In the 1950s in Brooklyn, every neighborhood had its “crazy” people. During that time, that less diagnostic and sensitive era, distinctions between them were not drawn--being senile was being crazy; being
retarded was being crazy; being disabled was thought of as crazy; and of course
being crazy was being crazy.
During a simple walk to and from school I needed to
run the gauntlet of this variety of crazy people—there was twelve-year-old
Herbert Bender who today we would call mentally retarded; there was Mrs.
Bronstein who we would now say has Alzheimer’s; there was Sonya Kloppman who
had Polio when she was twelve and was confined to an Iron Lung; and then there
was old Mr. Karpovski, who we thought came from Poland and who lived alone in a
cellar.
All were out on the street every day except when it
was raining or snowing, with the exception of Mr. Karpovski, who lurked in the
driveway to his garage, arguing with himself even in the worst weather. In fact, the more it stormed, the more he
raged, swinging his arms and fists as if to attack himself, screaming and
singing “Farblondzhet, Farblondzhet.
Shteyt a boym; shteyt a boym,” against the elements. He was by far the craziest and, I am ashamed now
to confess, the most fun.
The neighborhood was a mix of two- and three-family
houses with an occasional five-storey apartment house. Those houses that were “detached,” and thus
most desirable, stood on confining plots with less than ten feet separating
them from their neighbor on one side and had just enough space on the other for
a driveway that led to rickety garages.
When cars acquired their gaudy tail fins, and the extra
breadth to accommodate them, these driveways and garages fell into disuse, or
rather different forms of use, because the cars were either too wide to
negotiate the driveways themselves or make the sharp turn required at the end
to slip into the tight parking spaces.
A matchbox rectangle of a dirt garden adorned the
front and a slightly larger patch of earth in the rear. It was hopeless to think of growing anything
vibrant in either place. Though some
tried, especially those who came from rural Eastern European shtetls or Southern Italy, but even they
needed to concede that the soil, such as it was in Brooklyn, was basically
hard-as-rock clay, best suited to supporting cast concrete urns in which only hardy Chicks and Hens could grow or cement statuary of elves or, shamelessly, the
occasional black-faced jockey.
And each house had an elevated front porch or stoop
where during hot pre-air-conditioned days families would set up chairs and
tables and sit out all night to catch the occasional breeze. Stoops were also good places to keep a close
eye on the passing scene as well as to listen in on nearby conversations and,
above all, an ideal setting from which to interfere in your neighbor’s business.
And then there were the ubiquitous empty lots. The area was still not fully built up, and
these untended spaces largely contained ragweed and debris. From John Inusi the shoemaker, there was a
mountain of leather shavings he heaped in the lot adjacent to his store; in
another there were piles of bald and discarded rubber tires that were left over
from the Second World War when they were rationed and the fathers were forced
to drive on them until they became literally threadbare before tossing them in
the lot.
There was teeming life of its own among the
neighborhood’s children in these vacant lots and little used garage. In these lots we fabricated huts from
abandoned or stolen lumber, tin, and cardboard; and dug trenches and tunnels that
resembled those of battlefields, which they periodically became when the
Italian Ginny Gang from East 57th
Street invaded the huts of the 56th
Street Rockets and the Jewish defenders retreated to their underground
redoubts. And in the unused garages we set
up improvised boxing rings where dreams of glory were forged—recall that at the
time many of the boxing world champions were Jews; and an occasional drum set and
bandstand so aspiring hep cats could
live out their show business dreams—recall as well the Jewish jazz greats of
the time that included Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, and the amazing drum dervish
Buddy Rich.
And also in the alleys and spaces separating our
houses as well as in the dank cellars and basement apartments in the
three-family houses, lived and lurked the “crazy” people. It was as if an inspired architect or city
planner had designed an ideal place just for us and for them.
* *
*
Herbert (Herbie) Bender lived with his parents
right across the street in the second floor apartment, but in truth lived more
in the lot next to his house. The one
with the piles of discarded tires. They
served as his schoolyard, more his Matterhorn.
