Read Yom Kippur as Manifest in an Approaching Dorsal Fin Online
Authors: Adam Byrn Tritt
songs that he reads like dosage instructions.
He reads from the
Song of Songs
even faster as though there is a schedule to keep and melody
would only serve to slow things down, beauty
would only get in the way.
He calls up Irwin to give a eulogy. He has
cards—prepared, he says, so he would not fal-
ter. He means it. He means everything he says
and it is all beautiful. He doesn’t look at the
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cards, cries, talks about that which is lost, how good and kind she was, his love for his aunt,
the matriarch of the family, her strength, her
support. He means every word and I hold
tears but they are not for her. They are not
for her.
I turn and Lee is looking at me. She quietly
says she has no idea who he is talking about
but it isn’t the woman she knew. It isn’t the
woman I know either. Not at all. She holds
my hand. Irwin steps from the lectern, shak-
ing his head. “I just loved her, is all. I just loved her,” as he moves to his seat. And the service
ends.
The two men in black tell us it is time. We
are to move to the graveside, at the tent. The
family can take the limousine. The kids and
I walk with Lee and Erika pushing my mother
in turns. In two minutes we are at the grass
and across a short field of six by twelve inch
bronze plaques laid flat upon the ground,
marking the heads of graves.
In the green field is a reflection of stark gray marble slabs longer each than a body, wider
than a coffin, nine widths long and two across:
an interruption of cloud in the grass. All but
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the last one, the side close to us. It is open and concrete. Next to it, the tent. About fifty feet further to the right a dull yellow backhoe. On
the grass, attached to its shovel, by four taut
chains, is a concrete slab and next to it, a marble one: another cloudy hole in the green
earth. And all around, six by twelve bronze
place-markers of people who were.
My mother stays at the roadside with Erika.
We walk to the tent. There are folding chairs
beneath it, three rows of six, and they sit on
several pieces of plywood. Everyone sits. In
the front row, my grandfather, my aunt, my
uncle, and my father.
The casket arrives on a draped cart pushed
by men in blue workshirts. The cart is posi-
tioned over the open bunker and the drapes
hide the hole beneath. The rabbi starts rap-
idly again and a switch is moved on the cart.
The coffin descends slowly to settle into the
pit.
Sef has stayed with me the entire time. My
son, no further than arm’s reach. Lee at my
side. My brother close. They all retreat. Lee
tells me she is going to go stay by my mother,
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that she needs her and I have no doubt she is
right.
I am by the grave, by myself except for the
workers. Watching.
They move mechanisms at the wheels and
the cart unlocks itself from the grave, is
pulled away. The rabbi continues, holds a
baggy of dirt from Israel so that the daugh-
ter of Zion can be buried in Jewish soil, in
Florida, in this bunker, covered in marble.
The workers leave.
The two men in black tell me I must move.
Those seated under the tent, milling, pacing,
they must move. The tent must move as well.
The backhoe rumbling, suddenly, and the slab
is leaving the ground, swinging from the
bucket by its chains.
The tent is picked up and walked by its four
corners, the chairs are taken away and I help
fold them. The plywood is relocated from the
graveside to in front of the backhoe tracks.
More plywood, uncovered as the top sheets
are removed, are relocated as well, making a
narrow road for the tracks from where it sits
to the vault.
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I look into the hole. It is not right that she
is not buried, that the full measure of soil
there is only a baggy of Holy Land. There is
no shovel. There is no pile of soil. I ask the
rabbi, “Is it alright if I throw some dirt in? It doesn’t feel right if I don’t.” His answer is, “Of course.”
I crouch over the grave, look down, reach
to my right and grab a handful of sandy soil,
talk quietly, drop grit as I speak.
“I don’t know why you never treated us the
way you treated everyone else. Apparently
you were very good to many people. I don’t
understand. But I thank you for what you did
give me. You showed me how not to treat peo-
ple. I know how to be good and kind because
you showed me what it was like when some-
one isn’t. How much it hurts. And thank you.
If not for you, I wouldn’t have Sef or Alek.
Here. Here is the only dirt in your grave by a
relative. Just me. Goodbye.”
And with that, my handful rains down. I
stand up, stand back as the men in the black
suits ask me to watch out. Here comes the
slab.
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As I back up, Irwin comes up to me. I think
of his words. My eyes begin to tear. “Every-
one will miss her,” he says, and puts his hand
on my shoulder.
I am surprised to be talking to him. I am
surprised to be crying.
“That’s not why I’m crying.” I say this and
am shocked I have spoken but more so over
what words have come out, that I am being
honest. I continue as he looks at me. “I hear
how good she was to everyone and how won-
derful and I want to know how come I was
cheated out of that. Why did she treat us so
badly? Why did everyone get this loving
grandmother and we got nothing. I’m crying
for me. Not her.”
He apologizes to me. He means it. Not for
how I feel, but for his lack of understanding,
for her. He continues. “I don’t know why she
treated you the way she did. She wasn’t like
that with anyone else but you and your
brother and your mother. Your mother is a
wonderful person. I know her and Franky a
long time and I never understood it.” This he
says shaking his head. “It was unfair and I
never understood it.”
