I write what I see; I document what I hear; I talk when I’m listened to; I listen when talking in need to be heard.

Showing posts with label Short stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short stories. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 08, 2016



Photo with the Missing Head

As featured in ESRA Magazine, this short autobiographical story is only a small portion of a larger piece. 

Ten years in the making and this account is still not finished. A difficult time in my life, equally difficult to write. And more so, I contemplated long and hard whether to share it with the world.

Well . . . here it is.

I hope you enjoy reading.

http://www.esra-magazine.com/blog/post/photographs-drescher

The photo with the man’s head missing
For as long into the past as I remember, there hung on the wall above my grandparents’ bed a glass-framed black and white photograph which I could almost reach when I stood on top of the bed itself. In a large chest of drawers, more photo albums were kept in the bottom drawer, where the past could be paraded in disjointed events before my eyes. 
The photo above the bed featured the head of a younger version of my mother next to the head of an unfamiliar man, but who closely resembled my uncle. Boobe’s eyes welled up whenever she looked at the picture and then at me. Everybody cried around me: an uncle who came from America to visit every two years, my uncle and aunt who lived in Binyamina, Boobe’s sister who lived in Haifa, and my cousins. What was this sadness about? I waited for some sign to explain the offenses they believed I had committed against them.I was a walking question mark.
Was it a weekend or a summer holiday? Who could remember now? But I do recall my older cousin’s question, uttered so suddenly that I was struck by the oddity of it. We had been sitting in the kitchen, illuminated by a single light bulb hanging from the ceiling by an electric wire. The air in the room was warm and fragrant with my aunt’s rhubarb pie. Outside heavy drops of rain fell against the kitchen window and struck the ground. My cousin’s deft fingers were braiding my long curly hair. 
“Do you want to go to the cemetery?” she asked. 
Later—a week or two, or a month—my cousin and I walked to the cemetery. After a short walk through thorny weeds we stood in front of a grave upon which stood a headstone skewed by time and weather. I knelt down to place on the grave the wild flowers we had gathered along the way. Then I saw it: the inscription on the stone read my grandparents’ last name. 
I looked up at my cousin with questioning eyes.
“Ask Boobe,” she said. “She’ll tell you.” 
One late July evening, my grandparents and I were sitting on the porch. The air was warm. Insects buzzed in the darkening day. My grandfather held a Yiddish-language newspaper. The pages flapped gently in the warm breeze.  
“Zaide,” I said, “Why is the newspaper listing names of people? Is someone looking for them?”He peered at me; rimless glasses perched on the tip of his nose. His blue eyes were sharp and clear, eyes that looked. An army of furrows had settled deep in uneven lines across his forehead.“Many people lost their family members during the war,” Zaide replied in Yiddish. “Survivors have no other means by which they can discover if their families are alive.” 
My grandmother nodded.“Truth is often painful, but I hope that it alone will save us,” my grandfather continued. “It is important for you to know the truth.”At that moment I had thought that by asking about the mysterious grave, I might be able to understand something about my history. I never dared ask. 
Many years later I was able to acknowledge the persistent guilt I felt toward my family—the family I would need to leave in order to discover myself. And what compounded the guilt was the suspicion that in leaving them behind I would be leaving my identity as well, in a perpetual state of imposed exile.  
In those earlier days at my grandparents’ house, I wandered among the ruins of my family’s past as my eyes relentlessly traveled to the wall with the picture of my mother and a dark-haired stranger. I knew my parents were lying when they said the missing head in the picture albums was a dear friend who had died. Then why cut out his existence? If he was dead already, why annihilate his memory further?
Indeed, the albums contained vanished family members, but the missing head, which was mostly next to my mother’s smiling face—their bodies tilted into each other toward the center of their gravity, remained their deepest secret.
Information came in bits and pieces; I greeted each with increasing disbelief; each a separate blow. Their words furthered feelings of pity for unknown ancestors whose Litvak tribulations had been foreign to me. Yet my connection to them was deeply entrenched. There were hushed and unfinished stories about atrocities in concentration camps and missing family members. Many vanished; few survived. My grandparents lost a daughter and her six grandchildren. My mother lost her parents; my father’s mother and younger brother were murdered, a slew of cousins and friends. 
The missing head with the rest of the body intact remained a mystery until I turned thirteen.There will always be that certain incident that will remain more prominently than anything else during my childhood. If it had only happened a few years later, or even a few years earlier.
The two of us, Boobe and I, were sitting on a stoep. Insects lurched wildly against us. A gray cat gazed at me warily from the edge of the garden. ‘You are old enough to know the truth,’ Boobe said, enunciating each separate syllable slowly with voice unsteady, remote.
I leaned forward.  
Her words had a persistent stubbornness that kept entrenching me deeper and deeper. I was bathed in sweat and dazed by the heat; my clothes hung limply against my skin. No longer was I secure in my commonplace aspect, secure in my lackluster nonentity.These words offered the knowledge I craved for myself, but now unsure I wanted to know. Except that there could be no going back. - nothing to go back to. I had become what the world outside made me; I had to live in this world, as it existed. 
I was thirteen years old, for heaven’s sake! What was I to do with this information? “He’s been killed,” she said. “And he was only twenty-four years old. He had just arrived in Palestine with a young bride and seven-month-old daughter. He’d survived the hardship of war”and had somehow succeeded in securing a passage to the Promised Land.He had been drafted to dig fox holes shortly after his arrival, and had been killed doing so. He’d lived in Palestine for two weeks,” she said. “And your mother was left alone with you.”
I shouted out, “No! No! That is not true!”
I was wiped clean as a slate, emptied of history. My grandmother had taken it upon herself, against my parents’ wishes, to reveal the family’s secret. My father was not my real father.
Up until that moment, I could not understand why Boobe was my grandma. She was not my mother’s mother; neither was she my father’s. My father had his own stepmother. His mother had disappeared in some concentration camp. 
For years to come, I found myself imagining my real father, constantly comparing everybody’s features with the features of the man in the one saved photo. What was he like? He, of course, was kind; his eyes filled with the light of kindness. My birth father became a being of huge dimensions, a creature moving among the stars. He, of course, was generous: he loved to share, to guide; he would have taken great pleasure in initiating his daughter into entire domains of which she knew almost nothing. I had made myself according to the limitations I had understood. 
So it was that once, long ago, the death of my father, Boobe’s son, my mother’s husband and her first cousin, had imposed the verdict of silence. The father whom I had never known was my mother’s husband and first cousin. That made Boobe and Zaide my mother’s aunt and uncle, and my uncle and aunt once removed, and my grandparents. 
And there is irony here as well. My parents’ attempt to obliterate my father’s existence had not succeeded since the father I never knew resides in my own son’s face—my son who is now nineteen years older than my real father was. 

