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Grandfather's Tobacco Farm
If my paternal grandfather could have assured himself that a
quorum of 10 adult Jewish males could be easily assembled to recite the Jewish
prayer for the dead in the event of his own death in Connecticut's sparsely
populated tobacco farming region, I might have grown up as a farm boy.
With such assurances, my grandfather would have confidently purchased a 70-acre
farm near Windsor Locks, Conn. in 1920, my father might have eventually
inherited the farm, and I could have conceivably been born and raised on the
soil. But it was not to be.
My grandfather had arrived in the U.S. from the Czarist Russian-ruled sector of
Poland with his wife and four children about 14 years earlier. Like so many
other East European Jewish immigrants, they settled in the hurly-burly of
Manhattan's Lower East Side.
Grandpa, who was an ordained rabbi, founded and headed what was one of the first
Hasidic congregations in this country. His prestigious position was essentially
an unpaid one. He tried to earn a living selling steamship tickets and sewing
machines, but was not very successful. Grandma became the family's primary
breadwinner, as she had been in Europe. In Poland she had been in the vegetable
oil business. In New York she operated a tiny dairy store on the ground floor of
the tenement apartment house in which they lived.
Grandpa was oriented more towards philosophical pursuits than business. He had
only one occupation: "being a devout Jew," as my father once put it. (I never
actually knew my grandfather.) When his wife took time out to bear babies,
however, it was his unhappy lot to take charge of the store. This was invariably
a bitter experience for both Grandpa and Grandma. My grandfather had a
disquieting tendency to allow the store's operations to collapse into commercial
disorder.
Under his unskilled and half-hearted direction, customers would not be pressed
to pay debts, bills would not be paid, and orders to replenish inventories were
not placed. Grandma's remarkable mercantile talents would have to be hastily
applied to resurrect the business.
This would be accomplished as soon as the care of the latest infant could be
arranged, either with a relative or a boarder, usually a single young woman
fresh from the family's Polish home town.
After several years in New York, Grandpa, who was now about 45, became
dissatisfied with city life. The tumult of the big, teeming city was making him
disenchanted with the new land. He decided to move to the "country," believing
that rural life would be preferable for his youngest children still at home.
He was encouraged by a friend who had purchased a farm near Monticello, N.Y. in
the Catskills. The friend owned a few cows, chickens and a vegetable garden. His
farm house had several spare rooms, which he rented to summer boarders who
required a kosher cuisine. This was at a time when the Catskills area was being
established as the borsht belt, a summer vacation mecca for Jews from the big
city. The friend, who came from Grandpa's Polish home town, invited him to
visit.
Grandpa was overwhelmed by the beauty of his friend's bucolic surroundings. He
decided that he too would become a farmer and offer his family the benefits of
rural life. He was not deterred by the fact that he knew nothing about farming
and had never performed manual labor.
The move to the country, of course, would involve his severance from full-time
ultra-Orthodox synagogue life. But in the best Jewish tradition of "alles far
der kinder" (everything for the children), he was willing to make the
sacrifice.
Seeking advice on how to become a farmer, Grandpa turned to the Baron de Hirsch
Agricultural Society, an organization set up to promote the settling of
immigrant Jews on the land. The society provided both technical assistance and
low-interest loans to aspiring Jewish immigrant farmers.
When my grandfather told a society agent how impressed he was with his friend's
farming experience, the agent advised against moving to the Catskills. "If you
want to run a restaurant," Grandpa was told, "you might as well open it up in
the city."
The agent warned that my grandfather would have a hard time making a living by
combining the operation of a tiny farm with a boarding house for summer guests.
Indeed, Grandpa's friend normally moved back to the city in the winter to work
in a garment factory to support his family and pay the mortgage on the Catskills
farm.
The agent told Grandpa that he would seek a more attractive situation and would
call when one came along. Several months later, Grandpa received a letter from
the society, reporting that one of its field agents had learned that an aged
Jewish farmer, a Mr. Weinstock, in Windsor Locks, about 15 miles north of
Hartford, wanted to sell his farm and retire.
The farm was was almost entirely devoted to the cultivation of Connecticut River
Valley tobacco, a high-grade strain widely used as a broad leaf wrapper for
cigars. In addition to a curing shed for the tobacco, the farm had seven cows
and three horses.
The agricultural society suggested that Grandpa visit the farm. It was available
for $12,500, a fair price, the society agent assured Grandpa. The farmer had
operated the property for 25 years. His three children lived in Hartford and had
no interest in continuing to farm.
