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Shabbos Goy
Snow came early in the winter of 1933 when our extended Cuban
family moved into the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. I was ten years old. We
were the first Spanish speakers to arrive, yet we fit more or less easily into
that crowded, multicultural neighborhood. Soon we began learning a little
Italian, a few Greek and Polish words, lots of Yiddish and some heavily accented
English.
I first heard the expression 'Shabbes is falling' when Mr. Rosenthal
refused to open the door of his dry goods store on Bedford Avenue. My mother had
sent me with a dime to buy a pair of black socks for my father. In those days,
men wore mostly black and Navy blue. Brown and gray were somehow special and
cost more. Mr. Rosenthal stood inside the locked door, arms folded, glaring at
me through the thick glass while a heavy snow and darkness began to fall on a
Friday evening. "We're closed, already", Mr.Rosenthal had said, shaking his
head, "can't you see that Shabbes is falling? Don't be a nudnik! Go home." I
could feel the cold wetness covering my head and thought that Shabbes was the
Jewish word for snow.
My misperception of Shabbes didn't last long, however, as the area's dominant
culture soon became apparent; Gentiles were the minority. From then on, as
Shabbes fell with its immutable regularity and Jewish lore took over the life of
the neighborhood, I came to realize that so many human activities, ordinarily
mundane at any other time, ceased, and a palpable silence, a pleasant
tranquility, fell over all of us. It was then that a family with an urgent need
would dispatch a youngster to "get the Spanish boy, and hurry."
That was me. In time, I stopped being nameless and became Yussel, sometimes Yuss
or Yusseleh. And so began my life as a Shabbes Goy, voluntarily doing
chores for my neighbors on Friday nights and Saturdays: lighting stoves, running
errands, getting a prescription for an old tante (*) , stoking coal furnaces,
putting lights on or out, clearing snow and ice from slippery sidewalks and
stoops. Doing just about anything that was forbidden to the devout by their
religious code.
Friday afternoons were special. I'd walk home from school assailed by the rich
aroma emanating from Jewish kitchens preparing that evening's special menu. By
now, I had developed a list of steady "clients," Jewish families who depended on
me. Furnaces, in particular, demanded frequent tending during Brooklyn's many
freezing winters. I shudder remembering brutally cold winds blowing off the East
River. Anticipation ran high as I thought of the warm home-baked treats I'd
bring home that night after my Shabbes rounds were over. Thanks to me, my entire
family had become Jewish pastry junkies. Moi? I'm still addicted to checkerboard
cake, halvah and Egg Creams (*) (made only with Fox's Ubet chocolate syrup).
I remember as if it were yesterday how I discovered that Jews were the smartest
people in the world. You see, in our Cuban household we all loved the ends of
bread loaves and, to keep peace, my father always decided who would get them.
One harsh winter night I was rewarded for my Shabbes ministrations with a loaf
of warm challah (we pronounced it "holly") and I knew I was witnessing genius!
Who else could have invented a bread that had wonderfully crusted ends all over
it -- enough for everyone in a large family?
There was an "International" aspect to my teen years in Williamsburg. The
Sternberg family had two sons who had fought with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in
Spain. Whenever we kids could get their attention, they'd spellbind us with
tales of hazardous adventures in the Spanish Civil War. These twenty-something
war veterans also introduced us to a novel way of thinking, one that embraced
such humane ideas as 'From each according to his means and to each according to
his needs'. In retrospect, this innocent exposure to a different philosophy was
the starting point of a journey that would also incorporate the concept of
Tzedakah in my personal guide to the world.
In what historians would later call The Great Depression, a nickel was a lot of
mazuma and its economic power could buy a brand new Spaldeen, our local name for
the pink-colored rubber ball then produced by the Spalding Company. The famous
Spaldeen was central to our endless street games: stickball and punchball or the
simpler stoop ball. One balmy summer evenings our youthful fantasies converted
South Tenth Street into Ebbets Field with the Dodgers' Dolph Camilli swinging a
broom handle at a viciously curving Spaldeen thrown by the Giants' great lefty,
Carl Hubbell. We really thought it curved, I swear.
Our neighbors, magically transformed into spectators kibitzing from their
brownstone stoops and windows, were treated to a unique version of major league
baseball. My tenure as the resident Shabbes Goy came to an abrupt end after
Pearl Harbor Day, December 7, 1941. I withdrew from Brooklyn College the
following day and joined the U.S. Army. In June of 1944, the Army Air Corps
shipped me home after flying sixty combat missions over Italy and the Balkans. I
was overwhelmed to find that several of my Jewish friends and neighbors had set
a place for me at their supper tables every Shabbes throughout my absence,
including me in their prayers. What mitzvoth! My homecoming was highlighted by
wonderful invitations to dinner. Can you imagine the effect after twenty-two
months of Army field rations?
As my post-World War II life developed, the nature of the association I'd had
with Jewish families during my formative years became clearer. I had learned the
meaning of friendship, of loyalty, and of honor and respect. I discovered
obedience without subservience. And caring about all living things had become as
natural as breathing. The worth of a strong work ethic and of purposeful
dedication was manifest. Love of learning blossomed and I began to set higher
standards for my developing skills, and loftier goals for future activities and
dreams. Mind, none of this was the result of any sort of formal instruction; my
yeshiva had been the neighborhood. I learned these things, absorbed them
actually says it better, by association and role modeling, by pursuing curious
inquiry, and by what educators called "incidental learning" in the crucible that
was pre-World War II Williamsburg. It seems many of life's most elemental
lessons are learned this way.
While my parents' Cuban home sheltered me with warm, intimate affection and
provided for my well-being and self esteem, the group of Jewish families I came
to know and help in the Williamsburg of the 1930s was a surrogate tribe that
abetted my teenage rite of passage to adulthood. One might even say we had
experienced a special kind of Bar Mitzvah. I couldn't explain then the concept
of tikkun olam, but I realized as I matured how well I had been oriented
by the Jewish experience to live it and to apply it. What a truly uplifting
outlook on life it is to be genuinely motivated "to repair the world."
In these twilight years when my good wife is occasionally told, "Your husband is
a funny man," I'm aware that my humor has its roots in the shticks of
Second Avenue Yiddish Theater, entertainers at Catskill summer resorts, and
their many imitators. And, when I argue issues of human or civil rights and am
cautioned about showing too much zeal, I recall how chutzpah first
flourished on Williamsburg sidewalks, competing for filberts (hazelnuts) with
tough kids wearing payess (*) and yarmulkes (*) . Along the way I
played chess and one-wall handball, learned to fence, listened to
Rimsky-Korsakov, ate roasted chestnuts, read Maimonides and studied Saul Alinsky.
I am ever grateful for having had the opportunity to be a Shabbes Goy.
Aleichem Sholom (*) .
Definitions:
Shabbas - Sabbath
Goy - anyone who is not Jewish
Tante - aunt
Payess - long sideburns/earlocks
Yarmulkes - skull caps
Aleichem Sholom - Go in peace
Egg Creams - Chocolate syrup, milk and seltzer - no egg, no cream - a New York
specialty
(If there are any words I missed that you don't understand - ask!)
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