Monday, August 19, 2019
Survivor :: Personal Narrative Judaism Papers
Survivor I walk. I wake. I work, when I want to. I create uneven labyrinths of letters, I word. He worded and He created what He called earth, water, and swamp. I sink as I drown in that swamp, the same slick color as my patent green boots. I stomp on my existence. My father called them Nazi boots. He wasnââ¬â¢t trying to be provocative; thatââ¬â¢s how boots look to him. Thatââ¬â¢s how I look at a pile of shoes, a serial number, even a bar of soap. Thatââ¬â¢s how I look at an Aleph, the first of Hebrew letters, the sound that precedes speech; its arms grow rigid revealing the swastika tattooed upon my memory. When they teach us what it means to be a Jew, they coat the letters in honey, and coax us to lick it off. A sticky, suffocating sweetness clings to us as we learn to read and later still as we try to escape who we are, but canââ¬â¢t. My education is not tied to those books, but to my self, myself as I march up narrow staircases of apartments atop stores atop Brooklyn cellars, numbers on my grandmotherââ¬â¢s arm as she washes the dishes and uses her own thumb as a pincushion. She canââ¬â¢t distinguish pain from life. She used to urge my aunts to keep on sewing. ââ¬Å"Arbeit Macht Frei,â⬠she said. Work frees. Iron gates and barbed wire. I stick myself with a safety pin and I bleed. My grandmother chuckles generously at my soft, suburban, spoiled hands. She would get me a Band-Aid but doesnââ¬â¢t know where she keeps them. The pressure stops the bleeding, and I get into my fatherââ¬â¢s car. Go home. Sometimes I canââ¬â¢t tell whether persecution is an interruption of freedom, or if freedom is just how oppression looks from the perspective of the oppressor. The massah experiences subjugation as luxury. I scrub my own arms, trying to wash off the stain of white privilege, to find the Negro slave underneath. I breathe. I bathe. I believe. Sometimes I wonder what I believe. I wonder if Iââ¬â¢m that homeless guy that I saw clutching his Bible. Inheriting the earth. Do I truly believe that God rewards the faithful and punishes the blind? Does this anonymous man deserve only 17 cents in a cup, while I have merited my $38,564 a year?
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