My father, portraying Galileo, in a short play he wrote as part of the science curriculum for the Baltimore School for the Arts |
Four years ago today, my father died. In actuality, his personality and physicality
were lost to us for several years before that, to Parkinson’s with Lewy body
dementia.
I mourn my father today especially because he
would know What To Do. He would be able
to face the future with integrity, with intelligence, with strategy, and with
humor. He had done so many times
in his life.
Throughout his life, he stood up for what is
right. He paid for that – at one point,
because of his honesty, his army superiors punished him by sending him away
from his stateside army post to an overseas post. In the 1960s he and my mother
were in the thick of the civil rights movement. They both paid for that by
being harassed by members of their own church.
My father paid for it by being forced out of his job. As a result he found another job in another
city.
When we were moving (I was about 4
years old) my parents sold their house to the first African-American family to
move to the neighborhood. The neighbors
offered him a bribe to not sell the house.
He refused. The payment for that
was that the neighbors put up confederate flags in their yards. The neighborhood children also bullied his
son, my older brother. We moved to
Baltimore and my parents moved to a neighborhood consisting of Orthodox Jews,
African-Americans, and us. He was our neighborhood’s Shabbas goy. Years later he
worked on a process to safely destroy chemical weapons. In the
midst of all that, he worked a full-time job as a chemical engineer managing
chemical plants. He served his church
and the broader church extensively. He
raised three children and was a loyal husband.
Throughout his life he remained
intellectually curious and always wanting to learn more. He would take a decisive stand on issues, but
was not afraid to revise his opinion if he learned something to change his
mind.
If he were alive and well today he would be
joyful, argumentative, optimistic, funny, and active as much as is possible for
any citizen.
Go and do likewise.
3 comments:
Loved reading this. You are so fortunate to have had such a wonderful father.
What a man! What a legacy he has given you! I am sorry he is not alive and healthy here on Earth to guide us through these troubling times -- for you, and for all of us.
Ah, he sounds swell. I'm a bit jealous.
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