My not being a big fan of organized religion has less to do with being the daughter of a Holocaust survivor than it does my aversion to organized anything, except perhaps, chaos. It also has to do with my being a seeker. I spent the first two decades of my life hearing and believing one version of the truth as it was told/explained/offered and served to me and the next three unraveling, dissecting and uncovering another one. I am spinning my yarn in reverse.
When you grow up in a predominantly Jewish neighborhood and your father is the local poster boy for Holocaust survival, you wear a certain badge of honor and earn the guilt by association that comes along with it. As if by extension, family members are defined by this label, without most people having any understanding of the fibers or material from which the cloth is woven. How much of it is organic or manufactured? Is it raw or processed? Does the suit feel as well as it looks or is it over worn? Whether you like it or not, it’s assigned to you and every day you wake up, take attendance, become that person and dress your part, even if the bigger part of who you really are is often notably absent.
At the corner of my street lived a family, the matriarch of which was also a Holocaust survivor. Her daughter Susie was my age and we attended the same school. We attempted friendship in an awkward way but never actually managed it. The knowingness we shared about our lives behind closed doors was not enough and we could tell the difference. We just couldn’t talk about it.
I can remember going over to her house to play on a few occasions and being struck by the fact that as maniacally clean as our home was at all times, hers was downright sterile. The kitchen on the main floor was, for lack of a better description, simply for “show”. Absolutely no cooking or food preparation took place in that showroom. Meals were prepared in a secondary kitchen in the basement. It too, was spotless. In fact, the entire house was haunted by disinfectant, cleanliness and ghosts of horrible memories that could not be washed or chased away. The sheets were changed daily. Even when someone else makes your bed and you lie in it, fresh, clean sheets can’t cover up the truth.
Susie and I shared an unspoken understanding that the single commonality between our parents was the source of our own and included everything from shame, pride, fear and mystery to tension, unanswered questions, confusion and uneasiness. To walk on eggshells around someone for a few hours is an exercise in restraint. Being raised walking around and avoiding silent landmines was one of our normal, everyday “rewards”. In the end, it seemed easier to do it in our own respective houses than inside each other’s. The choreography in the home of Holocaust survivors is determined by the lead dancer. Everybody else just follows. No costume changes are allowed.
I have turned my wardrobe inside out, restitched sections and seen how its invisible pattern discovered clever ways to repeat itself without any sign of a seamstress' hand. For so many years, I watched myself be altered by it until I decided to undress myself completely so my skin could finally breathe. The uniform of being a Holocaust survivor’s daughter is not one I choose to wear to identify myself, even though it is a part of who I am. It hangs in the closet of reminders.
I have many others keeping it company.


Salon.com
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I also have to say - this essay can be a model of how to write powerfully and sparely - every word is chosen and important.
I had a number of friends who were children of Holocaust survivors and they too had those utterly immaculate kitchens, immaculate homes. How I envied them, because my home was a complete disastrous mess, my mother schizophrenic and barely able to separate her children and her home from her phobias and fantasies. I suppose that controlling cleanliness allow the illusion of control, as if all this working will ensure that you are safe. And we, in the safety of mess and crumbs. All this damage, all this misery.
thanks for sharing this piece of yourself.
I could actually feel the tense awkwardness of you and Susie trying to establish a friendship. This was well written and it makes one think how horrors like the Holocaust have a lasting and far reaching effect....in ways that are unseen...and I don't know that many people quite grasp that. Thank you for showing this. Much love to you.
I bumped into Clark Kent and Lois Lane.
On the left Feed @ 10:20. I love bumps.
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MACULAR DEGENERATION - R. Deluty.
`
Rather than try
to discern the world
through haze, blind spots,
distortion, and blur,
she prefers to close her lids
and see trees and flowers,
seashores and canyons,
sunrise and snowfalls,
friends and neighbors,
lightening and rainbows,
her children and grandchildren-
all clear as crystal-
in her mind's eye.
Touching story.
To have survival DNA is about as good as it gets !
Skin breathing free, feels good doesn't it?
Rated for awareness.
Beautiful writing!
R
Supreme, martyred, patriarchy in a home from a religiously homogenized community, weaves an invisible emotional shroud for a child. In my stridently Catholic neighborhood, we donned sack- cloth and ashes.
