I carried the secret of my father’s Judaism throughout my
childhood. As I said before, it was always present, always in the background.
It coloured our lives. Even my mother’s family did not know. We were involved
in a conspiracy of silence so great and so terrible that it almost had a life
of its own. Until the day when I betrayed my father and in one terrible moment
spewed my anger and pain in a volcanic revelation.
My mother and I were at a family reunion when I was about 20
years old and there were many people there. My mother had 5 living brothers so
reunions were not small. My father as usual had declined to attend. My mother’s
family found him difficult at best. Part of the conflict was cultural, part was
the absolute determination on the part of a few of my uncles to hate anyone
whom my mother married, and part (the largest part) was my father’s ever
present need to be as combative and provocative as possible.
We were sitting at a picnic table and someone made a joke
about Jews and Easy-Bake ovens. Even as
I write this, my stomach clenches and the rage bubbles. Yet I am also aware
that the joke was made in ignorance and without malice by a person who would
never ever have intentionally hurt me.
I erupted. I said loudly and without thought “I will have
you know that my great-grandmother died in a concentration camp!” Three heartbeats of absolute silence ensued.
Three heartbeats in which I realized that I had betrayed my father. Three
heartbeats in which I realized that I had betrayed my entire family. It was
cataclysmic. The earth shook beneath my feet.
I was up and running, heaving sobs coming from deep inside. The damage
was done. Something terrible was going to happen.
My mother later told me that everyone was stunned, in
particular the person to whom I had reacted. Even in their bewilderment, there
were heartfelt apologies all around as well as words of acceptance and love. I
was unable to hear those words both because I was too far away physically but
also because of the turmoil inside. The
uncle with whom I was and today remain the closest followed me and encouraged
me to come back to the house and to lie down for a while. As he quietly left
the room, he said “You should be proud of who you are Karen.”
Not one person ever said another word to me about my
revelation that day, but I am completely sure there was a great deal of
discussion in its wake. My parents had been married for at least a quarter of a
century by then, and this was, at the very least, unexpected.
When we arrived home, I tearfully confessed to my father
that I had betrayed the secret. I had
broken the trust. I was devastated. He simply shrugged his shoulders and said “Bet
that made a hell of a splash” and kept on reading his book. But I knew, I KNEW,
that I had done something terrible. I had clearly set in motion some unknown
chain of events, and placed us all at risk. I had exposed us and nothing would
ever be the same.
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