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My Grandmother’s Candlesticks: Lighting the Way for Others
By Amy Hirshberg Lederman
I entered the classroom of 32 seventh graders at the worst time imaginable -
seventh period on a Friday afternoon, the weekend before Halloween. I knew the
deck was stacked against me. I had been warned by the very enthusiastic teacher
who asked me to read my short story as part of her unit on ethnic literature,
that this class was a “rowdy” group.
I came prepared with two grocery
bags, one filled with boxes of donuts and soda and the other with my copy of
Chicken Soup for the Jewish Soul and my grandmother’s candlesticks. I knew one
thing for certain; even if the students didn’t understand my story, they would
appreciate the Jewish tradition that learning should be a sweet experience.
Munching on donuts while listening to me read would capture their stomachs, if
not their hearts.
I scanned the overcrowded
classroom; typical adolescents sporting pimples, nose rings, hair gel and
Attitude. When the teacher introduced me as the local Tucson author who wrote a
short story called “Grandmother’s Candlesticks,” eyes rolled, chairs tilted back
and notebooks opened in preparation for some serious doodling.
I would have given anything for my
grandmother to be able to see what transpired in the classroom that day. For in
the period of less than an hour, a multi-cultural group of boisterous teens came
together in a rare moment of understanding, compassion and kinship.
How did the story about a pair of
brass candlesticks secretly brought over from Russia in the lining of a coat
capture the minds and hearts of children who had never heard of a pogrom or of
the Jewish Sabbath? Why did the image of my aging grandmother struggling to
remain central in the lives of her children touch their imaginations and their
souls? And who would have imagined that as I read about my grandmother handing
me the candlesticks with her blessing before she died, students would break down
sobbing, remembering their own grandmothers, aunts, uncles and parents who had
died too soon, leaving them with too little.
When I finished reading, I passed
the heavy brass candlesticks, covered in years of wax, up and down the rows of
students. It was as if they felt the weight of tradition in their hands as they
gently handed the candlesticks to one another. I asked if anyone wanted to share
their feelings or ask me questions about what I wrote.
At first no one spoke. A
pale-looking girl stood and walked to the front of the room, sniffling and
wiping her nose with the back of her sleeve. She asked if she could read a poem
she had written for her father who had died in the hospital less than three
months before. She had been carrying it around with her since he died, but had
never read it to anyone. In a child’s whisper, she spoke directly to her father
in couplet form, without hesitation or fear. As she walked back to her seat,
friends crowded around her hugging her small frame, handing her a Kleenex,
offering her support.
Then a tough-looking young man who had scribbled throughout my reading stood up
and told his story. He didn’t have a grandmother or a grandfather, he said, or
even a mother. They had all been killed by a drunk driver when he was four. He
wished he had something like the brass candlesticks, something they had shared
together with old wax or fingerprints on it, because it was like having a piece
of them with you forever.
As child after child told of a “tia,”
“abuela” or “nana” with whom they had lived, loved and lost, the classroom
became a sanctuary for years of unspoken grief. The bell rang but no one wanted
to leave.
I gathered my things, hugged a few
of the students and said goodbye. I had almost reached my car when I heard
someone call my name.
Turning towards the voice, I
stared into the face of Celeste, one of the students in the class who hadn’t
said a word.
“Would you please talk to my
father?” she implored. “I really want to go to Phoenix - to the cemetery to see
my grandpa - he died a while ago - I can’t get there by myself - I have to go
but he won’t take me.”
Her words came out like choked
staccato notes; short, sharp and pointed.
“Well, honey, I could call him if
you want but…”
“You don’t have to,” she
interrupted, “he’s sitting right over there in that pick-up truck.”
I slowly turned my head and saw a
very big truck across the parking lot. I walked towards it and awkwardly looked
into the face of a man I had never met and told him how much it would mean to
his daughter if she could visit her grandfather’s grave; to have the chance to
tell him what was on her mind and in her heart.
He grunted, said he’d think about
it, and revved the engine which was my signal that the conversation had ended. I
felt badly, thinking that I hadn’t helped the situation much and that Celeste
would never have the closure she so desperately needed with her grandfather.
Weeks later I received a letter on
notebook paper from Celeste. Tears filled my eyes when I read her words. Her
father had taken her to Phoenix to visit her grandfather. She was lucky, she
said, because now she could visit him whenever they went there. She had written
me the letter so that I would have something permanent to keep by which to
remember her. Not as nice as those candlesticks, she wrote, but something
special just the same.
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