FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
First
They Came for the Dogs, But I Was Not a Dog
By Albert Stern
PAGE
TWO
Those
fellows were part of the faceless mass that comprises the majority
of one's New York neighbors. Some neighbors, though, get one step
closer. You may be aware of them, but you don't know who exactly
they are -- for example, the couple whose bloodcurdling arguments
resonate in the airshaft, the fellow who regularly messes up the
garbage room, or the enraged individuals screaming at a yelping
dog in the middle of the night. Though this type of neighbor mostly
stays anonymous, sometimes, if the opportunity presents itself,
they might intrude on your life more directly. For me it happened
one year after my tax refund was late. When I inquired about it
to the IRS, I was informed by mail that my refund had been paid;
attached was a copy of the canceled check, which was endorsed by
Sidney Stern. I went straight to the phone book and looked up Sidney
Stern. He lived two entrances away in the same block of flats.
So I called him up and said: "Sidney -- it's Albert Stern.
The guy down the block whose IRS check you cashed."
"I don't know what you're talking about," said Sidney,
who did.
"Sidney," I said -- I don't know why, but it was fun saying
'Sidney' -- "you've got my money and I want it."
"I don't know what you're talking about," he repeated.
"If you call me again, I'm going to call the police."
Click.
So I tore out the page from the phone book, highlighted Sidney Stern's
name, wrote a brief explanation to the tax auditor of what I thought
happened, and sent the material off to the IRS. In a few months,
I got a check. Sidney, I assume, got some grief. For years after,
I would sometimes walk down West 107th Street wondering whether
a man I passed might be sneaky Sidney Stern.
Then there are those neighbors about whom you glean one or two things
that are not obvious and maybe products of your imagination. Like
the bearded guy whom I had never seen with another person. One day,
I entered the garbage room and found it stacked from floor to ceiling
with pornographic magazines -- literally thousands of them. In a
few days, I noticed that the bearded guy was in the company of a
pretty middle-aged Asian woman who, it became apparent, was living
in the apartment with him. In time, they became one of the jolliest
couples I have ever encountered. My fantasy was that she was his
mail order bride, and I still cling to it only so I can say that
I have in my repertoire a happy story about a lonely wanker made
joyful by a mail order bride from the Far East.
And finally, there are the neighbors who will not be ignored. Foremost
among them was Mrs. Weissman, the jewel of the block, who, along
with her husband, represented the last of the Eastern European immigrants
who once predominated. Her people's era on West 107th long since
past, Mrs. Weissman had no fondness for the coarse new crowd, and
in truth, was a kind of pitiable figure -- a yenta who had lost
her nosiness. Seeing her walk without interest down the block (despite
being surrounded by all sorts of goings on that were none of her
business) was sad, sort of akin to seeing Gene Kelly in the film
Xanadu or Willie Mays in a Mets uniform.
Mrs. Weissman, desperately wanting me to be a nice Jewish boy, took
me under her wing. "Take orange to eat!" she'd enjoin
me if we happened to pass as she came back from the market; "Come
upstairs for tea and cookie!" if she encountered me walking
alone. She spoke five languages (English, Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian,
and Polish), often in the same sentence. "And then
and bedziemy twoja rodzina na zawsze in the ."
I remember her saying, "Yeah and makheteyneste so I
over there.
Furshtaisht? You understand? Because they are vildeh chayehs."
Wild animals. Those were the words she kept coming back to as she'd
point at the lightly-parented urchins, the young men and women with
all the time in the world to hang out, and the council of elders
who sipped beer from 8-ounce cans outdoors from April through October.
"All a bunch of vildeh chayehs -- vildeh, vildeh,
vildeh chayehs."
A person like Mrs. Weissman would not have been surprised by the
neighbors' furious reaction to a cast-off dog's barking in the middle
of the night -- "Look with your own eyes at what goes on with
them," I could imagine her saying, "then tell me what
you'd expect." Mrs. Weissman survived Nazi persecution and
fled Eastern Europe in the mid-1950s, and might have shared an attitude
toward neighbors that I learned from Mr. Schwartz, who lived next
door to me when I was growing up in Miami Beach. He made it out
of Auschwitz, and his attitude about neighbors could be summed up
as: "Neighbors are the people who are dividing up your possessions
in their heads as the police are taking you away." Actually,
he never said anything of the sort -- his wife, who hadn't been
in a concentration camp but acted like she had, was the one who
actually voiced those sentiments. But I'd always felt that she had
them on good authority.
The message drilled into me as a child was that even if you don't
know your neighbors, you can be pretty well certain that they're
up to something. Watch yourself. Mrs. Schwartz also sometimes
mentioned that her husband would never own a dog because of the
way he had seen them tear apart prisoners in the camps. At the command
of their human handlers, those dogs performed good or evil acts
indiscriminately -- and as long as they were fed, they were just
as happy. So don't trust dogs, either.
continued...
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