An Orphan's Tale (28 page)

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Authors: Jay Neugeboren

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Also: If God gave the Torah to Moses on Mount Sinai, how did Dr. Fogel explain who wrote the last 8 parts, after Moses dies?

I asked Charlie why he didn't want to give reasons for his feeling and he got angry with me and told me not to feel so proud because I knew how to use words. He surprised me and quoted the saying about God being concerned above all with what is in a man's heart.

This is what he asked me: Where in the Bible does it say that Abraham knew how to read and write?

Mr. Mittleman said that God was too smart to have ever put his promise in writing.

Sol said, God bless the state of Israel!

Then it was time for Minchah and Maariv. When I finished praying I went outside and when I saw 3 stars I went back inside and I lit the lanterns for Havdalah and sniffed salt and pepper from the palm of my hand. I kissed the backs of both my hands and wished myself a good week.

I sat on the step of the cabin making myself think of nothing until it became chilly, when I came back inside and had supper.

If I had enough food and money, could I go on forever like this, filling my days with nothing but prayer and study and eating and washing and sleeping?

The answer is no.

SUNDAY

It's the middle of the afternoon now and here I am, sitting next to my own pond and thinking how lucky I was to have thought to come here instead of staying in the city. I wonder if Dr. Fogel sat here when he was a boy and his father was the leader of the colony.

I just gave myself my 1st music lesson on the Tonette, learning to read notes and how to blow to get a good pure tone. I bought one in a drugstore this morning.

My promise: to practice music one hour every day. This will give me a start for when I come out and can take up a real instrument. I think the sweet fragrance of the Sabbath is going to stay with me all week long, because when I realized this morning that Charlie was not going to come today it didn't make me unhappy. Sunday is his big day for selling houses.

Charlie's fatal trouble: He's too good. If he had the ability to reject me he wouldn't be worried the way he is now and I wouldn't be able to make him do what I want. Mr. Mittleman would agree with me. This is what he would say: If you want to get ahead, learn to be bad! Too many people like Charlie, even after what he did to Murray, whether by accident or not.

My question: Why is he so good? If he were less good, would I have seen that in his eyes also, even in the photos, and would that have kept me from trying to find him? And if I hadn't wanted to find him and if everything hadn't happened the way it had and if I hadn't just thought what I thought about him being too good, would that have made him something else, and would anybody else ever have thought the same about him?

If I think the thought he will too!

Does that mean there's hope?

A fact: THE JEWISH PEOPLE ARE LESS THAN ⅓ OF
1%
OF THE WORLD'S POPULATION, INCLUDING CHILDREN.

To do: list the great contributions of the Jews to civilization, including not only those of people everybody knows like Einstein and Spinoza and Freud, but also others. In America, for example, find out if Jews really run the publishing industry and garment industry and movie industry and diamond industry and Democratic party and radio and TV and universities.

Some examples I remember of things even Jews don't know about famous Jews: Emil Berliner invented the gramophone and the microphone. A Jew discovered petroleum in Galicia in 1853. The International Postal Union was invented by Joseph Michaelson. The telephone was really invented by Philip Reiss in 1864. Nahum Salamon was the 1st man to manufacture bicycles. Bubonic plague serum and typhus fever serum were invented by Jews. The repeating rifle was invented by a Jew. In 1854 in Germany a Jew made and drove the 1st electric automobile. (Look up names I forgot!)

The question: What would happen if the whole world were Jewish?

The answer: There would be a shortage of Rabbis.

If I'm feeling so good now, is Charlie feeling the opposite?

Things that are not in my notebook: what I dream about when I dream. What each person I meet looks like. What I think between the time when I finish writing in my notebook until I go to sleep on that day. What I eat at every meal and/or between meals.

Also: I don't put down every single detail of what people look like, or everything they say, or what rooms I'm in are like. I don't put down what kinds of shoes people wear or what color the pants and shoes and socks and underwear and shirt I'm wearing now are. I don't put down how each thing I eat tastes and every time I drink water or go to the bathroom.

I don't put down only the important things either. Sometimes I forget the important things.

How different am I when I write things down from when I do the things I'm writing about?

I don't put down the stories I see all the time when I think of how people's lives, like Charlie's or Dr. Fogel's or Hannah's, would be so different with small changes and when I follow their lives along different lines, coming from them saying things or making decisions or having things happen to them that are different from the way things are.

When I imagine how their lives might become different lives from the ones they have I always see them in my head as if they're walking away from me on a path covered with leaves and I'm seeing them from behind. Then I see them come to places where there are several directions they can go in, including straight ahead. I imagine what lies ahead on each road. Each road has new turning points and I see them making choices or being forced on to paths and I see them in the future with different lives being led right there on the paths, and when I look from behind I can see 8 or 10 or 12 or more different lives being acted out by them at stopping points on the road, as if on theater stages. Sometimes I see all the lives being led at the same time and I can see which ones would have been the best choices. But sometimes a good choice at 1 point leads to a bad choice later and vice versa. And sometimes the paths intersect and the people shake hands with themselves and kiss themselves in delight at meeting themselves.

