Table of Contents
PART ONE
OLD ROOTS
PART TWO
DERACINATION
PART THREE
TRANSPLANTATION
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By: Jacob Auerbach
Copyright @ 1992- Jacob Auerbach, Long Beach, N.Y.
CHAPTER FIVE
PROGENITORS
P. 45 - 53
1. Paternal Side
The earliest progenitor on my
father's side still in living memory was my great-grandfather Note Shepsel Goldfarb. I
remember him as a spry little man, with a bushy white beard, who constantly busied himself
about his house and vegetable garden. The house, which he owned, was across the street
from his daughter Freide Leie, my father's mother. Zeide (grandpa) Note Shepsel, as
everybody called him, had been a tailor in his time--a ladies' tailor if you please, which
was a notch above the ordinary kind in the artisan hierarchy of the town. He still had his
Singer sewing machine, an asset of no mean value in those days, and he cheerfully used it
to do some patching for the family, being no longer able to do honest-to-goodness
tailoring. He used to take me into his garden to treat me to some sweet peas picked off
the vine or to a slender young carrot freshly pulled from the ground, watching with
pleasure as I was munching it. He lived with his second wife Rivka, who was apparently
resented by his daughter, and the two women never stepped into each other's house, to the
old man's chagrin. He also had a son, Berel Leib Goldfarb, of whom he was very proud.
Berel Leib lived in another, town with his own family, was apparently well educated for
those days, dressed stylishly and acquired big-city manners due to his occupation as a
traveling salesman for some large firm. This took him to many places in Russia not usually
frequented by Jews. When last heard from during the 1930s he lived in Simferopol, a large
city in the Crimea, which like many other parts
of European Russia was under German occupation during the Second World War. His and his
family's fate is not definitely known to me, but the fact that nothing has been heard from
them since then can only lead to the conclusion that they had not escaped the bloody hands
of the Nazi murderers, or that they perished
in some other way during those terrible years.
Zeide Note Shepsel was a
Cohen, a member of the priestly caste which presumably traces its ancestry in a direct
male line to the first High Priest Aaron, brother of Moses. This bestowed certain
prerogatives as well as obligations upon him in the synagogue, and his daughter was quite
proud of her descent. However, the prestige did not carry with it any material benefits,
and the poor old man suffered greatly from want of food, as we all did, during the First
World War, before he died at the age of ninety-two in 1917. Up to that time my parents
lived either with my maternal grandmother or in rented quarters. Upon Note Shepsel's
death we moved into his house, Rivka having died before him, and we thus acquired for the
first time a dwelling all of our own.
Most people's memories of
their earliest childhood are naturally associated with their parents, primarily their
mother. Mine are intimately connected with my grandmothers, who were always
affectionately referred to by everyone as Bobbe (Grandma) Leie and Bobbe Peshe. Freide
Leie's house is the one in which I actually spent the first conscious years of my life,
because she took charge of me from the time I was weaned until I was about four or five. I
say took charge advisedly, for she was not to be swerved from any course once she had
decided on it. She was a unique person, both in looks and bearing, and stood out among
other women in the town like a swan in a flock of geese. Slight of build, with a delicate
pretty face, she was always fastidiously dressed, not i n the ordinary patterned prints
but i n black satin dresses with white lace ruffles around the neck and cuffs. She sported
a small gold watch which, though hanging from a thin chain around her neck, was pinned to
the side of her dress for safety or perhaps for style. Grandma walked with a slight limp
due to an arthritic condition of one of her hips, and usually supported herself by a
cane when taking long walks. Some years before I was born she had traveled to a spa, a
rare event in our town, and had a supply of mineral salts which she used in her weekly
bath.
Grandma Freide Leie was known
for her pride, and some people considered her snobbish. She did not talk much, and did not
gossip with other women, but when she did speak she was listened to with respect and was
seldom contradicted, perhaps in the knowledge that her mind was not easily changeable.
Further more, she had a sharp tongue and could put antagonists in their place with a few
choice words, when necessary. She was the undisputed mistress of her household, and her
husband, my grandfather Leiser Ber, an amiable and unassuming man, always kept to the
background in her presence and carried out her bidding without a murmur.
Along with these traits
grandma had a deep sense of devotion to the members of her family, her protectiveness at
times verging on obsession. Her household duties were carried out with the same zeal,
almost to a fault. The cleanliness of her house became proverbial, fitting the saying:
"You can eat off her floor!"
