When Grandpa died 

Most of the family found out His

first name wasn’t actually Alan  It was

Alexander 

 

 

Which only added to the mystique 

Of his names 

For, when he was alive, he insisted 

His Hebrew name was Elihu But

Grandma insisted it was Eliyahu  A

long-running dispute 

 

 

Incidentally, Grandma decided 

This was a good time 

To let everyone know 

Her first name wasn’t Esther 

But Mayta 

 

 

It made sense, this  

Changeability of their names 

The mystery, the inconstancy 

 

 

They did, after all, have one foot 

In the Old World 

Were that much closer  

Than we will ever be 

To the mysterious traditions 

And dire circumstances 

Of the past 

 

 

 

My Hebrew name is Mordechai 

After Grandma’s father 

Max (Mordechai) Levine

The name was available 

In keeping with the custom That

children are named only after  The

deceased 

 

 

Mordechai Levine  

Was a butcher 

Who should have been a rabbi 

A learned man 

Who loved to study  

From his books 

Who was condemned  

By circumstance 

To work all his days  

As a butcher 

Who was embittered  

All his life 

Because he was a butcher  

Who should have been a rabbi 

In the one picture we have 

Of Mordechai the butcher 

He is wearing white shirtsleeves 

Glasses and a black felt yarmulke 

Bent forward in study 

Over an open book of learning 

Held in his hands 

 

 

 

Grandma once told me 

Her father temporarily  

Changed his name when he was 

Very ill 

 

 

An old superstition 

To trick the Angel of Death 

 

 

 

Mordechai the butcher  

Was born in Kalelishok

A shtetl in Lithuania 

Growing up in Kalelishok  

Mordechai the butcher 

Would have been known as Motel 

 

 

In the Old Country  

Any Mordechai like me  

Might have been Motel 

 

 

 

Motel’s father 

Was Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Levine 

A learned man 

A teacher 

And a ritual slaughterer 

 

 

We know this  

From a eulogy 

Delivered by one of his sons  

In Atlanta, Georgia 

In 1914 

And printed in a book of learning 

Titled House of David 

 

 

Thus, from the inscrutable  

Darkness of the Middle Ages  

At the end of a long line 

Of unparticularized wandering Jews 

Who traveled by foot 

Cart and blood 

Through unknown and unnamable channels 

Of two thousand years 

Of sufferings and persecutions  

That began in a Hebrew kingdom 

And ended up 

In a soon-to-be-liquidated shtetl 

In Kalelishok, Lithuania 

 

 

Emerged to us 

Into our recorded history

Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Levine 

 

 

 

Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Levine  

Had thirteen children 

With two wives  

Who were sisters 

(He married the second one  

After the first one died) 

 

 

And that eulogy also tells us  

His father’s name 

Was Chaim 

 

 

We don’t know his mother’s name  Or any other names before him  

Save Chaim 

 

 

 

Chaim may have been among the first Jews 

To take last names 

 

 

And by taking Levine  

We may assume  

Chaim 

And his father 

And his father’s father  

Believed themselves  

To have been Levites  

Descendants of priests 

Whose portion was the Lord  

And who therefore received  

No portion in the Land 

 

 

And we may also assume  

That as a Jew, living 

In the 1700s 

In Europe somewhere  

The father of a rabbi

Who considered himself a Levite 

Chaim believed in  

Carried with him  

Was closer to 

Than we will ever be 

The foundational Jewish tales 

 

 

Of Mordechai 

Who counseled Hadassah 

To change her name to Esther 

So that she may live 

To be a Persian queen 

 

 

Of Rachel 

Who, dying in childbirth,  

Named her son Ben-Oni 

“Son of my pain” 

(But whose family renamed him  Benjamin) 

 

 

Of Jacob 

Whose name was changed to Israel 

Because he wrestled God and man  And prevailed 

And received a promise  

His descendants 

Would be like the dust of the earth 

 

 

And of Avram 

Whose name was changed to Avraham 

Sometime before he withdrew the knife 

And only at God’s command 

From the throat of his bound son 

His only one 

Whom he loved 

 

 

Isaac 

The only one of our patriarchs  Who

married only one woman Who never

left the land of the covenant  And who

did not change his name

But we may never know  

What mysterious traditions  

And dire circumstances  

Chaim’s son 

Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Levine  

Actually carried with him  

From wherever he was born  

From that even older world  

To Kalelishok 

 

 

 

What we do know is this 

 

A few years after Grandpa died  

My second cousin once removed 

(His red-haired mother 

And my red-haired Grandma  

Were first cousins), 

Rabbi Jonathan Porath 

 

 

Met with me for sushi  

In Jerusalem 

 

 

Rabbi Jonathan Porath  

Brought with him to show me  

A book of learning 

Once owned by his ancestor and mine, 

Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Levine 

In the middle of this sefer was a blank page 

And on this blank page 

Rabbi Shmuel Dovid Levine  

Wrote the names 

In cursive Hebrew 

Of his thirteen children  

And the dates and times  

And villages of their births 

 

 

Including Mordechai 

My great-grandfather’s name  

And my name

Or what would become it  

Four generations later 

 

 

And as I sat there  

Trying to make sure  

Soy sauce did not touch 

My great-great-grandfather’s sefer 

As I beheld my Hebrew name 

Written in his hand 

One hundred twenty-four years ago 

 

 

I also saw the names 

Of his first three children  

Who died young 

 

 

Mayta Esther  

Chaim Asher  

Avraham Leib 

 

 

And I saw the lines through them  

 

 

When they died, 

Jonathan explained, 

He crossed out their names



_______

 

Richard Rosengarten is a Pushcart-nominated poet and author living in Miami, Florida. He studied creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh, where he served as editor-in-chief of The Original magazine. Later he served as editor-in-chief of the University of Miami Law Review. His poetry has been featured in Poetica magazine, Cosmic Daffodil, Sisyphus, The Reform Jewish Quarterly, and The Lehrhaus. His first children’s book, “With My Little Spade,” was published October 2023 (Happy Sailor Books; Gainesville, FL).

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