This
is my official Bar Mitzva photo. It was shot in a studio on West
Farms Square in the Bronx. Somewhere packed away now, there is also a large, framed
print that was hand colored. It was on a sort of permenant dispalay in my parent's livingroom. The photo is also the first page of my Bar
Mitzva album. In the years that followed, my parents delighted in
embarrassing me by pulling that album out to show to anybody they
could pin down on our couch. In many ways, this photo is the product
a decade of frantic activity on their part. Actually, I think they
started planning my Bar Mitzva right after their wedding. Never mind
that I wasn't born until a few years later, they were determined to
nail this.
My
memory of that day itself isn't all that much. What I do remember is
the preparation I had to go through: endless hours spent learning to
chant some dogrel in a language that I would never understand and
certainly never need to repeat again. Mine was to be a one shot
performance. I knew it. They knew it. I hated it.
Early
on my folks realized this deal was going to be problematical. See,it
wasn't enough that I had to learn the chanting bit. I also had to
get the rest of the religious bit. I was not having any of it. In
desperation, they sent me to series of local teachers, 'm'lamads' they were called, self taught and self styled. My memory of them is
that they were all old, gray bearded, spoke with funny accents and
smelled bad.
My
least favorite was a guy who ran a basement storefront 'school' in my
Grandmother's apartment building on Mohegan Avenue, off 180th
Street. He taught us in groups of half a dozen after our regular
public school classes. This was the last place any 11 year old boy
wanted to be after school. I hated it. We all hated him. The
feeling was mutual. About the only thing memorable about those
endless afternoons is that he used to disappear through a door at the
back several times during each class, to return a few minutes later redolent with the aroma of Manachevitz on his breath – along with the other
miasma that surrounded him – and push on for another half hour. In retrospect, I suppose I sympathize a bit with the old boy.
As
The Day got closer, my parents got more frantic. Among other things, they spent the
better part of 2 years sitting around the kitchen table planning the
seating arrangements for the reception. There were these
transgenerational feuds that had to be honored.
“You can't put
Cousin Gussy with Irving and Sylvia......... remember?”
“What about we stick her at
Table 12?”
“With Krutzman's? Maybe, but remember the time.........." And so it went.
In
the end, my parents probably spent much more on the party that evening then
they could have afforded. I think they had a great time. At least I'd like to believe that they did. I remember that there was food I didn't like and a bunch of old people I'd never seen before who handed me envelopes, pinched my cheek and mumbled.
Later that year, I got to spend some of my new found loot
on a good camera. Then I learned that as school photographer for my
Junior Highschool newspaper, I could get out of classes. And
occasionally I could get into places I didn't belong; these were skills
that would serve me well in the years to come. And before the year was out, I had
photographed the Mayor of our City and a famous - and disturbingly
gorgeous – actress. What's more, I had actually sold my first
photo to a local newspaper.
The rest is history.
The rest is history.
1 comment:
Hey Maury, My Bar Mitzvah was a similar experience. Didn't want to do it even after five years of Hebrew School. Sat around listening to endless angry conversations of who couldn't sit with whom. It sucked. Best of all my was around the same time of year, in fact it was the 22nd of February, 1966. So I've just past my 49th anniversary. Still have the book of pictures.
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