Unlike other households
crowded with children and in-laws, grandma lived only with her daughter, Esther Beile, and
grandpa Leiser Ber when he was not away in the
forest
where he worked as a shingle maker. Their oldest son, my father, upon marriage to my
mother went to live with her at the house of her mother, my other grandmother Peshe; and
their two younger sons were already in America. This may have been the reason why I, Bobbe
Leie's first grandchild, was taken in by her and became the apple of her eye.
Unlike
other people, who used the public bathhouse, Bobbe Leie took weekly baths at home in a
large wooden tub, for which pails and pails of water were heated in a copper cauldron
standing on a tripod over a wood fire. The rim of the tub was just about on a level with
my eyes
as I toddled up to it, naked, to be lifted inside for a
scrubbing. At bedtime during the winter she would help me get undressed near the
white-tiled stove while at the same time warming a featherbed against it, to quickly wrap
me in it and carry me to bed. On summer evenings there was a different daily routine. At
dusk, just as the herds were coming in from pasture, we would go to a nearby peasant's
barn where the peasant woman would fill a glass with warm milk straight from the cow's
udder, which I drank on the spot. The glass was brought along by grandma because the
peasant's utensils were not kosher, and besides she did not trust their cleanliness.
Grandma also made sure that the woman's hands and the cow's udder were clean before the
milking began. My own mother could not possibly have lavished all that attention on me,
busy as she was with keeping the store and ministering to her next infant, brother
David, and probably already pregnant with the third child, also a boy, who died within a
few weeks after birth--the only one of her children not to survive.
Among
other memories of Bobbe Leie's house is a glass cupboard in the parlor
which contained a number of
treasures I was occasionally allowed to handle. There were some colored porcelain
figurines which did not interest me very much, but I was thrilled to play with a large
silver watch, no longer working, with engraved lids on both sides which opened by
pressing a button; and with a miniature Torah scroll, just like the big ones in the
synagogue, which reportedly was brought straight from Jerusalem. Even in later years, when
I no longer lived there, a visit to Bobbe Leie's with my brothers or sisters was a signal
occasion for being plied with goodies , such as cherry preserves, marinated fish,
poppyseed cookies, and incomparable grivenes (goose skin cracklings) that just
melted in the mouth.
The concern of this remarkable
woman for her offspring almost verged on the mania, as demonstrated by her behavior during
the winters of 1915 and 1916, when father traveled about the villages in search of a
livelihood. During snowstorms or unusually bitter frosts she would go out into the garden
and stand there motionless, probably praying, so she could feel the cold and the wind. It
took a lot of persuasion to get her back into the house and to overcome her wish to share
in her son's predicament. She kept on insisting: "When my son is out in a blizzard
and is freezing, I want to freeze too."
Freide Leie was born in about
1860 and was married to grandfather when only thirteen years old. Down to my time people
were still chuckling about her behavior right after the wedding ceremony, when she
disappeared from the festivities to the consternation of parents and relatives. A
searching party found her in a neighbor's back yard, sitting on the ground in her wedding
gown and playing jacks with her girl friends. But she learned her duties soon enough and
became a respected housewife, devoted to her husband
and children. She died in Shershev in 1935 with only her daughter's family at her bedside,
her sons having previously emigrated to the United States. But even her funeral had an
unusual feature, characteristic of her unique personality. Contrary to tradition and
custom, and with special dispensation of the Rov based on her deathbed wish, a photograph
was taken of her, face uncovered, lying on her bier at the cemetery next to
the tombstone of her husband who had died three years previously. This was done so that
her sons in America should have visual evidence of her decease and thus heighten the
effectiveness of the Kaddish (Prayer for the Dead) which was incumbent upon them. The
photograph is presently in my possession, having been passed on to me upon the death of my
own father.
Zeide
Leiser Ber followed his two younger sons to America about 1901 or 1902, but apparently
could not adjust himself to the confinement in the crowded tenements of New York's Jewish
ghetto after his unrestrained and wholesome life in the forest, so he returned home and
resumed his old work as shingle maker. The forests in our province abounded in tall firs
very suitable for shingles because of their straightgrained and knot-free wood. After
the trees were felled and cleared of their branches, the trunks ware sawed into
two-foot-long logs which were then split into wedge-shaped slats about five or six inches
wide. These were then smoothened with a wide twohandled plane, and the thicker edge of
the slat was grooved so that the thin edge of another one would fit into the groove.
