In honor of Hanukkah, a combination of two tales from my life.
Solomon The Milkman is about my grandfather. He wasn't Jewish but he pretended to be in order to do a favor for some real Jewish people. Oddly enough, as I relate in the second story, he was married to a woman who was Jewish but he probably had no idea that she was. Even more odd, she probably had no idea that she was, either. It was only through DNA testing of their offspring - my uncle - that our Jewish roots were discovered. Still later, DNA testing on My Mom also found Jewish roots.
Anyway, here are both stories, told in the order in which I originally told them.
Solomon was published in the
Boston Herald. The other tale was submitted for publication to many places, but rejected by every last one of them. I couldn't possibly tell you why. I think it's wonderful (but, of course, it's about ME, so I would.)
Solomon The Milkman
Let me tell you about my ersatz Jewish roots.
My grandfather Sullivan was a milkman for H. P. Hood.
He told this story, which took place during the long-ago days when he did his
route on a horse-drawn wagon.
His route traveled through the Mattapan section of Boston, which at that
time was heavily populated with Jewish families. Now, some of the people to
whom he delivered milk thought he was Jewish. They thought his name was
Solomon, not Sullivan.
I'm not positive how this assumption came about,
but it's not a stretch to imagine what might have happened. Someone in
the neighborhood probably asked what his name was and he (or, more likely, one
of his customers with perhaps an Eastern European accent) said,
"Sullivan", and whoever had asked the question, with the idea already
in mind that he might be Jewish, heard it as "Solomon". That person
told someone else, and so on. It was possible. My grandfather didn't have the
map of Ireland
on his face like I do. He could have passed. Since he delivered milk in a
Jewish neighborhood, his customers might naturally have assumed that he
was Jewish, too. I don't suppose he would have had any reason to disabuse them
of this notion. He probably figured it wouldn't hurt business to let them keep
on thinking it.
Anyway, one day while he was doing his route, some
older Jewish men called for him to come down off of his wagon so that he could
help them meet the required numbers for a minyan; that is, so that they could
have enough for prayer service, which required at least 10 men.
They yelled to him, "Solomon! We need another
for a minyan! You got time?"
My grandfather was sharp enough to know what they
were talking about. He had been delivering milk in that neighborhood for many
years, so he was familiar with words and phrases and customs that an Irishman
might otherwise not be expected to know. The question was: What should he tell
these men? Should he spill the beans and let them know that he wasn't really
named Solomon, but Sullivan? That he wasn't Jewish, but Catholic, and that his
ancestry was Irish and French?
Well, my grandfather figured it this way: Who did
it hurt if he helped them out? As long as they thought he was Jewish, God
wouldn't be mad at them for including an Irishman in their prayer
service, and he also figured that God would probably look kindly on him
for doing the old Jews a mitzvah. So, my grandfather parked his wagon and joined
the minyan.
He faked his way through by following the lead of
the others. Having attended Catholic mass for many years, he knew he could
probably get by with indistinct mumbling as long as he did the right body
motions, so he kept his voice low, bowed when they did, and so forth.
Afterward, the old men thanked him. He then got back on his wagon and finished
his route. Of course, from that day forward there was little doubt along Blue Hill Avenue
that Tom Sullivan (that is, Solomon the Milkman) was Jewish - and a fairly devout
Jew, at that.
So, if someone calls me "Solly", instead
of "Sully", I won't complain. My grandfather wasn't really a
Jew, but he played one on his milk route.
Barukh atah
Adonai, Eloheinu, melekh ha'olam shehecheyanu v'kiyimanu v'higi'anu laz'man
hazeh. (Amein)
Unexpected Roots
You might assume, from my name, that
I have Irish blood in me. True. But let me tell you the rest of the story.
What you likely wouldn’t guess,
either from my name or my looks, is that I am of 25% Spanish blood; what some
would term Hispanic. My grandmother, on my mother’s side, was Spanish; somewhat
dark-skinned, whereas I am pasty white. And I’ve had folks make disparaging
remarks about people with Spanish roots in my presence because they were
ignorant fools and they assumed I couldn’t possibly have that blood in me. Even
if not meant as an insult to me personally, I took it as one. If I let it slide
without punching you, it’s because I gave you the benefit of the doubt that,
deep down, you weren’t just a reprehensible bigot with no redeeming value.
