Hatikvah: In Praise of Those Who Persevere

Hatikvah. The song I learned during

Friday night services at Camp Nah-Jee-Wah

in the amphitheater overlooking the lake

or in the rec center when it rained.

Where we learned Yerushalayim shel Zahav

and zeal for Eretz Israel.

 

Hatikvah. The flow that brought me home

as I listened to Smetana’s Vltava

in Prague’s Spanish Synagogue pew, melodic

notes borrowed from “La Mantovano”

and the nineteenth century. The hope

for a homeland, the hope of a people,

the hope of a dispersed set of tribes

longing after two millennia to go home.

 

Hatikvah. A lifelong mantra I learned

from Hebrew School teachers

with indigo numbers tattooed on their forearms.

A burning call to action I inherited as Mrs. Don

taught us the song in the synagogue’s

All-Purpose room. Hatikvah. All purpose.

 

Hatikvah. The allegiance to a nation

fighting once again for its existence,

bearing the brunt of Weltschmerz for all,

breaking through the clouds in jets,

with guns, with fierce persistence and Hatikvah.

 

~

 

Genesis

Eve shook her name—life—off the apple tree

until it fell onto my second-great-grandmother, Chava.

 

Death dragged Chava beneath river currents,

Life passed on to four granddaughters honoring Chava.

 

The Garden of Eden, now called the Goldene Medina,

beckoned. Across the Atlantic journeyed my grandmother Chava.

 

In America, she ate apple pie on a plate of stars and stripes,

stuffed memories into photo albums. This Chava,

 

now Eva, whose limbs stretched back across ocean and centuries,

bore children who bore children with the name Chava.

 

And while I don’t bear the name myself,

I will always sit at the ancestor table with Chava.

 

~

The History of Rock Candy

            After Matthew Rasmussen

Zuckerkandel, rock candy, is an ironic name

for a family of diabetics, the irony of cruel

Hapsburg nomenclature. I used to suck

on threads of rock candy from Nanke’s Confectionary,

not knowing my DNA would lollipop that sugar

to my blood and bones and glucose up

my eyeballs so that I could barely read or sleep.

Sure, we’re told as kids and later as aspiring

parents that we shouldn’t give our kids too much

sugar. They won’t fall asleep. But that’s really

only because sugar ribbons already loop and hoop

our eyelids wide open. Rock candy, like a giant

fireball of cinnamon, some say a remedy

for diabetes, can break your teeth. A jawbreaker.

family members punch against our so-called fate.

Take the sugar, add hot tears (but watch the salt),

boil it up with bones of ancestors sunk in pine boxes,

stir with oars of transatlantic journeys.

Let the centuries dry out the concoction

until only crystals remain. Shags and shards

of memory like tectonic plates

to create a new confection with a more stable

shelf-life, no GMOs or preservatives. Wholly organic.

 

~

 

Viennese Crunch

Dr. Emil Zuckerkandel called me

and asked in his thick Viennese

accent if he might attend

a meeting of the Cousins Club.

I immediately said yes and gave him

the address. He showed up

with his grandson, also Emil,

the one I met in Stanford

twenty years ago. They wanted

to talk about Vienna in the good old days:

the salons, cafes, concerts. Mahler, Klimt,

Crown Prince Rudolf. I explained

I’d never been there. Not wanting

to sound like a rube, I said their name

meant rock candy. Emil the Elder

let out a belly laugh so hard Emil the Younger

had to slap him on the back. My grandmother Eva

joined us in the kitchen. She said, Instead

of discovering the Organs of Zuckerkandel

and the molecular clock, couldn’t you—

the renowned scientists of the family—

have found a cure for the family’s diabetes?

 

______________

 

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