It would be many years before Henya saw the complete picture, which revealed the missing head of her birth father




Tuesday, January 18, 2011

The Woman with the Jet-Black Hair

A partial of the whole...

(An excerpt from my first book, Black Diamonds)


That evening at the Eats, Moldoun sharpened the edge of a match and used it to pick between his teeth. “Sometimes I see things I don’t want to,” he told Jamie, who had just returned with his order. “Men getting hurt at the mine, company not caring…”


Jamie was just about to set the plate in front of Moldoun when she stopped suddenly; just at that moment, getting off a motorcycle, there was the woman with jet-black hair. Jamie’s skin prickled all over.

“Sometimes I see things I want to see all the time,” Jamie blurted. She watched the woman take off her helmet and shake her long hair free. The entire restaurant grew hushed. Dishes stopped clinking; the hum of conversations drew far into the background. A deep excitement settled on Jamie as she watched the woman inspect her reflection in the side mirror of the motorcycle.

The young woman walked in with a slight sway to her hips and sat at the table by the door, Jamie could see hidden smiles and trailing looks. At that moment, Jamie wished she didn’t look and feel so tired and that her hair wasn’t in such disarray.

After taking a few other orders, Jamie walked over to the table where the black-haired beauty was sitting. She stacked the cup on top of the plate that had been left there by a previous patron, and wiped the surface of the table. The young woman’s hands rested on her lap, and Jamie watched them, with their thin, blue veins. On her left hand she wore a silver ring etched with an intricate design. Her nails were ragged and half-eaten, the skin around them uneven.

Jamie caught the young woman studying her. She became acutely aware that she was taking in her pink uniform, her army boots, and her black bandana wrapped around her left wrist. Jamie shifted uneasily in her confining uniform. She felt ridiculous.

The young woman spoke. “You’re new here, aren’t you?” Her voice was throaty. It came up from somewhere deep inside her chest. Jamie noticed that she was braless, and the gauzy fabric emphasized her nipples.


“Not that new. Ten days old,” said Jamie, smiling.

The young woman ran a small red tongue over her upper lip. “You’re tall.”

Jamie sent her a look from under her long bangs, which nearly covered her eyes.

“And muscular.”

“I like your bike,” Jamie said.

“You do? Really?”

“Really.” It pleased Jamie to see how eagerly she had sought her approval.

“It makes me feel powerful and free. You know, being out in the open with nothing between you and the air.”

Jamie wanted to hear her voice a little longer. “A car can do that too.”

“Not the same. I like the attention I get from riding it.”

“It’s a Suzuki TC 100, right?

The girl’s face lit up. “How do you know?”

“I know a good deal about motorcycles," Jamie said. "Had one when I lived in LA, a Kawasaki. It was a real beauty. I used to take long rides to Laguna Beach, sometimes all the way to San Francisco. Fact is, I’m thinking of buying another one.”

“Really? I know this guy, Jed, he rides a Kawasaki. It’s totally cool looking. Orange with lots of chrome.”

“Cool.”

The girl threw a glance at Jamie. “I love my bike, but it runs bad when I put the carburetor cover back on.”

“Could be a restricted air flow to the carb.”


To be continued...