Though she was not religious, we ate matzo
for the whole week of Passover, often searching
for hours in our rural neighborhood
for a store that sold matzo, and the store
that sold matzo one year did not always sell it
the next so she always bought more
than we needed, and for the Passover after
her death I had no need buy any more matzo,
but none of her family celebrated Passover,
she was the one who insisted on Passover,
but the family expressed an impatience,
as she prompted the men on procedure
and pronunciation, to get on with it and eat,
and when her niece gave birth to twins and
one twin was stillborn, her niece and
husband crying and confused, she insisted
that they deal with the dead one
he should have a proper burial
with proper Jewish prayers,
so many ancestors had been killed
with no ceremony and no memory
and this one child will be buried
with honor and memory
and the Family did gather to bury the child
and we said prayers for him, and
Kaddish, the Jewish Prayer for the Dead,
which we said for him
and for them
and for us,
and that was the last act
she did for her family
and at the Thanksgiving
following her death
the non Jewish husband of her niece
opined
she will be missed,
but she was cantankerous.
Peter Goodwin
Saturday, May 22, 2010
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Yes, thank goodness she was.
ReplyDelete--Maggie