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chapter
14
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SHEILA WANDERS IN THE COPY SHOP
T
he next morning I went out. I went to get some stationery,
stamps, and a pen. I wandered for fifteen blocks before I noticedâÂin the window of the basement of a brownstoneâÂa tan piece of cardboard on which was written, in thick black marker:
copy shop
.
Beneath it was a line drawing of a matzo and four words:
we sell bird's milk.
Bird's Milk had been my father's favorite treat! My mother fed it to him in the early years of their marriage. It was a custard soup with egg white clouds floating on top. I knew this place was calling me like fate; that it would have just what I needed.
I went down the steps and entered a room that was long and cramped. The walls Âwere all shelves, and from the shelves spilled ink, paper, pens, glue, staplers, rulers, and some items I didn't know. Near the back of the store was a tiny, cluttered desk with a very old computer on it, and above the computer Âwere pasted colored notes in Hebrew. Behind the desk was a tiny office space, sectioned off by half a wall. Boxes Âwere stacked everywhere. A man appeared from amid the dust: balding, not tall, in a torn sweater and beige pants. He had a round, smooth face and tiny eyes, and he stared at me as I moved through the clutter.
“I saw your sign about Bird's Milk,” I said.
“Do you even know what it
means
?” he asked in an aggrieved and accusatory tone. “Do you even know what Bird's Milk
is
?”
I replied that it was my father's favorite dessert.
“What? No! They hang these signs over shopÂkeepÂer's stalls in Prague!
We Sell Bird's Milk
means
We Sell Everything
!”
He cleared his throat in disgust, but he clearly wanted to talk more, for then he said, “I'm a Jew. I was born as a Jew. By the way, a Jew is a Jew. Did you know that? Even if you convert to another religion, you are still a Jew.”
SHEILA
Yeah, I think so.
SOLOMON
There's nothing to think! This is our religion!
SHEILA
If you have a mother who's a Jew.
SOLOMON
Tell me how come if your mother is Jewish and not the father.
SHEILA
Because you know who the mother is, but you don't know who the father is.
SOLOMON
Ah, that's bullshit.
SHEILA
You don't know whoâÂnecessarily who the father is!
SOLOMON
That's bullshit. That's complete bullshit.
SHEILA
'Cause the father passes on the cultural Judaism, he teaches the laws, but the mother passes on theâ
SOLOMON
No, no, it's complete nonsense.
SHEILA
What do you mean it's nonsense?
SOLOMON
It's nonsense because that's not how Judaism was in ancient times! There was a change between the sixth and the ninth centuries on the subject.
SHEILA
Why did they change it?
SOLOMON
A-
ha
! ÂHere we are!
Why?
SHEILA
Well?
SOLOMON
There's a good reason.
SHEILA
Tell me.
SOLOMON
I don't know.
SHEILA
You don't
know
? You know
when
it happened, but you don't know
why
?
SOLOMON
It's one of the hottest conversations in Jewish scholarship in the last twentyâ
SHEILA
And what are the speculations?
SOLOMON
The speculations? Nobody knows why! There's actually no answer. It's nothing to do with geÂneÂtics.
SHEILA
So you're saying there was a change between the sixth and ninth centuries. It changed from the father passing on the religion, to the motherâ
SOLOMON
I think personally it has to do with the occupation.
SHEILA
What occupation?
SOLOMON
Of the fathers.
SHEILA
What do you mean the occupation of the fathers?
SOLOMON
What the fathers
did
!
SHEILA
Elaborate.
SOLOMON
What did the Hungarians
do
? How do we have Hungarians? Where do Hungarians
come from
?
SHEILA
From Hungary.
SOLOMON
No, no! They don't come from Hungary!
SHEILA
What do you mean! Just explain what you mean by the occupation of the fathers. You mean what they Âwere occupied withâÂor is it that they Âwere occupied?
SOLOMON
But you see, nobody really knows. Why, in that period of time, does this drastic change occur? There's no answer.
SHEILA
But Âdoesn't it make sense? If the fathers aren't around, who's
going to transmit the traditions and the culture to the children except the mothers?
SOLOMON
The mothers cannot do that because they aren't that learned.
SHEILA
But the women are the ones who run the holidays, so they know the traditions. They're the ones who cook. I know it from my own family. So it makes sense that the women would know the traditions from growing up in their familiesâÂand that they would pass it on to their children.
SOLOMON
By the way, it's a good possibility what you say. I'm not
saying that what you're saying is completely falseâ
SHEILA
I don't know if it's nonsense or true, but it makes sense.
SOLOMON
Logically, logically. But that's not the reason.
SHEILA
Then what's the reason?
SOLOMON
That's not the reason.
SHEILA
What's the reason?
SOLOMON
That's not the reason.
SHEILA
What's the reason?
SOLOMON
I don't know.
SHEILA
Then how can you say that's not the reason!
SOLOMON
Because it
cannot
be the reason.
SHEILA
Why!