Now I'm going to do what I mean, in an opposite way, going backward.

Do I really know everything my mind went through during the instant in which I had the idea to do what I'm going to do and during which it sped backward in time even while it was writing in time right now and saw everything that happened in time back then and which I'll now put down?

What did my mind do with all the years in between??

Without further ado, Danny Ginsberg presents:

THE STORY OF NEW ZION

  a story by   

Daniel Ginsberg

One bright day in the 3rd quarter of the century in which we now live, a young boy of indeterminate age chanced to be walking through a deserted section of some woods in upstate New York, where he had been sojourning, on his way to freedom (for the boy was an orphan who had run away from the orphanage which had held him—and in those days there were still orphans, though they were forgotten by the public at large), when he spied a tree trunk that attracted his attention by the strange light flickering from it. Upon closer examination the boy discovered that the strange light came from sunbeams dancing upon the filaments of an intricate spider web, which web covered a hollow in the old tree, and below which web the boy saw what it was that was causing the marvelous light to glisten at him.

He stuck his fingers through the sticky web and took out the box. It was made of highly polished metal, and though the boy could tell that it was very old, it still shone as if it were new. Upon the lid of the box was a Star of David, and the initials, in Hebrew
.

The brass hasp of the box gave way easily to the pressure of the boy's fingers, and inside he found an envelope addressed as follows:

A LETTER TO MY JEWISH AMERICAN GRANDCHILDREN LIVING IN ZIONAMERICA

The boy, looking around stealthily to be sure he was not being spied upon, for he was fearful of having his whereabouts detected before he could establish a new existence for himself (he had, upon quitting the orphanage which had held him in bondage, made sure to destroy all records of himself, including fingerprints and photographs, so that, when he had come to some new town which was not hostile to children like himself, he would be able to start anew), then made his way to a bold rock beside a pond, where he sat himself down.

As he was wondering whether or not he had the right to look within the letter, a shaft of bright light seemed to fall upon his hand where he held the letter, and the boy was so transfixed by the nature of the curious light that he did not even realize for a while that it was burning his knuckles. When he released the letter with a cry of pain, it floated to the ground, but though it fell upon mud, when the boy lifted it, it showed no signs of dirt, and his hand too had no mark from the burn.

Was the boy religious? Did he believe in signs from above? Did he believe that the same light which had attracted him first to the tree was now offering him the letter as his own?

Alas, dear reader, we shall never know what went on inside him! All we know is that, without any seeming thought, he did in fact reach inside the envelope and from it he plucked the letter.

The paper was remarkably well preserved, and showed no signs of aging, not even at the corners. The script was quite legible, the boy was pleased to see, and he looked around once more, to assure himself of his privacy amidst Nature (did a frog croak? did birds twitter above him? if they did, would he even have noticed, so lost was he in contemplation of his treasure?) and then he read:

MY DEAREST GRANDCHILDREN,

As I write this letter, who can know if you exist or if you do not because how do I know if my son who has long ago deserted me will have married, and if he married, will have had children? Remember what the Talmud said (I'm telling you this in English because who knows if anyone will speak Hebrew anymore in the time in which you will be living?): “The unmarried person lives without joy, without blessing, and without good. He is not a man in the full sense of the term.” Which shows that He wanted us to have children, also from when it says that a man may divorce his wife if she is barren for 10 years and a wife may divorce her husband if he is impotent.

So if you are there somewhere reading me and hearing my voice I want you to know about how I came to America and founded my colony of New Zion and how it all ended so maybe you will not repeat my mistakes and will have a better life as Jews than I or your father, who calls himself, so I am told by those who see him, “Doctor” Fogel.

Was I to blame? In the Talmud the Rabbis blame the evil nature of Absalom who revolted against David the King on David himself, who brought him up with too much freedom, but who could say that of me?

Listen for a minute, my grandchildren. This is a voice from the past and even from the Old Country, as it is called, telling you to be good Jews and to remember Israel, for does it not say that it is an inheritance unto you?

Remember this: GOD, THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL, AND THE LAND OF ISRAEL ARE ONE. If you are born a Jew, you remain a Jew always, and a stranger in all lands but your own. And I Eliezer Fogel know this better than any man, for I tried to establish God's land here in America and my end is that I end alone, without my wife or my son or my followers, so that I am condemned never to have the blessing even of praying in a Minyan, or of knowing if my children and grandchildren will follow after me and redeem my life for me!

I am hoping you understand what these words mean, coming to you now, across the years. This is what you should remember if you are a Jew: Trust Nobody, not even other Jews. I trusted in man, and was paid in kind!

