Showing posts sorted by relevance for query purim. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query purim. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, March 19, 2007

Wednesday Mar 19



On my way from work I was
instinctively walked into a
synagogue to listen to the
Megilath Esther (The Book of Esther)

The house was crowded, everything
went along mechanically, without
any enthusiasm. --

In my mind is a picture
of the same scene in the old
world in my early childhood,
at sunset all stores are closed
All work has stopped, All streets
are full of young & old go on their
way to the synagogues dressed in
their Sabbath's best, At the places of
worship, everybody seems so happy
as if they would live there with Esther
her adventure. Thus they welcomed
the eve. of the happ merry fiesta of
Purim. -- Sweet memories.






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Matt's Notes:

Purim is one of the more cheerful Jewish holidays, a celebration of how ancient Jews of the Persian Empire saved themselves from an evil royal minister who hoped to destroy them. The celebration involves dressing up like characters from the story, putting on plays, having parties and giving to charity. Papa grew up in a Jewish ghetto where Purim was probably the biggest festival of the year and gave everyone a breather from the trials of their daily lives, so it's no wonder it meant so much to him.




When I read about his disappointment, I'm reminded of the scene in Midnight Cowboy in which John Voight arrives in New York, sure his cowboy look will make him a standout gigolo, only to see dozens of other cowboy gigolos wandering around. This might seem like an odd association, but I bring it up because New York can be unforgiving that way -- huge, busy and hungry, the city is indifferent even to the things we find most significant. New York has never needed help from any holiday to feel colorful and hectic; perhaps that's why, in Papa's eyes, Purim felt less important when imported.

I should note that my wife, Stephanie, who spent her early childhood in an insular Orthodox community, remembers Purim as a big deal and has many happy memories of it. Perhaps the dilution of Purim Papa sensed was due to the diversity of his neighborhood (yes, it was very Jewish, but not entirely so, while my wife's neighborhood was probably as culturally homogeneous as Papa's home town). He might have enjoyed Purim more, too, if he'd had children to dress up and regale with the old stories; surely such holidays intensified his longing for a family of his own and contributed to his sense of disappointment.

In any event, the Yivo Institute for Jewish Research has a great Web site called "People of a Thousand Towns" with images of Eastern European Purim celebrations in the early 20th Century. I've written to Yivo with a request to use some of these images. Alas, I'm not sure I'm ever going to hear back from them The above and below photos of early 20th Century Eastern European Purim celebrations come from this collection and are published with their permission. Check out the site when you get a chance (registration required) but beware -- you may lose a few hours paging through all the images.

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Update 3/19 -

My mother writes:

When I was growing up in Brooklyn, Purim was also a big deal. I remember one play in Hebrew school where I played Queen Vashti, the king's petulant wife. Papa thought I was wonderful and raved about the way I tossed my head, but I'm sure he believed I should have been chosen for the part of Esther.
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Additional references:

Here's more on the story of Purim from jewfaq.org and Wikipedia .

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Update 3/22 -




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-

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Thursday Mar 20


I was embued with
a Purim spirit just thinking
a little of days gone by
Down in my neighborhood
I saw some cheep masquerades
just a shadow of a Purim
in the old world.

Visited my sisters.

I talked with the 20th
Century girl on the phone,
I long for a closer association
with her, I am constantly
thinking of her.

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Matt's Notes

Just a few days after meeting the "20th Century Girl," Papa has become the very picture of a lovesick young man. Nothing can distract him from his longing; even children running by in their Purim regalia make him feel worse. (Not that he was happy about the state of Purim in New York to begin with, as we saw yesterday.) If this were an old cartoon he'd be kicking a can down the street. Maybe a car would drive through a puddle and splash him.

I wonder where he talked to the 20th Century Girl -- he didn't have a phone in his apartment, so he must have borrowed a neighbor's or used a pay phone in his building or on the street. I'm sure he prearranged the call with his friend Rothblum (who introduced Papa to the 20th Century girl) during their conspiratorial shvitz a couple of nights earlier.

In any event, when she talked to Papa, the 20th Century Girl might have looked a little something like this:



Image source: Young woman posed with a telephone, 1915.
Library of Congress call # LC-USZ62-89817. No rights information indicated.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Saturday Mar 22


Attended the Hadassah
Ball at the 71st Reg. Armory

It looked more like a
fashion show, because
of the attendance
being of the most prominent
Jews, displaying their
best in evening dress.

However it did not impress
me very much I felt
rather lonesome throughout
the evening although I met
numerous friends.

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Matt's Notes

In 1924, Hadassah was well on its way to becoming the enormously successful Jewish womens' organization it is today, though it had technically become a subset of the Zionist Organization of America in 1918. Its growth outstripped ZOA's almost from the start, though, and it would only be a few more years until resulting organizational tensions effectively ended the relationship. Papa was an active, loyal member of the ZOA, so I'm sure he picked up on some of these tensions. This may be why he was so uncharacteristically quick to dismiss the guests at the Hadassah function as vain and self-important -- his ZOA compadres must have lit up the schvitzes with such talk.

I wonder, too, if his unforgiving reaction to the "prominent Jews" at the ball was related to the "20th Century Girl" (if you're just joining us, the "20th Century Girl" was the latest object of Papa's ardor). He pined for her constantly, but worried that her social aspirations -- her need to be "prominent" -- precluded a relationships with a lowly "wage earner" like him. As a result, he'd felt lousy and forlorn for days. Perhaps, deep down, he was angry at the 20th Century Girl, blamed her for his apprehension, and took it out a little on the highfalutin' Hadassah folk she aspired to be like.