From my bedroom window I could see him struggling every day to scale
these mountains of tires. Just as he
would get close to the summit of the tallest mound he would invariably slip, catching
a foot and come tumbling down, his fall softened, his fragile body protected by
the rubber heap. Undeterred, he would
struggle back to his feet and then stuff the fingers of his right hand into his
mouth, hooking them behind his lower jaw of teeth, and rock back and forth in a
form of mock davening or perhaps
actual prayer, all the while drooling on his wrist.
He would again turn to confront his indomitable
mountain and try again with the same result—tumbling down followed by righting
himself, twisting his overalls into alignment, shoving his fingers deep into
his mouth, and beginning his rhythmic rocking.
All day, every day. Relentless
and ritualistic, dressed always in those overalls and tattered sweater no matter
the season or time a day.
In the evening, when the street traffic had
subsided, I would raise my bedroom window a few inches so I could also hear
him. He emitted a sound, not a coherent word, just a sound--a continuous
breathless sighing or keening that felt as ancient as his rhythmic rocking.
One afternoon my mother caught me
spying on Herbie, actually heard me laughing when he tumbled down yet again
from near the peak of his tire mountain. It was unusual for her to put
her hands on me except lovingly, but this time she yanked me back from my perch
at the window sill, and with both her hands gripping my shoulders, shaking me
to focus my attention, she snapped, “He’s sick and you shouldn’t be making fun
of him. You should only know how lucky you are. You should feel
sorry for him and his mother.” I thought I heard a sob, “You have no idea
the burden they have. Leave him alone,” her voice softened, “Please. For me.”
I tried very hard to heed my mother and ignore him but I continued to be
fascinated by Herbie and occasionally risked the guilty pleasure of spying on
what he was up to, to see if over time there would be any changes in his
behavior. But while over the years he swelled up to gargantuan size,
nothing varied in his daily routine. Until one day he was no longer
there.
I began to spend more and more of my time either on the stoop to see
what had happened to Herbie or posted at my bedroom window on the lookout for
his return. But he never did.
Six months after he disappeared I asked my mother what had happened to him.
She told me that his father had become very ill and his mother was concerned
about what would happen to Herbie after they were no longer able to take care
of him.
“So what,” I asked, “did they do?”
“They put him in Kings County,” which I knew meant the local city
hospital.
“What will happen to him there?”
“They will take good care of him for the rest of his life.”
I thought then about what it would be like for him—would there be a
place for him to be outside, clearly something he needed? Would there be
anything resembling the vacant lot and the mounds of tires that had been at the
center of his life?
So one day, in an attempt to find
him, I walked over to the hospital and asked the guard where I might find
him. He wanted to know what was wrong
with him.
I said, “He’s crazy.”
”Oh,” he said, “He must be over there with the other nuts,” pointing to a series of towering
stone buildings about two blocks away.
Unusual looking structures, because at the end of each of the floors,
there were caged-in balconies.
I stared up at them and behind the bars on every floor saw men in
pajamas and green bathrobes. Many of
them rocking back and forth just like Herbie. But there was no sign of him.
But then looking up to the third floor I spotted Herbie, also in a cage,
with boys of about his own age, all with the same large heads and vacant
eyes. He stood apart from them, though, still with his fingers in his mouth
but this time not rocking back and forth. Just looking mutely out at the
sky.
When I got home I told my mother about what I had found, reporting that
Herbie didn’t look happy. She told me again that his parents were doing
the best they could for him and reminded me how lucky I was. And how much she loved me.
* *
*
We also thought that Sonya Klopman was crazy. Not
because of the polio, but because of the way she acted after being put in the
iron lung. Always humming to herself, fogging up the little mirror by her
face which was supposed to help her see who she was talking to, assuming she
was talking at all, since all she ever seemed to do was hum and sing songs
which none of us recognized or understood. Like in some foreign language.
