Read Not a Happy Camper Online
Authors: Mindy Schneider
Incredibly, she accepted that. “I go to bed early every night,” she said, “so I can get up early and jog.”
Maddy would run to Boys' Side then meet up with the food truck and get a ride back. She seemed very devoted to keeping off that weight.
“But Mindy, you're not really supposed to be out of the bunk at this hour,” my counselor explained.
“Oh, well,” I said. “I'm new here. I don't know the rules.”
Maddy nodded.
She figured she might as well stop by the Boys' Headquarters and wake Head Counselor Jacques Weiss. Classically tall, dark and handsome, Jacques was one of many foreigners on staff. Saul had long ago discovered he could get deals on airfare and import European counselors who'd then work for free. Most of them were Christian and most would visit the United States just this once; therefore, eight weeks in the backwoods of Maine with a bunch of American Jews formed the basis of their entire impression of our country.
Jacques was unique among the foreigners, and not just because he was actually Jewish. At thirty-one years old he was still in school, in Paris, working on an elusive PhD. “A professional student,” my uncle the high school guidance counselor would call him, Jacques kept his summers free to keep coming back to Kin-A-Hurra.
“Wanna wait for me and ride back on the truck?” Maddy asked.
“I would, but...” I was growing uncomfortable, so I took a deep breath. “Did you know there's just this one disgusting bathroom for all of Boys' Side?”
Maddy got the hint.
As it turned out, Boys' Headquarters had its own private stall and she led me in. She was still inside, in the back room with
Jacques, when I came out again so I took a seat on the porch and waited. He must have been a heavy sleeper. I waited for at least twenty minutes.
“Good morning,” I said to Jacques, when the two finally appeared.
“Mais oui,” he replied, with a sly grin.
Jacques let me ring the bell to wake up Boys' Side. A few minutes later, Autumn Evening strolled over from the Foxes' bunk and Dana emerged, alone, from the Giant Teepee at the far end of the softball field, over by the flagpole.
On the ride back, amidst a truckload of waffles, we learned that Dana had met up in the night with Aaron Klafter.
“We went into the teepee to look at the stars,” she told us.
“Really? You can see through the top?” I asked. “It looks all closed up.”
Dana paused. “Nothing happened, okay?” she insisted.
It didn't matter to me. All that mattered to me was that she wasn't interested in Kenny and that I had one less obstacle to deal with in this, the summer I was going to get a boyfriend. And not just
a
boyfriend,
the
boyfriend. The one I wanted. The one I had to have.
It was Kenny Uber or bust.
“There were five, five constipated men
In the Bible, in the Bible
There were five, five constipated men
In the Five Books of Moses
The first, first constipated man
Was Cain, he wasn't Abel...”
M
Y MOTHER'S
MOTHER
, G
USSIE
B
ARUCH, DROPPED OUT OF SCHOOL AT
the end of sixth grade and went to work in a factory. There, her older, worldlier co-workers introduced her to Chinese foodâthe official nosh of the assimilated Jewâand it was the beginning of the end of keeping kosher. Within a few years, Gussie met my grandfather, Max Leventhal. Max's mother did not approve of the under-educated factory girl; she attempted to break them up by first moving the Leventhals from Brooklyn to The Bronx, then drinking a bottle of iodine in protest. The iodine did not kill her, nor did it deter young romance. Max and Gussie were married in 1924.
Gussie promised her new mother-in-law that she would keep a kosher home and she did. But on Sundays, while my grandfather read the paper, she told him that she was taking their two daughters (my mother and my aunt) “downtown to see the relatives.” This was code for “I am taking them out of the house to eat non-kosher Chinese food.” My grandfather would smile, “Send the family my regards,” and turn the page.
Gussie had it easy. After my own parents married in 1957, there would be no more visits to the relatives downtown. My father was the son of Eastern European immigrants, a man who would have fit right in at a 17th century
shtetl
, adamant about sticking to the
Old World dietary laws. This meant we kept two separate sets of dishes in the house, one for dairy foods and one for meat. We did not eat meat and milk together. We did not eat pork or shellfish. Ever.
These rules were difficult to explain to my friends, particularly the matter of vegetable shortening versus lard. I couldn't eat Hostess cupcakes, but Drake's were okay. I couldn't have Oreos, but I could gorge on Hydrox. Pepperoni pizza at birthday parties posed multiple layers of nightmares, as did sampling the food we made in Home Ec class. To this day, I'm not sure if I'm supposed to eat Jell-O.
So Camp Kin-A-Hurra was on the list of acceptable summer camps because, in our kitchen that winter evening, Saul Rattner smiled widely and assured my father, “We are strictly kosher!”
If only my father had known the truth.
While the camp did own two separate sets of dishes, the Girls' Side kitchen staff found the bone china dishes designated for meat too hard to clean. They decided to go with the plastic dairy set full-time and I decided not to tell my father.
Of course, I felt bad about the deception. Jewish guilt is a very real thing. I grew up with a lot of pride in my heritage, wanting to embrace it, to celebrate its history. But the way my father insisted we observe every minor holiday we couldn't even pronounce and stick to every obscure rule (“No ripping toilet paper on Saturdays!”) made it tedious and time-consuming and I came to resent it. Which made me feel guilty. It was with this familiar feeling of trepidation that I approached the first Friday night at camp. Sundown marks the beginning of
Shabbos,
the Sabbath.
Up until the 1960s, summer camps operated like little private countries with official camp uniforms in official colors. Most of this
went out the window by the end of the Cultural Revolution and by the mid-70s Kin-A-Hurra had developed its own unofficial daily uniform. If you were cool, you wore a t-shirt (really cool if it featured the Coca-Cola logo in Hebrew) and denim painter's pants or overalls. To complete the outfit, you wore a red or blue bandana tied to the hammer loop on the thigh. Luckily, I had plenty of painter's pants. They were not a big seller in Springfield, New Jersey and had been on sale in every color at Rynette's. On Friday nights, when we were expected to wear white to welcome the Sabbath, I pulled on and zipped up my white discount painter's pants.