Grandpa occasionally did this work at home, and I loved to watch the dexterity with
which
he clamped the
slat into a wooden vise, glided the plane along the flat sides to produce a thin shaving
that curled up with the movement of the plane, and then formed the groove right through
the center of the
thicker
edge with a special tool. This was the most critical part of the job, requiring a keen eye
and a steady hand, because the edge was only about half an inch wide, and if the tool went
off center and cut the groove's shoulder the shingle was spoiled. Sometimes grandpa let me
"help" by placing his hands over mine on the handles of the plane and glide it
slowly to produce a shaving all of my own. The pungent resinous odor of the pine was
most pleasant and considered healthful, and the shavings made fine kindling for starting a
fire. When I got older I used to whittle an occasional shingle that got spoiled into a
saber, dagger or rifle, the possession of which automatically made me a
general when playing war with my friends.
Wars were known to us kids
from the Scriptures as well as from overheard talk of adults, so games of war were often
played by us: Jews versus Assyrians or Philistines, Russians versus Turks, or Poles versus
Cossacks. But sometimes there were real battles, between boys from different heders or
streets. They started with taunts, progressed to pushing and punching, and often developed
into throwing rocks. Most of the time the combatants were dispersed by grownups, but the
fighting always stopped if one of the kids began bleeding or crouched in pain from a
direct hit. In such event the victim's pals would raise a howl: "Look what you did,
you killed him!" At this the victors, not the vanquished, took to flight in fear and
with a feeling of guilt. There were, by the way, two standard remedies for a bleeding
head: application to the wound of either some soft black bread from the inside of the
large brown loaves available in every household; or of some thick cobwebs just as easily
available from any barn or outhouse. These must have been effective--no mother ever lost a
son in our wars.
We had no doctor in town, only
a feldsher--a sort of medical assistant or male nursewhose usual prescription for
backache, fever, or any other malady the cause of which was not readily ascertainable,
also was, like the remedy for a bleeding head, one out of two: either leeches or cupping.
Leeches were plentiful in our swamps, and the disgusting creatures always stuck to our
bare legs whenever we waded there. Cupping was done by holding the opening of a small
thick glass cup over a lit candle, and then quickly applying the cup to the back or side
of the patient so that the flesh was drawn into the semi-vacuum created as the warm air
inside the cup cooled. If these remedies did not help a more drastic cure was sometimes
resorted to: bleeding the swollen protuberances created by the cupping, the incision
being made by the town barber with his razor. The basic idea in these cases was to draw
out the "bad blood" which caused the illness. If the patient died, well . . . ,
one did whatever one could, so it must have been G-d's will.
The described remedies, though
common, were not universal and sick people often were taken in a wagon bumping
over the cobblestones and the ruts in the dirt roads to the nearest city, Pruzhany, which
had a doctor. He was a Pole named Pacewicz, a pleasant elderly gentleman with a drooping
white mustache who acquired considerable experience during his many years of practice and
pursued his profession seriously and competently. The trouble was that he could not always
be found at home after undergoing the bone-jarring trip of about four hours, since he was
the only doctor serving the two towns and several nearby villages, and was often away for
hours or even for days. It is anybody's guess how many lives would have been saved if we
had a resident physician or at least a telephone in town, not to speak of an automobile.
People who have never lived under such conditions and who make use of the wonderful
machines and
appliances of the last quarter of the twentieth century as a matter of course must find it
difficult to visualize the life of those days, and fail to appreciate the ease and
convenience of their lives compared to those of their grandparents.
To return
to Zeide Leiser Ber. He was a rather handsome man, with a neatly trimmed round beard,
erect in his bearing and with the unassuming and straightforward manner of the woodsman.
He was not given to many words and always kept in the background, especially in the
presence of grandma who dominated him as she did everybody else. He worked hard by choice
as well as necessity, and was ever ready to do whatever he could for the entire family.
During the trying years of the First World War he labored with us in the garden and field,
plowing, hoeing, and lugging the heavy sacks of potatoes. I am sure that he went hungry
many-o-time in order to spare some of the scarce food for his little grandchildren.
Both he
and grandmother were broken down with inconsolable grief when word was received of the
death of their youngest son Lippe (Louis), at the age of thirty, in January 1913 in the
United States. I remember the gloom that pervaded the whole family during Shiva, the
seven-day period of mourning, when the nearest of kin sat on the floor or on low stools in
their stocking feet, moaning, wailing and reciting Psalms, the other family members and
visiting friends or neighbors moving about dejectedly and not uttering a loud word. My
grandparents never really recovered from the shock and carried their pain with them to
their graves, he in October 1931 and she in March 1935. |
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