What was my life like in the Old Country, where I was a student in the Cheder of the great Riminova Rebbe, may his name be blessed? I might have become his prize pupil and a wise man myself but I was too eager. This is what Eliezer Fogel says: “Don't be so eager!” In my village we were taught to honor the stranger and when he came into our midst and stayed with us for Shabbos and told me of the land of Palestine and of the people who were going there to make it a Homeland for the Jewish People, I trusted in him.

May the worms feast on his flesh!

And what was my life like in our Shtetl in Europe before I left it? Now I have beautiful memories of a community devoted to God and Torah and one's fellow Jew, but the truth is, my grandchildren, the Shtetl had a smell like rotting onions! It stank like poverty stinks and sickness stinks and sadness stinks!

You should study what life was like for Jews in the Shtetl and through the centuries, wherever they were, unless they catered to the Goyim, and then you will see that the great miracle is our survival and that you are alive and still a Jew despite everything!

This is what we said: “If God lived in the Shtetl His windows would be broken.”

But more than His windows broke. Didn't His heart break to see our suffering? Or was the Rebbe right, that Suffering was our lot, that it showed we were His people, and that the New Doctrine of Zionism was trying to take from God what was His, who had to work through His time and in His way?

My son left me when he told me this was so, but what did he ever know of sorrow and hardship, having been born here in America?

I declare this: God wanted us to regain the land of Israel, of our forefathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, whenever we could, for why else did He choose us to be a blessing to the nations, and how could we be a blessing to the nations in these terrible times if we have no nation of our own, no land which is our own, where we can be safe from Destruction? Remember this: “If there is no bread there is no study.”

On our Holiest day, Yom Kippur, God himself cannot forgive us all our sins. We must ask our fellow men for forgiveness. Do you understand me? We Jews are a people of this world!

Here for you is another way of seeing what I mean. The Rabbis say “If a person who withholds himself from wine is called a sinner, how much more so is one a sinner who withdraws from all of life's enjoyments.”

I believed this when I was a young man, and so I trusted the stranger who stayed with us and I gave him my money so that he would buy me passage to the border and onto a ship bound for Palestine, to join with the Knights of Zion in building our Homeland.

So, my dear grandchildren, bound to me in the blood of the children of Israel, I wish you long life and happiness! But how can a Jew enjoy life if he is not part of His people? For in the study of Torah is the highest happiness. Remember what we sing each Shabbos when we open the Holy Ark—OUT OF ZION SHALL GO FORTH TORAH!

And so I came to America. The voyage across the ocean stank. There was an epidemic and half the ship died. Jews were thrown overboard into the sea. Did they believe they were going to the Promised

Land? I arrived in New York, with no money and in ill health.

If you want to know the rest you should ask your father. I became a man of the world. I studied money. I made my fortune and I bought land and I left Gomorrah and moved here to the country to build a colony which would train Jews and prepare them for a future life in the land of Israel. I had many followers in my time, don't ask me how many. We had cabins full of Jews who spoke all languages, but with each other Yiddish.

We built our homes with my money. I continued to study money. I married and had only one son and I saw my duty in life as preparing others for the journey I never made. Did I believe it was God's will to stay here, or did I really love the land I was in also? Who can tell.

We argued about everything: Should a mother nurse and bring up her own children or should she put them in the care of others? Were children private property or communal? Should we speak in Hebrew or Yiddish? We farmed the land and we built furniture to sell and we prayed and we had children. We sent settlers to Palestine and many died and half of those who didn't die came back to New York.

You should look up and study about all the things we argued about: Marxism and Socialism and practical Zionism and synthetic Zionism and cultural Zionism and political Zionism. Some of us followed Herzl and some of us followed Jabotinsky and some of us followed Weizmann and some of us followed Gordon.

Look up the history of Palestine before and after the Mandate!

Chaim Weizmann said this: “Memory is right.”

On several hundred acres, at our height, we were like Babel itself. Answer me this: Why did God give us so much brains if he wanted us to be One people? Without poverty, nothing joined us except our different theories. We became our own enemy.

The Colony of New Zion has been dead for 20 years. I have lived here alone since its death studying Torah and finding only questions. Maybe, wherever he is, my son has answers. My followers forsook me for the temptation of America. Why should they suffer the hard winters of our colony and the harder life in Palestine? Hadn't they left the Old Country to abandon Suffering?

Many of them forsook God, so that they lost both ways, in this world and in the next one too!

Many of them died and we buried them.

My son, your father, wanted them to stay and, like Akiba, he warned them against corruption and assimilation, but when they fled, he fled also. He had my blood.

Without land a man is nothing. Without God a man is nothing.

I left my land to my son, and I left myself only enough money to travel to Palestine, where I hope to die and be buried soon after my arrival there.

Finally, I leave you the words of Rabbi Akiba, “Whoever is buried in Palestine is as though he were buried underneath the altar, for all Palestine is fit for the altar.”

The choice is yours!

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