Read Yom Kippur as Manifest in an Approaching Dorsal Fin Online
Authors: Adam Byrn Tritt
81
Adam Byrn Tritt
Uneasiness all around by the few
other friends and family members
who showed up.
I think there were six of them.
Erika was not in the kitchen the entire time.
Part of the time she spent with Lee. Upset,
she needed someone to talk with, to vent to.
She knows Lee. Lee is not part of the family.
Not by blood. Erika knows how she feels and
Lee is safe.
Erika is angry. She ranted on and on about
how the brother and sister treat my father
like a dog. Dog is the word she used. Over
and over. As we wait near the bar, Lee goes
on, more and more. She needs this off her, out
of her.
Erika was there when grandmother died.
She was there for her last words.
Grandpa came near. To him she says, “I
always knew you’d steal my money.”
And then, “Get away from me, you
bastard.”
And she died.
There is a break at the bar. They have Guin-
ness on tap. It is four dollars and a quarter a
82
Funeral, Expurgated
pint. Four and a quarter and far too many
calories. I don’t actually need this. I order one.
The cliff is always closer than it appears.
83
Passover and
the Industrial
Revolution
Every Passover I bake matzah.
I wait until there is
Nothing left to do,
I wait for the lull
In the torrent of business and busyness
And preparation for the unexpected
guest,
The soup is bubbling slowly
Covered, tzimmes done,
Choroseth setting
And Passover plate
Covered, in the fridge
Next to the gefilte fish.
When there is nothing left to do
And everything is finished
85
Adam Byrn Tritt
I bake
I work as quickly as I can
Rushing, like of old
When there was everything to do
And nothing to be done but hurry.
I work to make bread
Matzah shemurah,
“Watched matzah”
As of old,
Before the machines were invented,
Before 1857 and the mixers and
kneaders,
Rollers and perforators of the
Industrial Revolution.
In fewer than eighteen minutes
From flour to done,
Nothing can rise
But the realization of the mitzvah,
Purpose for preparation,
Intention
And prayers.
At a temperature I can comfortably
reach my hand into
They bake
86
Passover and the Industrial Revolution
Quickly
Like bare feet on desert sand.
When they are done
They have opened in the
Center, crisp and brown,
Heavy and thick,
Empty. Receptive . . .
This is not like the matzah
From a box.
My matzah is not a gigantic saltine
Stacked like x-ray plates
Or cards
Or slates.
Although . . .
When I was seven
I went on a field trip
Through the Jersey countryside
To the clogged vessels of
Dense New York streets,
Sitting in the Yeshiva bus,
Staring down
At the faces in the unmoving cars
87
Adam Byrn Tritt
We slid, heated, halting,
Metal to metal cells, fuming forward.
Finally, stilled, we gratefully
Disembarked, stood and walked along
Delancey Street
The lower east side
Of Manhattan,
With my school class,
We visited a temple during minyan
Sat separated
Girls from boys
On an austere balcony of
Dark woods and dark ages
Staring above the vaulted steps
At the dais of black-coated men
Listening to the song to their beloved
Carried with the audible overtone of
the holy
And an undertone of confidence
The song was surely heard.
We were there for days or minutes
And fidgeted, fussed, squirmed
In the presence of the Universal King.
88
Passover and the Industrial Revolution
After, released of our confinement
Reconfined to sturdy lines to walk
On to the great mystery of the
Matzah factory.
Past the pickle barrels
On the sidewalks
Where for ten cents
We all got to dip our hands
And pull a half-sour
From the briny cask,
Close by,
And brick-built
Red and high-windowed
Was the matzah factory.
We entered though the loading dock
And never wondered if there was
A door, an office, a warehouse but
There were ovens
Vast and hot.
We stood on a balcony
Over the open factory floor,
Vats and vaults
Mixers and all over the smell of flour.
89
Adam Byrn Tritt
Rolling from the vat,
Poured onto a sheet, rolled into the
ovens
Pressed by combs
For perforation
For ease of use
For profit
For Horowitz-Margareten,
Streits, Manischewitz
The Matzah Monopoly
For tables during Passover
For people to gingerly, slowly shop for
In Pathmark, Shop-Rite, Foodtown
Kids in cart, mamma picking her box
Of matzah, plums, salami
And, if she was in a hurry
It had nothing to do with
Evacuation, or the Pharaoh
Or Moses except that
We’d read it in the Haggadah
And break the matzah,
Ask the questions, dip the
Parsley, spread the horseradish
And bite.
90
Passover and the Industrial Revolution
The factory was hot with baking
And we left, sweating, drenched
Flour-powdered without and
Within, samples of matzah,
In a single-file exodus from the ovens.
Which, every Passover
I recreate in my kitchen.
The bread of affliction
Is my joy, my revolt,
My exodus and cry unto the
wilderness
To my own kind—
“Let my people go.”
91
The Harmony
of Broken Glass
A million years ago, I used to own a
bookstore. The community had
asked for it and even put up much
of the money. In return, they’d receive a
return on their investments when the store
turned a profit and would have a local store
that carried the things they wanted. All Lee
and I did was to quit our jobs, invest our time
and money, and pour our hearts and souls
into it. They gave us a list of the sorts of things they wanted, we stocked them, and they
pointed their browsers at Amazon to buy the
books and drove to Wal-Mart to buy the can-
dles and soon we were out of business and
they could not quite figure out why.