I have a nephew, Darian. He’s a
sweet kid. I love him. His mother is white, his father is black. So, I have
black people in my family, too. I don’t suppose I have to tell you I’ve heard lots
of nasty jokes about black people told in my presence. I’ve usually let them
slide, too, much to my discredit. I may not be as forgiving in future, so
consider yourself warned.
Now let me tell you what my uncle, my father's brother,
told me on the phone last night.
It seems he has done some
genealogical research. During the course of that, he decided to get a reading
of his DNA. By doing so, it can be determined what ethnic groups are in your
bloodlines.
He told me what we already knew –
lots of Irish. There were some other Northern European folks among our
ancestors; nothing surprising there. Then he dropped a bombshell.
His results came back as 18.6%
Ashkenazi Jew, with that blood from his mother’s lineage.
This means that I am, one
generation further along, at least 9.3% Jewish.
Well, when he told me this, I had
to laugh. This is because I grew up among family who were not averse to making
jokes about Jews and who had no compunction about dragging out the most
reprehensible generalizations concerning them. They didn’t hate Jews, per se;
they weren’t mini-Hitlers who wanted them destroyed. Many of them actually had
Jewish friends for whom they would have gladly gone to the wall. But they
weren’t known for gracious use of the language when it came to them, either. When
I was growing up, I heard many a derogatory term for Jewish people thrown
around. Never, in my wildest dreams, did I imagine they were talking about themselves.
Or about ME.
My father, God rest his soul, went
to his grave believing he was purely Irish, Scot and French. Never once did it
enter his mind that he could have been one of The Chosen People.
For my part, I now feel a whole lot
better about being circumcised when I was a baby. I was kind of mad about it
before yesterday, but now I realize it’s part of my cultural heritage.
The serious point here is that
science is proving most of us are interrelated in ways we may never have
imagined. And if you’re the type to indulge in racial slurs or ethnic jokes,
you may not only be insulting the guy next to you without knowing it, the joke
may also be on you.
*****************************************
And, as I said earlier, I've since found out that Jewish blood also flows in My Mom. Therefore, getting it from both sides, I am the most Jewish living person in my entire family.
L'chaim!
8 comments:
Awesome!
My sister had her DNA tested, no Jewish, but not as much Irish as we always thought. Can't remember specifics at this point.
Happy Hannukah, Jim!
Happy Hannukkah! Love the idea of the name Sullivan morphing into Solomon, I'm going to send a link to this story to my best Jewish friend, she'll love it!
I think DNA testing is extremely interesting but I have no intention of doing it. I don't want my internal personal details available to the medical industry or the insurance industry, and anyway, I'm definitely Anglo-Saxon / Celtic, red hair, blue eyes, freckles, like you! (But not Irish!)
Good to know that you're back in the blog world.... sold anything worth while recently?
Thanks for your comment on my SOLD post, yes, I'm always thrilled when I sell something that I have created. And very grateful too.
I love this post, Jim.
One of the great enrichments of my own life is that, when I found and met my birth-mother, I found that she was a convert to Judaism. And ever since, her (and her family's) Jewishness has been a particular fount of joy and richness for us.
And listen, you're just as happy not having to deal with the personal-hygeine aspects of not being circumcised, anyway. . . ;)
L'Chaim!
Thank you, folks! So nice to get such wonderful comments from folks who have obviously read the stories! One thing I rarely got when writing for newspapers, etc., was fast complimentary feedback. There was the occasional good one, but most people who wanted to get in touch quickly were doing so because they had some sort of dislike. This is much better!
One of these days I want to do a DNA test for the heck of it. Families have a wonderful ability to tweet family history. My family is a true melting pot. At least one representative from the basic race types have snuck in. Kind of a “what you got stew”.
I love the Solomon story.
The results of my DNA Testing came back with 21% Other of undetermined Origin... now The Man teases me constantly that he just knew I was from another Planet! I confess that our People aren't your Garden Variety folks, on either side of the Family, so it is Curious what the 'Other' could be? I question some of those DNA outcomes tho', my Dad's whole Family are of Native American descent and almost all still live on the Rez and many are registered Tribal Members... yet when some of the Cousins and I did the DNA thing for a lark, few showed any Native American DNA of any significance and said we could be Arabic or Turkish and the most hilarious, Scandinavian... LMAO since if you saw how Dark and Tribal all of Dad's Fam are the Scandinavian slant is a stretch... and wondering what woodpile that DNA assessment allegedly came out of? *Smiles*
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