Before Russia had the A-Bomb, polio was the scariest thing. It
seemed to kids during summers just when everyone was having a good time playing
on the street or going to the movies. Actually, after Sonya, who was only
three years older than me, caught it, my mother wouldn’t let me go to the Rugby
Theater any more since she said that’s where you catch polio. You could be fine in the evening and then wake up the next
morning unable to walk. They would take you to the hospital and, if you
didn’t die, you would come home in a few weeks in an iron lung. It helped
you breathe since not only were your legs paralyzed but also your lungs.
It also meant you couldn’t go to school any more or walk because your legs were
all shriveled up.
Sonya had always been very
serious, happiest when she was alone listening to the radio. So we
thought it wouldn’t be that bad for her being in the lung, as long as there
wasn’t a power failure, because she could be wheeled over to where she had her
radio and listen to her favorite shows. Since she never joined any of the
street games anyway, it wouldn’t be that much of a change for her. Or so we naively thought.
Because she was older than I and was so shy, I didn't become close to her; but after she got polio my mother
made me go over to her house and sit with her. We never talked. I
just sat near her, listening to the radio and the compressor in the iron lung,
which made a sound like breathing, which I suppose it was.
It was boring but since I wasn’t
on any teams at the time and most of my friends were up in the mountains for
the summer, to keep them away from the polio germs, it was all right. One
good thing, it must have been hot for her all closed in like she was and so her
parents got her a big standing fan, which managed to cool me as well as
Sonya. And my mother said, in spite of my fear, that you couldn’t catch polio
from someone who already had it. She even suggested that as long as I
would stay close to Sonya I would be safer than if I was on the street or at
Coney Island, where being in the water with everyone was the most dangerous
thing you could do.
That’s when I began to pay attention to her humming and singing and
thought maybe being in the lung was making her crazy, like Herbie who always
hummed to himself. I thought that maybe it had to do with having the
compressor expand and contract her lungs and that what I thought humming might
be the result of the machine breathing for her.
It was the singing, though, that
convinced me that Sonya was becoming crazy. Because though she would
listen to music on the radio, the Make
Believe Ballroom for example, where Martin Block would play the newest
popular songs, it sounded to me as if she was singing in another
language. But it was cool there, safe, and it made my mother happy; and
so I went over to sit with her almost every day.
Then September came, my
friends returned from the Catskills, and school resumed. No one else on the
block got polio while they were away so we felt we had escaped for another
year. My routines began again and, since the weather changed with the new season, I didn’t see very much of Sonya. She
no longer was brought out onto her stoop, and I didn’t have time to go over
there, what with my homework and sports teams.
I stopped thinking about her until the following spring when my mother
announced that she had a surprise for me—there was something Sonya
would be doing at the school auditorium Saturday evening that we were
invited to. I thought that since the summer polio season was fast
approaching, the school was doing one of their periodic presentations about
hygiene and health, where a doctor or nurse would talk to us about how
important it was to eat carrots or keep our fingernails clean, and that this time
it would be about polio and what to do to avoid catching it. That Sonya and
maybe a few other kids in iron lungs would be wheeled onto the stage to scare
us so we wouldn’t think about sneaking into the Rugby for a Saturday double
feature. My mother said I had to wear my white shirt, which was
fine with me since it was Saturday night and on Saturdays she always tried to
get me to look good. She also wanted us to get there early so we could
sit in the front of the auditorium.
They did wheel Sonya onto the stage and set up a microphone right by
where her head was sticking out of the iron lung. I didn’t see any
doctors or nurses, though, and was wondering why the school band was
there. Dr. Zeifert, the principal, came out and bent over so he could
talk into Sonya’s mike.
The band began to tune up in the background and everyone in the
auditorium became fidgety and began to squirm in their seats. Then Dr. Zeifert, leaning too close to the
microphone causing it to howl with feedback, announced that Sonya was going to
sing an aria from some opera. Everyone grew quiet and wondered what kind
of singing she would be capable of with the iron lung breathing for her.
