My mother,
Anna, was born in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine in 1951. Her father was born in Poland, and because
of Polish support for Israel at the time, they were able to leave the
anti-Semitism of the USSR behind and emigrate to the Middle East when she was 5
years old. With her mouth taped shut, my mother and her family boarded trains
and boats for a long journey which led them to Israel 8 years after its birth. Hardly
the advanced country that exists today, Israel was young and
underdeveloped. Her family lived in a hut on a mountain side in Atlit.
A
professional soccer player in the Dnipropetrovsk, my grandfather became a butcher and my grandmother, a former
nurse, plucked chicken feathers for work. My grandfather brought home chicken
fat and my mother and her sister ate Schmaltz sandwiches for lunch and dinner.
It took five years to get a visa to come to the United States, where my
grandfather had an uncle. They never planned to settle in Israel, as many did
at the time. My grandfather had his heart set on America.
In 1961 little Anna
was just 10 years old when she sailed towards Lady Liberty and arrived at Ellis Island. Her first home was in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, where she discovered
what are still some of her favorite things: Television, Bugs Bunny, potato
chips, pretzels, hot dogs and pizza. The new American family quickly learned
and embraced the language of the land, and made it the tongue of the house as
well. Now my mother has a thick Brooklyn accent. (Imagine a 5ft tall, blonde,
female Donald Trump sans the comb over and sadly, the millions.) It didn’t take
long before she started to forget Russian and Hebrew and schmaltz sandwiches. Fast
forward 15 years and you’d never know about my mother’s journey or past. When
asked the common “what are you?” question her answer is always the same:
American. When I remind her of her birthplace she claims that it was just a
geographical error, she was really meant to be born in the USA.
When she had children of her own, my mother
never thought to teach us the Russian language, or to incorporate Russian
culture at home. That was fine until 1985, when strange speaking relatives
began to visit us from Russia.
I think I know where this is going!
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