I've been thinking about my father a lot this week, so I wrote this short tribute to him:
I write often about my mother, but I have never tried to describe my father. Recently, Jon Katz mentioned that, and I have been mulling over how to capture Papa without writing a whole book about him. Maybe someday, I will, but for now, I’m going to attempt to just offer a few memories. I always called him “Papa”, never “Dad” or “Daddy”, and we named our daughter, Lee, after her grandfather. He was a tall man, who always stood up straight and proud, a Jew, son of a tailor, a lawyer and a judge, a Lieutenant Colonel in the Army during World War II. He adored my mother, a wild, Catholic revolutionary, and he loved me as unconditionally as anyone ever has.
I thought when I was a kid that being a lawyer meant having
the phone ring all the time at 2 or 3 am with some distraught person calling
for help. There was the lady whose drunken husband was climbing up to her
bedroom window on a ladder with a gun in his hand. My father asked her, “Why
are you calling me? Call the police!” She wailed, “They won’t do anything!
You’re the only one I know who cares!” And he did, for all the waitresses,
cops, teachers, garbage collectors and everyday people who lived in our small
town in Illinois. He helped them, whether or not they could afford to pay for
it. He sat at the bar in the local tavern, drinking coffee each morning in the
cozy place he called his “branch office”, listening to their problems. He
stopped by again on the way home as the tired businessmen got off the train
from Chicago, drank a beer and gave free legal advice.
He taught me how to shoot pool and bet on the horses. When I
lived in New York City, my parents would come to visit and while my mom went
shopping with her best friend, Papa and I would hang out together in some dive
bar that I knew he would appreciate and watch football and get to know the
locals. He never talked about himself.
My mom told war stories constantly, but my father never revealed that he had
gone into France before D-Day and organized the Resistance fighters. He never mentioned how one lovely summer day,
a woman showed up at our house, walked through our unlocked screen door with a
gun and threatened to kill him. I remember hiding in the coat closet while Papa
convinced her to put down the gun and let him help her with her troubles. Five
minutes later, he was making her a cup of coffee and asked me to get the tissue
box so she could dry her eyes.
Papa never thought of himself as a brave man. He left that
to my mother. Yet, in his caution and even his fears, he found the strength to
do what needed to be done without making a big deal about it. My father always
told me that there were two sides to every story. He said that any time I didn’t get along with
someone, I needed to spend some time imagining what it was like to walk in
their shoes. He’s been gone from this earth for almost 30 years, but not a day
goes by where I don’t think about him. And
each time I say my daughter’s name, I see his face. I can’t help but believe he’s
sitting up in Heaven, drinking a beer with his buddies, watching out for all of
us.
4 comments:
Your dad sounds like a wonderful man.
What a lovely, lovely post.He sounds like a man anyone would have been honored to know.
What a wonderful tribute - thank you.
He sounds wonderful...there is just something extra special about the relationship between papas or daddies and their daughters. Mine has been gone for 19 years, and I still miss him every single day.
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