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The Sienese-inspired 71st Street Armory was a mighty fine building, but it's been gone since the 70's. Here's what it looked like while it still stood on 33rd and Park:




Papa, of course, would have worn his tuxedo there that night:




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Additional notes:

For a better Hadassah history than on the Hadassah site itself, check out this excerpt from the American Jewish Desk Reference.

Image source: 71st Regiment Armory, Library of Congress call # LC-D4-19584

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Updates:

I've updated my March 19th post with early 20th Century Eastern European Purim images from the Yivo archive. Give them a look if you've got the time.

Friday, June 8, 2007

Monday June 9



Shebuoth

Many things have happened
during the course of the last 2 weeks
which could not be entered on
account of being upset,

have induced me to see
some girls whom I did see but they
did not appeal to me in spite of
their money which I could use,

Don't think that I can depend
on . It is becoming to me
an ambition to marry and have
a child son which should carry
the beloved name of my Father (olam haba)
Joseph Scheurman.

I called up Mrs. Resnick and
made an appointment to visit
her and her husband this Thursday
I will be glad to see old friends

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Matt's Notes

I haven't looked at this post since I originally transcribed it last December, but perhaps I unknowingly had it in mind while thinking about Papa's diary silence for the last week (I figured he fell into an uncommunicative funk for a number of reasons after he wired money home to pay for his father's tombstone). Papa's mood seems to be on a slight upswing, though. He started writing again yesterday, he's called up old friends on his brand-new telephone, and he's restated his "ambition" to marry and pass on his father's legacy. (I wonder if his unsuccessful blind dates over the past couple of weeks were helpful in their way because they got him thinking about marriage and heirs.) This is far from the end of his struggle with sadness, of course, but at least the forces of resolve and productivity are making some headway against passivity and depression.

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Additional notes

Papa twice uses the Yiddish word "shadchanim" (the plural of "shadchan") in this passage to refer to the marriage brokers who aren't doing him any good. My wife, Stephanie, thinks there's a chance he's written "shadchanit," which would be the feminine form of "shadchan." His handwriting is a little hard to decipher, but you be the judge:



This isn't the first time Papa has written about marriage brokers rather dismissively. Maybe Jews from the old country generally regarded them with good-natured derision (see Yente in Fiddler on the Roof) but Papa, who believed in romance, probably found the whole matchmaking process to be distasteful. His attitude may also give us a glimpse of an old country tradition in transition; like midwifery or (to Papa's dismay) elaborate Purim celebrations, the shadchanim's business couldn't compete with the opportunities and services New York inherently afforded in spades.

Monday, January 1, 2007

Subject Index

This is the full list of subject tags for Papa's Diary Project as of July 4, 2007. I've been making up my tags as I go, so this list may seem a bit inconsistent. Still, I think it's useful.


- 1924

- 20th Century Girl

- 71st Regiment Armory

- A Woman of Paris

- Abraham Goldberg

- academy of music

- aquitania

- audio

- b'nai zion

- baseball

- birthday

- Blank Entry

- Blau Weiss

- Blaustein

- blues

- Bluestone

- breindel

- Capitol Theatre

- Cars

- chaim weitzman

- Clara

- classical music

- Clinton Theatre

- coney island

- Coolidge

- Cooper Union

- Coq d'Or

- dating 3

- Death

- Democratic Convention 1

- dentist

- diary silence

- dodgers

- Dos Yiddische Folk

- Ebbet's Field

- Edward William Bok

- family

- Federation of American Zionists

- fraternal organizations

- funeral

- Galician Jews

- garment industry

- giants

- Gitel

- Golus

- Gypsy String Orchestra

- H.S.

- hadassah

- Halutzim

- headlines

- holidays

- hotel astor

- Hotel Pennsylvania

- If You Are But a Dream

- Imber

- immigrants

- Isaac

- Jack Breitbart

- Jack Zichlinsky

- Jewish National Fund

- Julius

- Keren Hayesod

- Kessler Zion Club

- L'Oracolo

- La Roi de Lahore

- landsmanshaftn

- Lillian Gish

- Loews Delancey

- Lower East Side life

- lower east side tenement museum

- Marice Samuel

- marriage broker

- Mendel

- Miss Weisman

- montefiiore

- more research needed

- mourning

- Movies

- Nettie

- new apartment

- new years eve

- new york city

- niece

- No Entry

- opera

- organ grinder

- Papa and Me

- papa's father's death

- Papa's Father's Injury

- Parkway Palace

- Parkway Restaurant

- Passover

- Phil

- Poetry

- politics

- Polo Grounds

- prohibition

- prospect park

- Purim

- radio 2

- Rothblum

- Rubinstein's Romance

- Ruchaly's Illness

- Ruppin

- schubert's serenade

- schvitz

- shadchan

- Shapiro

- Shevuoth

- shiva

- Sir John Davis

- sister

- sleeping beauty waltz

- sniatyn

- Sniatyner

- Sniatyner Ball

- Snyatyn

- subway

- Success School

- Teapot Dome Scandal

- Telephone

- tenement life

- The Song of Love

- The Unknown Purple

- The White Sister

- Theater

- Tillie

- transit

- trolley

- Tsardash

- tuberculosis

- United Hebrew Trades

- update

- volga boat song

- Washington's Birthday

- Webster Hall

- Woodrow Wilson

- yankees

- Yivo

- zeire zion

- Zichlinsky

- Zionism

- Zionist Organization of America