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I appreciate this and he leaves me with a
hug. My tears become sparse as my brother
approaches to me. Irwin spoke with him as
well and the conversation, while ending the
same way, started quite differently. He had
no idea who we were. We were never men-
tioned. Not by the grandparents. Not by my
parents. Not in his memory.
He was amazed to see not because he was
surprised at our presence but at our existence.
After stepping on that with my brother, he
was kind enough not to repeat it to me. That
I found out later is of no consequence to his
kindness and I will always appreciate his can-
dor and restraint in a time of such difficulty
for him.
I am shocked. How does a parent not men-
tion their children? In forty-two years? My
tears dry. They are used up. I am empty and,
suddenly, much more alone.
The backhoe is over the grave, the lid,
swinging, guided by workers, descends and
my father talks to the men in the black suits
about the guarantee of watertightness of the
vault. They explain there is no such guaran-
tee. There never was one and especially not
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in Florida. Gaskets? No. Seal? No. His face
drops. He wants her sealed and safe.
Permanent.
I think fallout shelter. I think Ziplock.
Tupperware.
One blue work shirt leans over to adjust the
top so it lowers just right. He jumps into the
vault to undo the chains and the backhoe
retreats, beeping.
As it does, the driver misses the plywood
and runs over plaque after plaque, hitting the
corners, pressing them into the ground as
they pop catercornered into the air one after
another until the row becomes a line of
bronze diagonals. I had been doing my best
not to step on the head-plaques.
Now comes the marble cover. It too is
brought over at the expense of plaques and
noise and I watch it put into place, positioned
perfectly before I walk away. All is done.
Erika will drive the van back. My mother
will ride with Lee. I have the kids. All back to my grandfather’s house. Twelve-thirty.
Once back, Erika is busy putting the food
out, all cakes and sweets. I was told I need not bring anything. Nothing was needed or
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wanted. Food is supposed to be supplied for
the people sitting shiva. I should have brought
food anyway.
Here are cakes. Cookies. Breads and crack-
ers. No food to sustain. Here are also card-
board boxes printed to look like wooden
benches for the family to sit on. Within the
hour my father has crushed one under him.
Cakes, cookies, and breads.
My brother walks by me, asks quickly, qui-
etly for whom the funeral we attended was
for. He did not know that woman either. He
walks on.
We talk. I introduce my wife to Arial and
they talk shop at the table about their prac-
tices, laws, medicine, and get along well. There is wine and my aunt drinks one, two three
cups nearly immediately. I know this because
she counted them out loud and had five
within the next two hours. It showed.
Erika is busy, stays busy, out of the way. The
siblings have moved to the far, deep corner of
the kitchen and are discussing in hushes. We
talk with the cousins. There are others.
Soon, my aunt is drunk, the conversation
is loud, my wife and children are hungry. It
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is nearly five in the afternoon. I say my good-
byes. Hug my mother, my father. Take my
cousin’s email addresses and phone numbers,
thank Irwin, and say goodbye to Erika. We
head to Lee’s sisters where we will spend the
night.
We change. Where to go for dinner? The
Whale’s Rib in Lighthouse Point, but five
minutes away from the house. It is crowded,
inexpensive, comfortable and, I think, what
we need this evening. We sit, wait for our
table and talk.
I ask Lee questions. I ask how parents
neglect to ever tell relatives about their chil-
dren, how a grandparent treats some grand-
children well and leaves others ignored.
I tell her, today, I feel cut loose. Today, I
have less of a family behind me. Today, less
of a family in my past, that fewer people care.
I feel I was deluded. I feel the family I have
chosen, a blessing, and those I was born with
. . . I do not finish. I do not know how I feel.
Maybe I do and don’t want to say.
I know my father as weak. Did he ever talk
about the lack of parity? He seemed, always,
to simply accept all as it was, to question
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nothing his family did. Perhaps this is unfair.
I don’t know. I have been undefended,
unmentioned, unknown. As though I was not
there.
We sit. Lee talks to me and I am glad of it.
I listen closely and ask her to write down
what she has told me. I want to see it, to read
it, again and again. To know it was not just
me. She did and I include it here. It is a bit
more than I had anticipated. It is
unedited.
I felt I needed to add my two cents to
your essay. I was a participant also.
How sad for her. How much hate
can cheat you out of life. This poor,
ignorant woman who was afraid her
daughter-in-law was after her money
cheated herself out of life’s joys and
died bitter and hating. Although she
lived to a very ripe old age of 94, she
cheated herself from knowing and
loving not only her grandchildren,
but her great-grandchildren. How
horribly sad for her. In her worry
about being robbed, she not only
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cheated herself, but three generations
behind her. She cheated my husband
and his brother from having a grand-
mother who loved them. They also
cheated themselves out of knowing
their children, grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. How sad is
that?
My children, her great-grandchil-
dren, who are lucky enough to know
their great-grandparents, do not like
them. They are duly compensated,
however, in having the loving grand-
parents that my husband and his
brother do not.
So who did she hurt with her hate?
Let’s see . . . her son, his wife, and their
two sons. But the list does not end
here. It also includes others in the
family who are baffled by this hatred.
The non-understanding that was
prevalent at her funeral. Questions
unanswered as to why this had
occurred.