We were in Gainesville, Florida, at the end
of Sixth Street, where it met 441 at an acute
93
Adam Byrn Tritt
angle just past the north side of town. Our
building was an old gas station built in 1906.
It had the original brick foundation holding
up the original cedar beams holding up the
original pine tongue and groove floors hold-
ing up the original pine tongue and groove
walls in which were held the original win-
dows. Nearly one hundred years old the entire
building was, and it creaked and groaned and
loved every step made inside.
The building had two main rooms. The
front, the salesroom, was twenty by twenty
and windows all around except for the front
door on the south wall perpendicular to the
street, and the door leading to the second
room, right in the middle of the west wall
with a large pane of glass, door to wall, on
either side. The second room, twenty by forty,
was solid wall on the north and east. Sepa-
rated by glass from the front room and, on
the south side, made of century old wood,
plaster and glass. Mostly glass.
The windows were high and wide with
broad sills. In the second room, three of them
stretched from the front to the back. As one
looked to the lower edges of any of the win-
94
The Harmony of Broken Glass
dows, as one looked to the grass below through
the bottom of the pane, the world stretched,
became bulbous, swirly. If you put your hand
on the glass, you could feel it thicken as one
got closer to the sill. Thin at top and thick at the bottom. Old poured glass windows—a
super-viscous liquid that slowly, over nearly
one hundred years, poured towards its own
bottom. Kids would love to sit there and stare
though the bottom and watch the world wig-
gle, fatten, and wave. So did I.
This was the room we used for classes and
workshops. Around its perimeter, it held rugs
and t-shirts, dresses and scarves as well as
other textiles, folded on tables, hung from
frames, and tacked to the walls. So large, it
was, we never had to move anything much
for a workshop or fair.
We had bands too, and we’d serve coffee.
We’d be open until eleven and many of the
coffee drinkers would not purchase anything,
so we figured the coffee would pay for the
electric that evening, at the least. The coffee
was in the small kitchen area off the large
room and it was self-serve, as we were neither
set up nor licensed for food service.
95
Adam Byrn Tritt
At first it was by donation. When we found
the donation can with little money but filling
fast with empty sugar packets and gum wrap-
pers, we decided the honor system wasn’t
working and charged a dollar for the cup. Not
the coffee. Just the cup. All our mugs went
behind the front counter. Folks could ask for
one, pay their buck, and drink all night if they wanted. On an average night we should have
made thirty to fifty bucks from the folks who
otherwise would not have spent a cent. Folks
who came in and bought books and such, we’d
happily hand a cup to. Everyone gets to do
their share.
It wasn’t long before I started seeing people
walking around with coffee in vessels I had
never seen before. Little ones. Big ones, Even
stainless steel thermoses and double-size
travel cups. I’d ask for the buck for the night’s coffee and they’d show me their one quart
mason jar, telling me they had brought it from
home so no need to hand any cash over to
me. I suggested, along with the cup, next time
they should bring their own coffee, too. Late
nights at the bookstore ended soon after that.
96
The Harmony of Broken Glass
But the workshops continued. Authors,
therapists, artists. Book talks, dances, song-
fests. I taught a few myself, on occasion.
I had, over the few years prior, been doing
a workshop on chants from the Kabbalah. I
had been doing them at the local Unitarian
Universalist Fellowship, at churches as far
away as Greensboro, North Carolina, in the
forests of Ohio, and even in a hot tub. So why
not do one at my own store?
The night was set and we had a very nice
turnout of over thirty people. Someone vol-
unteered to watch the register and I set to
work. Three rules only. These rules, along
with the chants themselves, were taught to
me by Rabbi Shelly Isenberg, who was the
Chair of the University of Florida Depart-
ment of Religion. They seemed to work for
him, and they work for me.
Three rules:
Everyone stands who is able to stand.
“I’m tired” is not a reason for not stand-
ing. We always lose a few at this one.
People walk out in a huff because they
aren’t going to be able to sit and chant.
97
Adam Byrn Tritt
No full breaths from a full body while
sitting curled in a chair.
Everyone singing. No gawkers. We
always lose a few more at that. When I
tell them we’ll be chanting for an hour
or so, still more leave. I tell them it won’t
feel like an hour. That they will wonder
where the time went but people want
fast, instant results and they want them
easy. They want to slouch in a chair and
attain enlightenment from watching
other people sing for five minutes. Good
luck.
The last rule is everyone comes to the
center. I set up four chairs in the middle
of what will be our circle and, at some
point, each person comes to the center
to sit and have the rest of us sing around
them, letting them feel the sound, the
vibration, the harmony. I often have a
person help me make sure everyone gets
their chance. I joke that I call her my
shill. I tell them, at some point, I’ll be
going to the center as well and, please,
please, they should not stop chanting
98
The Harmony of Broken Glass
just because I have. Always people laugh
at this. The twenty or so people who
remained did exactly that—laughed.
The group had been culled and we were
ready to start.
The chants are short and simple. We learned