Softly at first and then more
powerfully, she began--
L’amour est un oiseau rebelle
Que nul ne peut
apprivoiser
Et c’est bien en vain
qu’on l’appelle
C’est lui qu’on vient de
nous refuser
Sonya’s singing was as pure as that of the performers we would hear Saturday afternoons on the
radio from the Metropolitan Opera. My
mother gripped my arm so hard that I was afraid it would turn black and blue.
She said it was the Habanera, her
favorite aria, from Carmen.
I could hear her beside me, crying softly. And soon I too began to
cry. I didn’t then know why Sonya made everyone feel that way.
Maybe because it was the most beautiful thing any of us had ever heard.
Perhaps it was because of her remarkable achievement.
Later that night, back at home, my mother said, Sonya was that oiseau rebelle, that rebellious bird.
* *
*
Mrs. Bronstein was also
crazy. She was very old and hated that we always seemed to organize our
street games right in front of her house. She spent nearly all day
sitting on her stoop in a rocking chair and screamed at us whenever anyone
managed to blast one well into the outfield during one of our endless spring
and fall softball games.
We laid out our baseball field using the cast iron manhole covers in the
street, the sewers, for home plate and second base. But since her house
was right where first or third would be, depending on whether we set things up
north to south or south to north (wind and sun location determined this), she
was in one way or another very much in the field of play. And crazy as
she was, this made her even crazier.
Things actually were at their worst when someone slammed a foul ball off
the façade of her stoop or the ball fell into her front garden. Whenever that happened, old as she was, she
would pull herself out of her chair and race to get to it. We almost
always beat her to the ball and then play could resume; but occasionally, she
was that lithe and spry, she would manage to scoop it up and run with it into
the house. That meant the game was over since we never had more than one baseball at a time—a new one cost $1.50 at the sporting goods store on Utica
Avenue and we needed to take up a collection to round up enough to buy a
replacement.
She would manage to make us as crazy as we made her because whenever she
would snatch our ball she would take it into her basement where she would cut
off the leather cover with an Exacto
Knife and then toss the naked ball and its slashed cover back out onto the
street from her sunroom window.
My mother forbid us to retaliate, saying we were wrong to make her so
upset—she was old and lived alone—and, at least as significant, had heard that
if we ever chased after her into her house, which we were considering, or did
damage to her property, for this we actually had many specific plans, Mrs.
Bronstein would call the police, and we knew what that would mean--minimally a
ride in the back seat of the patrol car where one of the cops would beat us
with a rubber hose or they would give us Juvenile Delinquent cards, which, though they were coveted by the Italian kids
eager to display their emerging manhood, for Jews they represented an indelible
lifelong stigma.
This cat and mouse combat lasted for at least three years until Mrs.
Bronstein, like Herbie, disappeared. We heard that she went to live with
her sister in New Jersey or out on Long Island with her daughter. Others said that she must have
died, but her house was still empty; no one else had moved in. So, what happened to her continued to be a neighborhood mystery.
During winter street games were suspended for a few
months. Everything moved indoors where more and more we would sit in
front of the newly arrived televisions.
But then in the spring play
resumed. We set up our field and as in the past Mrs. Bronstein’s house served as one of our bases. Heshy and other adolescent sluggers once again hit foul balls onto her property. But with her not there, it became routine
to simply hop over her now overgrown hedge to recover it. She was no
longer a part of the game.
One Sunday morning in late May, as we gathered to choose up sides and
organize the day-long softball games (her driveway this time would be first
base), her front screen door opened, and there was Mrs. Bronstein, as
disheveled and untended as her hedges.
Though it was quite warm she was uncharacteristically bundled in
winter sweaters and a scarf. She was still thin but in no longer
spry. In fact she walked unsteadily, seemingly dragging her left leg
behind her. We also noticed that her left hand was snarled into a tight quivering fist, and it looked as if she had a twisted smile on her face.
