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My Yom Kippur blessing: May we all know love

Call those close to you. It’s all too easy to forget the things that are truly important in life

September 9, 2021 17:37
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3 min read

The earliest memories I have of Yom Kippur are from my childhood, in my uncle, Shep Gerszberg’s home, where his sons were more brothers than cousins. I recall his great disappointment upon coming home during the break to find us playing Risk. I did not bear the brunt of his wrath. Whether that’s because I was a bit younger or because I was a girl, or because I hid behind the sofa, I’ll never know.

But I felt the shame of disappointing him just the same. He was not someone you wanted to let down, for he loved with his full heart. Evidence of this was left on my face after the millions of kisses he rained upon me whenever he greeted me.

Indeed, I remember asking him once (I must have been 10 or so) if — hypothetically — one needed to wait six hours between meat and milk if the hamburger one ate was not kosher. Even through the phone, and even though he’d never say it, I felt I’d let him down. And it hurt.

My family was not religious, growing up. He and my mother were brought up in the same house... but perhaps not the same home. Their parents were Holocaust survivors, each on their third marriage, brought together because one needed a wife and the other a husband, to prevent their remaining children from being sent to an orphanage. (That’s what happened in the United States if you couldn’t prove a stable home. And what could two destitute survivors who had lost children and spouses to the Nazis prove?)