily understandable why the
six-year-old girls in my class were not interested in me, aside from
the fact that they were six and not perverts like myself. When my
mother delivered me to class that day, I still had my baby bottle
with me and was still drinking from it. The class exploded in
laughter! I had my mom stay with me the entire day which turned out
to finally be the day I was weaned. I had never been breast-fed; my
mother’s doctors had advised her against it because of her heart
condition. Stupid doctors.
There were attractive girls in my
‘micro-neighborhood’ as well, being the apartment buildings on
three of the four corners of 47th
Street and 15th
Avenue. Most of the kids I hung out with lived in these three
six-story buildings. Mine had no girls our age, but my best friends
lived there, Teddy, Pete & Jules. Les and Bob lived across 47th,
along with Julie (notice: name change) and Penny (real name retained
to illustrate the fact that it rhymed with mine, but also so that you
can imagine how we ribbed her about being worth one cent and other
mean things that kids said back then).
Also in that building lived the
great unrequited love of my life, Sue (not her name). Being a year
younger than us and not in our grade at school, she was not part of
our peer group. But I secretly loved her from afar, once braving
Halloween night alone to lay a gift at her door. I did get 'chalked' by a group of older kids who grabbed me in the lobby of my building,
but it was worth it. Once, when we were in high school, I summoned
the nerve to call her and ask for a date. She was busy on both nights
I’d suggested, she was beautiful after all, dark complexion and
perfect features, and while I’d heard through a friend that she
really did want me to call back I never did. Lucky for her. A few
years ago, while reminiscing on a New Utrecht internet bulletin board
about just such things, someone told me they knew Sue and could get
me her address. But what would I say to her now?
I had two sweethearts in the
third building, in my mind at least, Arlene & Lucille, their real
names as I’ve nothing potentially embarrassing to say about them.
There was that first game of “spin the bottle”, of course, that
was as exciting as it was innocent but it led to nothing else. I felt
a great loss when Lucille moved away, somewhere down south as I
recall where I’d never see her again. My favorite memory of Arlene
was the day we were searching through a closet in her apartment (for
what I don’t remember) and I found some of her older brother’s
45’s. She got his permission to give me a rare Velvetones record on
Aladdin (“I Found My Love”); wish I still had it. We also had a
male friend in that building named Rance, but weren’t allowed to
play at his place since it was full of antiques. He snuck us in one
time when his parents weren’t home, and it was like visiting a
museum. Rance took his role as curator and tour guide, explaining the
significance of some of the pieces.
Teddy’s cousin Jan also lived
there. Before leaving this topic I must say that these three
buildings yielded great booty on Halloween. We would knock on every
door, even the ones we knew contained Hasidim
who did not share our
interest in that holiday. One year the school guilt-tripped us to
“trick-or-treat for Unicef”, which was boring and we never did it
again. But it gave Teddy and I a great memory when one older man
listening to our plea through his door exclaimed, “but the hour is
late” in his eastern-European accent. We laughed for years,
literally; if either of us ever said that, we’d crack up all over
again. You had to be there, I guess.
I don’t mean to suggest by that
crack about Unicef that we were entirely selfish. Just like in Woody
Allen’s movie “Radio Days”, we would roam the neighborhood with
little blue charity boxes called pushkes
to raise money for Israel, and unlike Woody’s character in that
movie, we actually turned the money in, although I’d be lying if I
said that stealing it never crossed our minds.
Growing up in New York City,
especially in a safe neighborhood like mine, was a great blessing. In
those days, while we heard rumors of crime, and even news stories
that were certainly not rumors, they were always about somebody else
in another neighborhood. I admit that when mob boss Albert Anastasia
was killed while getting a haircut in 1957, I became afraid of barber
shops and refused to get a haircut for months. My father laughed and
explained that it had nothing to do with me or our neighborhood
hair-cutters, but it took me awhile to get comfortable about it. When
one of the kids in my class got 'nits', bugs in his hair,
suddenly keeping my hair trim took on new meaning, however.