Boys' Side and Girls' Side held separate services on Friday nights. Ours were in my favorite building, The Point, and the waitresses dressed it up for the occasion, draping bed sheets over the tables to simulate tablecloths. By each place setting sat an overripe piece of cantaloupe and a Xeroxed booklet containing the evening's prayers. Because there was no rabbi, head counselor Wendy Katz was in charge. She asked us to turn to page one. Then she asked us to stand and then be seated. And then we turned to page twelve. The service was short and sweet and to the point. And best of all, there was no sermon.
We concluded the service by singing the blessing over the candles, which were already lit, and the blessing over the wine, which was really grape bug juice. And then came the blessing over the bread. Based on my Kin-A-Hurra experience so far, my expectations were nil when this first sliver was handed to me, which made it all the more spectacular when I bit in. On Friday nights it is a Jewish tradition to eat
challah
, braided egg bread, and this was the real thing, made fresh by Walter Henderson, the chef across the lake who'd been employed by the New York State prison system for over thirty years. After three decades of serving up bread and water, he'd certainly mastered the bread part. It was soft and sweet, manna from Boys' Side that would
arrive once a week, and nothing like the loaf my mother picked up each Friday at ShopRite.
After the dishes were cleared away, old mimeographed songbooks were passed out. While it was nice to have the faded purple ink words in front of us, most of us already knew these songs, some of which were in Hebrew and others in English. Though the camper population was quite diverse, coming from twenty-three different states and five foreign countries (apparently Saul duped Jewish families âround the globe), our religion, our shared ancestry, bound us together. Well, that and the fact that we were all stranded in this dump for the summer. I mouthed the words silently, so as not to ruin things, and enjoyed the concert.
The next morning, Saturday, services would be co-ed and held over on Boys' Side. I expected this to be my next chance to see Kennyâbut to my delight, he showed up in our bunk that night, at three AM.
The creaky screen door woke me as he entered.
“Kenny?”
I thought I was dreaming.
“Hi,” he grunted, peering around in the dim light. “Which bed is Dana's?”
“Dana? Why would you want to see her?”
“Never mind. I found her.”
Kenny kicked the foot of her bed, “accidentally” waking her up.
“Oh, hi,” she yawned in his face.
“Nice pajamas,” he whispered.
“Shut up,” Dana laughed as she sat up, pulled out her ponytail holder and fluffed her hair. “Hey,” she suggested in a sudden burst of genius, “wanna walk me back to Boys' Side so I can go see Aaron?”
“Aaron?” Kenny gulped.
“Yeah, c'mon, it'll be nice. We'll walk around the lake.”
Kenny was looking at the floor. “I guess,” he said quietly.
“Hey, I'm awake, too,” I whispered.
They turned to me.
“You want to come with us?” Dana asked.
“Sure!”
I grabbed some clothes and raced to the bathroom to throw them on, unable to make out the muffled exchange between Dana and Kenny. When I returned a minute later, the three of us slipped out of the bunk.
Except for the fact that he was standing next to the woman he loved, I had Kenny all to myself.
He turned to Dana. “You know, if Aaron's asleep-”
“Of course he'll be asleep,” I interrupted. “It's the middle of the night.”
“If Aaron's asleep,” Kenny continued, ignoring me, “you can hang out with me,
Dana
.”
“Oh, thanks,” she said. “But I don't think he'd mind if I woke him up.”
This wasn't going the way I'd planned. Kenny was acting like he was interested in Dana even though he knew she liked Aaron. Perhaps he thought he could still win her over, but not if I won him over first.
“I'm not busy,” I offered.
Kenny hesitated, which I determined had to do with the temperature. Even though it was early July, the night air was cold and we shivered as we walked down the dirt road and around the lake. Kenny put his arm through Dana's and picked up the pace. I tried to keep up, found I couldn't, but failed to see the metaphor.
I arrived at Boys' Side ten steps behind them. Dana thanked Kenny, then said goodnight to us and headed off. It was just the
two of us now, the moment I'd waited for, the reason I was here. My chance to flirt. If only I knew how.
“So what do you want to do now?” he asked.
I wanted to cross my arms and blink my eyes and make him like me. Instead, I just shrugged.
“Do you sing on Boys' Side?”
“What?”
“Sing. At services. On Girls' Side, after dinner, everybody sings. It sounds really pretty. I don't really sing, butâwhat songs do you like? What are your favorite prayers?”
“I don't know,” Kenny muttered, then stuck his hands in his pockets and looked around.
I needed to regain his attention, to make this sound interesting.
“I like
Dona Dona
,” I offered. “Well, I like how it sounds with the harmony and the melody. Do the boys sing it with the harmony and the melody? Actually, if you think about it, it's pretty sad. I mean, it's a whole song about a calf about to be killed. I wonder why we sing that.”
“Uh, I don't know...”
“I kind of like
Zum Gali Gali
, too,” I went on, waving my hands and gesturing, as if this made my story more exciting to hear. “There's this one girl, Erica, she's only eight. She's from Queens. She likes to stand on the table and lead us in it. I also like
Hava Nagila
, especially when you change the words to âHave a banana' even though I don't really like bananas. The smell bothers me. So far Friday night is my favorite part of camp. How about you?”
I'd thought about if for months, what I'd say or do when I was alone with a boy I liked and now, here I was, talking about songs and bananas.
Kenny looked at me like I'd just stepped off a space ship.