Most remarkably, we saw that she was wearing her slip, brassiere, and
girdle on top of her skirt and
sweater. How crazy we thought.
She fell back into her rocker and it began to move as if on its
own. Our game began, with considerably less enthusiasm than the days
before. Heshy particularly was most subdued. Something had happened
to his father, Mr. Perly, over the winter. We didn’t know what, but he too
had not been seen in months, and when he reappeared he had to use a cane and
also dragged one of his legs.
Since it was so hot we took frequent time outs to run to Krinski’s
candy store to buy sodas. It was unusual for Heshy to go for drinks—he
was the biggest, most athletically adept, and thus exempt from having to do any
errands. But this time he was the first
to get there and the first to return. With two bottles of soda. He
put one down for himself by home plate, and brought the other one over to the
stoop where Mrs. Bronstein sat rocking.
* *
*
But craziest of all by far was Mr.
Karpovski. Like Sonya he too did a lot of singing, also in another
language, but this one we recognized—the same one our grandparents spoke. Yiddish.
His singing was nothing like Sonya’s. While hers was gentle, he punctuated
his songs with angry curses and spit them out in rages.
Oyfn veg shteyt a boym
(By the wayside stands a bent tree)
Shteyner af zayne beyner
(Stones on
his bones)
Shteyt er ayngeboyn
(All the birds have flown away)
Lakhn zol er mit yashtherkes
(He should laugh with lizards)
Mr. Karpovski lunged from his alley, as if at us, every time we walked
back and forth to school, snorting his songs and epithets. He was very
large and muscular and so he frightened us. But my mother assured me that
he would not harm us, that he was really a gentle soul who had had a hard life,
though he did not appear gentle to us as he charged at us, flailing his arms
and tearing at himself.
As time went by and my mother proved to be right, we began to look
forward to being “attacked” by him because we found that we could scare him
more than he could us and that made him even crazier and more fun to perversely
joust with. We could make him dart across the street, run around in
little circles, and then we would chase him back to his cellar apartment.
We also noticed that as we made him more agitated he would sing in
bursts of phrases and, intermingled with them, we would hear him utter, in an
almost inaudible tone, unusual for him, “Mein
tochter, mein tochter. (My daughter, my daughter.”) He as well seemed
stuck on the Yiddish word for “destroyed”—kaput.
On certain afternoons it was as if that was the only thing he could say, “Kaput . . . kaput . . . kaput . . . kaput” in long strings of
sound, more like a moan than words or phrases.
It was also a time when Jews who had survived the concentration camps
were making their way to America. Including some members of my own
family. My Aunt Tanna’s apartment was a halfway house for cousins who
had been liberated from concentration camps and then spent years waiting in
other kinds of camps, DP camps for Displaced Persons, before being allowed to
leave Europe for America. They would arrive by boat at the Brooklyn Army
Terminal where we would go to pick them up and bring them to Tanna’s apartment
before they would, in a few weeks, go on to live with other relatives in New
Jersey, Buffalo, or Cleveland.
While these displaced relatives
were living with Aunt Tanna and Uncle Eli, the rest of the family would
visit to help them get used to being here, to show them they were welcome and
safe in America.
I especially remember one cousin, Malkie, who was my age. He and
his parents had been in Auschwitz for the last six months of the war and had
somehow managed to live long enough to be liberated. Though they had
spent time in DP camps, they still looked like the pictures of the human
skeletons we had been seeing in Life
magazine. Malkie was so thin that I thought his eyes might fall right out
of his head and land on Aunt Tanna’s starched tablecloth.
He was most interested in the toys I would bring to him. He would
barely touch them but simply put them on the table in front of him and stare at
them in such wonder that I thought he must have believed I had brought them
from another planet. He could sit there like that for hours and I would
sit beside him, never exchanging a word, in large part because I did not speak
any language he knew and he did not as yet know a word of English.