Another vague fear my friends and
I had was of a gang known as the “Baldies”. We knew that they had
shaved heads, so we were always on the lookout for bald people, but
never saw any, at least not any that were young. In reality, they
were not bald at all, nor did they scalp their victims. One gang we
did actually see, from a nearby neighborhood, was an offshoot of the
“Golden Guineas”; but they were really a social group, harmless
greasers typical of the era. Crime was truly rare in Boro Park, with
many if not most residents leaving their apartments and even cars
unlocked most of the time.
A typical day in my ‘hood would
begin with the sound of horse-drawn wagons bedecked with cowbells,
and push-cart merchants. One vivid memory is of the fish seller
pushing his small cart through the early morning street yelling:
“ay-oh-ay, w-oh-oh-oh ay-oh-ay”; and then after several of those
the closer, loud enough to wake anyone still asleep, “I got FISH!”
You know Teddy and I loved imitating that guy! There were also fruit
and vegetable sellers, and later in the day the ubiquitous Good Humor
ice cream push-carts. The latter had a promotional campaign going for
awhile where they would give you a numbered ticket each time you
bought a frozen treat, with a comic strip character on it. Then you
would check your number in the newspaper, and if you were lucky would
win a cash prize. The vendors were very competitive and soon began
handing out two or three tickets with a purchase, then whole handfuls
of tickets. My friends and I collected huge piles of tickets with
Dick Tracy or Little Orphan Annie on them, and a character known as
the Schmoo, a holdover from decades earlier. But none of us
ever won any money that I remember. My favorite morning vendor was
the Dugan’s Bakery truck; I’d zoom downstairs to buy a box of 6
cupcakes with thick frosting, two white, two pink and two chocolate.
I’d admire their beauty, especially the lovely pink color, running
my finger over the tactile surface. Then I’d peel the frosting off
and throw it away and only eat the delicious golden cake below.
There were push-carts at school
as well, mainly the sellers of soft nickel salt-pretzels. These were
eaten either plain or with a squeeze of mustard. Typically the
vendors were elderly Jewish men, and each had their own corner. But
one day in 1960, a guy a block away from Montauk Junior High dropped
his price to 2 for a nickel, and the pretzel war began. When the
price dropped to 3 for a nickel, and it was impossible to eat three
of these things, we all began throwing them at each other and even at
the old Jewish guys. When the bell rang at the end of lunchtime, the
entire schoolyard was littered with chunks of soft pretzel inches
deep in places. The candy-apple sellers did well after the pretzel
war; we were sick of pretzels.
There are a few other highlights
of Junior High days that still come to mind. If you live in a
hurricane area of the country, it would be a commonplace thing, but
the only hurricane I ever experienced caused the school’s windows
and doors to be locked one day at lunch time. We could watch the wind
whipping around through the windows, and the pretzels and their
sellers flying by. Just kidding. At 3:00 we were allowed to leave;
the sidewalks were all strewn with leaves. Another unforgettable
event took place while I was yet a 'freshie' in the 7th
grade. I’d heard that the seniors routinely beat the freshmen up,
but in my case a kid named John, (I say kid, but he looked at least
20 to me; must have been left back a few times) flung a metal
trashcan cover from across the street, over the schoolyard fence, and
hit me on the back. Ouch! John, if you’re still alive and reading
this, I forgive you. It didn’t result in any lifelong back
problems.
In those days if you were bright
enough and had at least a 130 I.Q. you could skip eighth grade thus
get through Junior High in only two years. The IQ tests were
administered in sixth grade and the scores were kept secret. If you
were admitted to the “SP” (special progress? stupid pest?)
program you’d be alerted only at the very last minute. I became
obsessed to find out my IQ score. As much as I hated school, the idea
of skipping a year sounded great. And if I didn’t make it, I
wouldn’t be in the same class as most of my friends who definitely
had the requisite smarts. I noticed that the teacher had a folder on
her desk that had a card for every student corresponding with their
seats. So I began to sneak up to her desk any time I could think of
an excuse to do so. One kid had only a 70 IQ; others hovered around
100, the so-called average. Eventually I saw my card; mine was 136. I would be in class 7sp1 the following year. My best friend Teddy’s score was a bit under the sacred mark, however, which caused him great distress. I’m glad they no longer give those tests, although public schools are way worse today than 50 years ago.
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