This was astounding! Let's go skinny-dipping!!!!
-rated-
That unspokedness you write about is the only way to survive such loss. Thanks for putting it into words. R
R
There wasn't much talk of family history in my house. My mother was intent on remaining "white linen" Irish. Not like the rabble that came over after her parents. There was never a word about what was happening in the Auld Sod at the time. Admonitions to scrub behind the ears before Sunday mass had nothing to do with impressing Jesus. I'm quite sure of that.
Haven't been around much lately, but I can see you haven't lost you touch with the written word.
This was beautiful.
me too...and I think it very important that everyone look to see if there might be a few truths in need of dissecting.
Great writing.
Your writing talent is incredible.
Lezlie
Odd in a way, but it is well-established that obsessive-compulsive disorder (often exhibited as an irrational cleanliness) is often the result of molestation as a child. But then again, I suppose it isn't really odd, because both causes are beyond human capacity to fully overcome.
i can't ignore the myriad of ways the above could be interpreted. upon my completion several of them still sound with measured strokes in my head.
you never disappoint.
Oh also... random aside, sort of. I did not know that you were Jewish, but it reminds me of ANOTHER thing we have in common. While I am not Jewish, people always think I am. It may have something to do with my being in Fiddler on the Roof when I was a junior in high school. There were a total of two Jewish kids in that whole show; in fact TEVYE was actually played by a Catholic! (I. Know.) Anyway, most of the cast didn't really take the show seriously and just kind of went through the motions. I really embraced my role and found the culture and story so fascinating that I think a part of me sort of became Jewish. I don't know if that makes any sense... but that's kind of how I feel.
...Aw crap. I highjacked your journal in a comment. I'm sorry! But I did rate you! And I did read and comment in regards to your actual post... so I don't think I'm too much of a jerk. =P
E.
Hells Bells, the narrative of Patricia's life is available in many, many of her posts. Prepare to be blown away. And to cry. And to applaud.
R
There could be women Catholic priests if women were sufficiently disobedient. Mass and all the sacraments can easily be performed in homes. Why could the hierarchy do without making utter idiots of themselves? Arrest them? Excommunicate them?
Rated,
Stephanie
Your experience is extremely far removed from mine. It doesn't take away any of the heartache, all these miles and years between us. And you are able to describe this pain in a sublimely beautiful way.
P, I'm going to PM you about this subject awfully close to my heart/mind/soul.
R
The term, "organized religion," is vastly broad. Oddly, I wouldn't have connected the Holocaust to organized religion, simply due to the association I have with that term.
Now that you have purged your closet, you can go to church, synagogue, temple, or what have you on your own terms, and use if for other needs: fellowship, meditation, spiritual exploration, ritual, conviviality, etc.
Or is that simply pure Americanism: the belief that we can pack it away, the stubborn insistence that we can remake ourselves? Sometimes I think I'm fooling myself in thinking that I'm different than that child I was. Sometimes I marvel at the distance between the two mes.
Very thought-provoking, cartouche. If anyone can both re-tailor and then decide, cleanly, to leave it hanging in the closet, you can. (And if I may: I'm soooo glad you're writing again. Always a delight; always thoughtful.)
My wife is the daughter of two survivors and all of this -- especially the cleanliness, Deb's mother is like that -- rings true.
There are times I lie with Deb as she snores a bit, or watch her cook, or even when we argue, when I am overwhelmed with ache for what I know about her. How she moves and thinks and feels, having grown up with her mother and father and all their oddity and frailty and steel.
It lasts generations. My daughters take no shit from anyone about being Jewish. I mean, they kick ass. And yet express, at odd times, a certain radical fearfulness about the future for Jews, even in the land of the free, that crushes me a bit.
I am davening here, involuntarily. Exceptional post, Patricia.
Until this line: "I decided to undress myself completely so my skin could finally breathe."
And then, the story sang.
rated
Your really digging deep with your material and emerging and changing before us, which is especially rewarding to watch. I think that's one of the benefits of our community here, is to watch our core members evolve and change via their writing. It's really quite miraculous, really. And I truly mean miraculous.