SOLOMON
It cannot be the reason! In order for a drastic change like this,
in a male-Âdominated religion like Judaism, for something like the mothers passing on the religion to happen, there had to be something drastic. We are missing something in this puzzle. (
to a delivery man
) How you doing? (
turning back
)
By the way, there's a guy at Yale who has been trying to write about it, but up to now we don't have any good
explanationâ
DELIVERY MAN
How do you spell?
SOLOMON
SOLOMON, it's S-O-ÂL-O-ÂM-O-ÂNâno good explanation on that subject. It's very critical to understand this thing. There's no explanation by the rabbis, either. Now, I'll explain to you what the problem is. When the state of Israel was established in '48, there was a decision not to write a constitution. Do you think that's good or bad?
SHEILA
Do they plan to write a constitution eventually?
SOLOMON
Well, when the Messiah will come. What do you think about
that?
SHEILA
How are they going to live until then? By what principles?
SOLOMON
The principles ofâÂGod knows. Their
own
principles!
SHEILA
Individual principles?
SOLOMON
I have no idea! Jews know best. They know better than anybody Âelse how to live.
SHEILA
(
laughing
) They have the covenant with God.
SOLOMON
You have toâÂthinking is a very complex thing. Thinking is something that is not done anymore. You understand? Thinking is something that is not done anymore, because Âwe've stopped thinking, because if people Âwere thinking, we Âwouldn't have gotten ourselves into the trouble we have gotten ourselves into.
SHEILA
But people have always gotten themselves into trouble.
SOLOMON
Never mind that. Anyway, so what you have is a judicial disaster, and because of that judicial disaster, we have all the wars that you see now. Because of their inability to write a constitution, they ruined their chances for survival. That is my theoryâÂmy philosophical theory. If you don't write a book by which you're going to rule yourself, you are opening the door to all kinds of things that only God knows. Do you know that there's not a single record in all of Egyptian history of Jews working there as slaves?
SHEILA
So you think it's a lie?
SOLOMON
That's not what I said. Why would I say!âÂit has nothing to do with a lie or not!
SHEILA
So why Âwouldn't they write it down? Probably they didn't think it was important.
SOLOMON
No, no, I'm talking about the Egyptians.
SHEILA
Yes, but why talk about one's slaves?
SOLOMON
Why not? They make hieroglyphs of everything in the world. I mean, they decorated hieroglyphsâ
SHEILA
But maybe one's slaves are below one's consciousness.
SOLOMON
No, but the king stands there, and there's seven thousand slaves. Why shouldn't they show them? They show all the other things.
SHEILA
Do they show the insects?
SOLOMON
Absolutely! Insects are very important!
SHEILA
Maybe slaves are below insects.
SOLOMON
I don't think so. I don't think so.
SHEILA
Well, you have to have some kind of regard for something in order to show it.
Sheila starts idly leafing through a pile of papers, junk, and books
.
SOLOMON
What I'm saying isâÂlet's be realistic. If you don't have a historical record, the question is always,
We have a problem Âhere
. What is the problem? You understand? I'm not saying that your questions are not right. Your questions
might
be right. But you see, there has to be a deeper thinking Âhere.
SHEILA
Wait a minute. What do you mean by
deeper thinking
?
SOLOMON
I'll explain. I do a lot of thinking. Okay, soâÂdon't touch those things.
SHEILA
(
holding up a book
) What is this book?
SOLOMON
Don't touch those things.
SHEILA
What's this book?
SOLOMON
Don't touchâÂthat's my private stuff. You cannotâÂlistenâdon't touch things Âhere because if you touch things it becomes a, a, aâ
SHEILA
A mess.
SOLOMON
A mess, and you cannot, because I Âwouldn't touch your things either. But anyway. So where are we now?
SHEILA
(
puts the book down
) I want to know what it's like to think in the desert versus what it's like to think in the city.
A young man has been vacantly regarding the messy shelves.
SOLOMON
Sir, can I help you with something?
YOUNG MAN
Do you have pens?
SOLOMON
Yes. Do you have money?
YOUNG MAN
Of course.
SOLOMON
What kind of pen do you want? Do you want something
to enrich your mind, or something to enrich your pocket?
YOUNG MAN
(
pause
) I just want something that writes well.
SOLOMON
Well, okay.
Solomon takes something from his desk.
What about this one? It's a gel pen.
YOUNG MAN
A gel pen.
SHEILA
It's good. I just got one. I like it far more.
SOLOMON
Oh, God.
SHEILA
It's a good pen!
YOUNG MAN
How much is it?
SOLOMON
How much do you want to pay?
YOUNG MAN
A dollar.
SOLOMON
Two dollars. It sells for two-Âfifty.
YOUNG MAN
Okay, I'll take one.
SOLOMON
What a deal. (
yelling to his wife in the back
) Enid, we make two dollars! So what do you want to do when you grow up?
YOUNG MAN
I was hoping I was almost grown up.
SOLOMON
You know we never grow up. I hope you realize that. What do you study?
YOUNG MAN
Uh
.
.
. computer stuff.
SOLOMON
We are in the beginning of the revolutionâÂthe computer revolution! Or evolution. I think they're eventually going to make people who are computers in China
.
.
.