As he was fascinated by my toys, I was at least as fascinated by the
number printed on the inside of his forearm. His parents had them too, in
the same place. I knew that these were not put there for a good purpose,
and thus tried not to stare. But because Malkie couldn’t take his eyes off
the toys, I was able to get at least some quick peeks at his arm. There
seemed to be six or seven numbers tattooed there, in what appeared to be a
foreign-looking script; but I was pretty sure the first number was a 1.
I left one of my trucks for him to keep. It was a dump truck made
of wood with rubber wheels. It was my favorite and I knew it was his as
well. But when we went over to Tanna’s a few days later, though they
were still there, I didn’t find Malkie at the kitchen table. My aunt said
he had been upset, crying for the last two days and that maybe I could soothe
whatever it was that was bothering him. He was in my cousin Chuck’s room.
I found him at the desk. He had placed the truck on the blotter
and was sitting in the chair still staring at it, but this time while crying
softly. I asked as best I could what was the matter and in gasps, though
his tears, he said to me “Der oskar ist
kaput. Der oskar ist kaput.” I noticed that one of the wheels
had broken off. It was indeed kaput.
A week later they moved to Trenton. I never saw them
again. Malkie’s father worked for a time in his cousin’s glove factory,
eventually started his own pocketbook plant, made a lot of money, and I learned
that Malkie had become a doctor and was living in Florida. He was now
called Michael.
Some time later, I remembered his
kaput oskar when I heard Mr.
Karpovski sing about a Mamma weeping bitter tears:
Zogt di mame--nite, kind—
(And momma says, “No child”)
Tochter kaput, tochter kaput
(My daughter is no more)
Un zi veynt mit trern . . .
(And weeps bitter tears . . .)
And thus I began to see Mr. Karpovski in a different light. I
began to sense the meaning of the “hard life” my mother had mentioned and why
we should stop tormenting him and driving him crazy. That the way he was must also have had
something to do with the war and the camps. I was certain, because in the
hot weather he would sometimes push up the arms of his sweater and I saw that he
too had those numbers--1 8 4 8 7 9--with a small triangle
tattooed beneath them.
We began to get comfortable with each other and rather than continuing
to try to scare each other we began to look at each other, at first warily.
And after a time even began to exchange some words—Mr. Karpovski could in fact
speak halting but good English.
Over the course of two months, in snippets, I learned the story of his
life—at least the latter part of it. He told me that he had a wife and
daughter in Europe, in Poland. He was a bookseller in Warsaw,
specializing in English language books. And that when the Nazis came they
broke the windows in his store, took out all the books, and burned them in the
street. Later, I learned, he was taken away to a labor camp and was
forced to work on the roads. He didn’t see his family for many months and
then he was sent to Auschwitz where miraculously he found his wife, Freida, and
his daughter, Rifka.
But soon after their reunion they killed his wife, he thought as either
a part of a medical experiment or she was just, like thousands of others,
routinely taken away and gassed. The Nazis, though, allowed Rifka and him to
continue to live because they were still strong and could work. He spat
out what was written over the entrance to Auschwitz, “Arbeit Macht Frei,” work makes one free.
And then one day he couldn’t find Rifka, his sheyner tochter. In desperation, he ran all around the camp
to try to locate her and was told that the SS
guards had taken her to the far end of a field where there was a vegetable
garden and some horses. He was frantic because he knew that was also the
place where they took girls and women to rape.
As he got nearer, he could see that was what was going on—seven Germans
had their pants down around their ankles and were taking turns raping
Rifka. When he got to this part of the story, Mr. Karpovski spoke his
words in a monotone of grief.
And then, he told me, they pulled the naked and bloodied Rifka to her
feet and brought over four horses. They quickly tied her arms and legs
separately to each of them.
And then they whipped, all four at the same
time.
As the animals ran apart, they tore off Rifka’s arms and legs.
I wept with him as he sang once more, for the final time--
Zogt di mame—nite kind
Un zi veynt mit trern.
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