By coincidence, several weeks earlier, my father had just returned to New York
after quitting his job on the Ford Motor Co. assembly line. Having tired of
Detroit, he now sought work in New York. My father, who was 22, accompanied
Grandpa on a visit to the tobacco farm.
As Mr. Weinstock explained, the tobacco seeds were planted in the fall under
glass in a hot house. The following spring, the tobacco plants were set into the
open ground, and in the early fall were harvested. The leaves were placed in the
curing shed for several months and then sold. In addition to the tobacco crop,
the farm produced a small but regular income from the sale of dairy products. It
all sounded perfectly simple.
The time was May, and the farmer promised that if Grandpa bought the farm, he
would remove the tobacco leaves from the hot house and replant them before
turning over the premises. He assured Grandpa that he would visit the farm twice
a week throughout the summer to see how my grandfather was making out and to
provide any required assistance. He advised Grandpa to hire a live-in laborer to
help with the heavy work. There were many immigrant workers in Hartford, he
said, who were eager for such jobs.
Grandpa returned to New York with my father to decide what to do. After much
deliberation, my grandfather decided to go ahead with the deal. Mr. Weinstock
wanted an immediate $500 deposit and a $5,000 down payment 30 days later to seal
the purchase. The agricultural society offered my grandfather a no-interest,
long-term loan of $3,500 for the down payment. The farmer was willing to hold a
mortgage for the balance of the purchase price.
My father offered to dip into his savings to help Grandpa with the down payment.
Again my father accompanied Grandpa to Connecticut to make the $500 deposit. My
grandmother and their other children remained in New York until arrangements
could be made to sell the dairy store and move to the farm.
After a few days, during which the farmer instructed Grandpa and my father on
how to operate the farm, my father went to Hartford to hire a laborer. The usual
pay was $75 a month, plus room and board.
The first morning, my father was unsuccessful in finding a man. He had no better
luck the following morning, and decided to return to the farm and bring Grandpa
back to New York before closing the deal. He thought that the family might be
able to get along without a hired hand. He figured that he would stay on the
farm for a couple of months, and that his younger brothers would then be able to
help their father run the farm.
When he got back to the farm, he was greeted by a stranger who introduced
himself as the owner of the neighboring farm. The man sadly informed my father
than Mr. Weinstock had had a heart attack and had died a few hours earlier. Very
slowly my father entered the farm house's living room and was shocked to see
Grandpa kneeling over Mr. Weinstock's body and reciting the Psalms in Hebrew.
A candle was burning on the floor besides the body. Grandpa was a member of his
synagogue's burial society, which prepared the dead for burial, and was thus
well qualified to cope with Mr. Weinstock's body. Jewish religious practice,
which forbids embalming, requires the hasty burial of the dead.
Hasidim like Grandpa usually did not use commercial undertakers. Grandpa tied
Mr. Weinstock's legs together before his body became stiff, washed the body, and
covered it with sheets. After several hours, Mr. Weinstock's children arrived to
arrange their father's burial.
After the funeral, the children returned to the farm to "sit shiva," the
traditional Jewish, seven-day period of grief and mourning normally held in the
deceased's home. ("Shiva" is the Hebrew word for seven.) The custom stems
directly from the verse in Genesis in which Joseph mourns his father Jacob for a
week.
During the shiva period, the deceased's sons recite "kaddish," the prayer
for the dead, at the three Jewish daily prayer services--in the morning, at
sunset, and in the evening. The sons continue to recite the kaddish for the next
11 months.
The prayer's central theme is the magnification and sanctification of God's
name. The prayer's purpose is to assure that the deceased's soul goes to heaven.
According to Orthodox Jewish practice, all the prayers are conducted in the
presence of a "minyan," a religious quorum of 10 adult males.
Grandpa was jolted by the fact that there were not enough adult Jewish males
living in Mr. Weinstock's neighborhood to constitute a minyan during the shiva
period. He was equally shocked by the family's inability to quickly find a Torah
to be set up in the home while sitting shiva--a tradition followed largely by
ultra-Orthodox Jews like my grandfather.
Grandpa suddenly realized what it would mean for him to live and die in what he
now regarded as "the wilderness"--a neighborhood with few if any other Jews. The
religious requirements that meant so much to him could not be fulfilled. A life
as an ultra-Orthodox Jewish farmer near Windsor Locks began to look impossible.
My grandfather decided to abandon the idea of becoming a farmer. He called off
the deal, surrendered his deposit, and sadly returned to the hurly-burly of
Manhattan's Lower East Side, the family's dairy store, and the familiar comforts
of his religious life as an ultra-Orthodox Jew.
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