Friday, October 28, 2011

Eulogy for My Mother, June 2, 2011

Three years ago, my mother wrote to Rabbi Gerald Zelizer when she discovered she had cancer. She told him that she wanted no eulogy at her funeral.

My mother was selfless and private; she had no wish that her virtues be proclaimed in public. I want to respect that--never mind that I probably could not get through a eulogy today.

Three years ago, no one could turn off my tongue. At this point in my journey, I find myself speechless, except that I know in my heart that my mother was the most decent and caring person I ever knew, an angelic soul.

Still, it seems only just that my mother be praised in direct proportion to the magnitude of her humility.

So, please allow me to rely upon someone else’s words to do so. In Proverbs, known more for the sayings of Solomon, are also the “words of King Lemuel,” from a vision Lemuel’s mother instructed him to relate.

Please read responsively with me Lemuel’s Praise of the Virtuous Woman.

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Mom, I am so grateful for your unconditional love. It’s the heart of the matter and it’s what has made me who I am.

Eulogy for My Father, 8.12.2011

Last time many of us were here together, I said that it had been forty-one years almost to the day since I had spoke from this podium on my Bar Mitzvah at age 13. Sadly, today, it has been only 70 days since the last time I spoke from this podium, June 2, 2011, the date of my mother’s funeral. It is much too soon for us to be reunited here again. Much too soon.

In writing the words to follow, I realized that they were meant as much for my 13 year-old son’s ears as in praise of my father. In order to heal, I have to look forward as much as back. I believe Morris Brown believed this also. You will see why.

They say that the child is the father of the man. To me, this means that the man is formed from the child and becomes a mensch, through the right kind of teaching and experience. A mensch, in Yiddish, is a person of integrity and honor, a real human being of character.

Morris Brown was a mensch. He was, and remains, the moral center of my life. He was a vast repository of knowledge and wisdom. He was not a chatterbox. He would say something to you once in his laconic, unequivocal way, and you remembered every word, just the way he said it.

Morris Brown loved the law, the Jewish religion, his family, his colleagues, and his fellow human beings. As a trial lawyer, in chanting the book of Jonah every year for decades on Yom Kippur, and as a son, brother, husband, father, colleague, and mentor, he played a key speaking role in our lives. More important, he taught by example.

He taught me that no one is superior or inferior. Every one is equal.

He taught me respect for authority, as much as I resisted.

He taught me that there is honor in all work.

He taught me to sacrifice.

He taught me to make everyone feel comfortable and welcome, often starting with self-effacing humor.

He taught me to love knowledge. You knew who and where you were if you understood the world. He avidly consumed historical biography and several newspapers a day, front to back.

He taught me professional ethics and to make disinterested decisions.

Indeed, he taught me to smell conflict-of-interest until it was second nature, intuitive.

Like others before him, he sought to make a just world that he would be proud, content, and safe to live in.

He taught me to tell the truth and that the truth was not always pretty.

I his last weeks, his dignity seemed to stand out as even more refined and compelling amidst the insults of the hospital.

Last Wednesday evening, as I hand-fed him his dinner, he looked at me straight in the face between small bites and said, “this is just what I did for my father every night when he was in the hospital.” His sentiment was both universal and very Jewish. In one sentence he encapsulated what a son should learn from his father and demonstrate without prompting generation after generation. David Hersh ben Moshe ben Fishel.

Yesterday, I handled my father’s effects that I had collected from him just before he went boldly into surgery. Glasses, watch, wedding ring, and wallet. I had been carrying them with me everyday for twenty four days. His wallet contained no pictures but one, a laminated Little League baseball card of Manny, my son, smiling in batting position. He didn’t need other pictures. He knew what we looked like, that we were formed. Manny had his whole beautiful life ahead of him. So when you think back on this morning, thing of this card.



GROWING UP.

When Manny is having a hard time, acts out, disrespects me, and trashes good character, I ask him to write a letter to me once he calms down. It's a kind of promise. It's what we call in Reevaluation Counseling, a "Frontier Commitment." How long it lasts varies. He's a beautiful boy and a good son.

1)
To: David Brown
I respect you, listen to you. No talking back. Everything to make life easier.

2)
Manny Padron 2.26.11
Dad, I'm sorry I yelled, started a tantrum, and made life a whole new barrier to overcome. Those aren't my intentions. I want to be a good, hard-working person. So from now on I'm going to apply myself more in school than in friends. When I told Kenny, "someday I'm going to be your boss," he said, haha, yeah, right." But he also said, "never tell yourself you're bad at something. You just have to work harder."

3)
Manny.
a) I'm going to pay attention in class
b) I'm going to ask a question when I don't understand, especially with homework.
c) I'm going to do my homework calmly every day.
d) I will not yell at David or raise my voice.

4)
Theme: Telling the Truth
Telling the truth is all about being honest and keeping a straight face. it's also about using your head and making the right choices. It also comes from your heart, so you don't get in trouble--or so you go to jail. It is so people can trust you to keep your word. You have to be a good friend. I want to walk through life with a clean conscience. I would go to any adult or friend with calm and order if I didn't know what the truth was. There are times when you don't know what the truth is because people are telling lies, so you have to investigate to find out the real truth. I promise never to tell a lie. Manny, 10.25.09

5)
1.23.11
Dad, I'm sorry that I went against what you and Rosie agreed to and I tried to trick you guys. It won't happen again. I will be so much better. I promise to be good. I won't lie to you any more.

6)
July 5, 2011
Dad, I'm sorry I broke the window. I've noticed that you have always been there for me and I've always messed up with you. I probably deserve to be homeless at this point but I have come to an understanding that It's really hard for you at this certain rough road in this long field trip and I understand now, but what I know for sure is that I love you and that you've been a great father to me and I haven't been appreciating it. At this point it's up to you to tell me I stay or go!
Yom Kippur. L'Shanah Tovah. "Sins," for us, really means "missing the mark." We don't believe in "Original Sin." Sins against God are absolved with prayer on this day. Sins against others are not absolved by God until we make amends directly to the people we hurt.
I just had an altercation in the supermarket with a woman who cut in front of me in the check out line. Upon regaling her for selfishness, lack of remorse, and how lovely an evening she should have with her husband while gloating about her drive to get a head, a hero of the male persuasion appeared and called me an insecure asshole for talking to a woman in such a way. He challenged me to a fight. Chivalry is not dead in New Jersey.

We Are the World.
I walked out of the bank. A woman backed straight out of her space directly at me without looking at all. I said, "you almost hit me." She rolled down her window and indignantly asked me, "why were you walking in back of my car?" There was no altercation. I could only ponder the absurdity of the human race.
Doesn’t this lovely scene remind us of Vaudeville? Lo folclórico has taken over the minds of the faithful like a bad hangover. People actually love this stuff, as if it were Camelot, JLo, Michael Jackson, Sponge Bob Squarepants; maybe even Liberace. I’d begin to blame Rogelio Martínez Furé y toda esa mariconería, or even Fernando Ortiz, but it actually goes back to Minstrelsy—you know, chickens, watermelons, and banjos, and “yah suh, massa”—which influenced Cuban caberet performances of the 1930s. It makes me tired and embarrassed, though I love the clothes.