bubbie

I Remember Bubbie: Her First Yartzheit

Bubbie: It’s been a year!

Hard to believe it’s been a year since my husband Maurice’s mother Fanya – passed away.

Bubbie was Fan for her four boys, Maurice, Avrum, Sol and Sam, the ultimate Em Habanim (the Sons’ Mother). My sisters and I gave her name an affectionate old-fashioned Sephardi twist and called her Freha, which means, happy, jolly. I never referred to her as my mother in law, alert to off-color jokes the term never fails to conjure up in people’s minds, but always as Maurice’s mother.  She was a beautiful woman, the poster girl for self-reliance, stylishness, discretion, hard work and wisdom. She turned every hardship into a great opportunity, and passed this trait on to all her children. Since my husband, the oldest of her four sons, was the first to get married, I also became the first de facto daughter in her male-dominated house, and later in our own. We shared a predilection for, how shall I put it, occupational therapy: she muddled her way out of any frustration by making something, cooking something, baking something, buying something, watching something.

There is nothing we didn’t share:

Cooking, schmoozing, baking (hey where’s the clip of that heavily accented interview she had with Bob Lape about her award-winning carrot cake on Channel 7, circa 1980? We are hunting it down), sewing, going places, traveling, walking, rummykub (she played with a kind of vengeance,  as if this was high-stakes poker in a casino); monopoly; bingo; mini golf (once when she hit a hole in one she looked flabbergasted and protested, that doesn’t count, it was an accident, it was an accident!); classic movies; opera. She must have watched South Pacific and Carmen a dozen times, and cried heartily each time she crooned along every song all over again. In time she even came to forgive me for not sharing her love for Barbra Streisand (she did grow up on me in time) and soap operas, a deep aversion I could not confess to until my title as wife was firmly established (who knows what might go through the head of pop culture fans?) I owe her the little Yiddish I know: Levana has shpilkes in tuchis, Levana has guldina hant, and a few more terms I often came across.

Bubbie trusted me and deferred to me completely.

I went by myself to buy fabric to make her the gown she wore at our wedding, and escorted her to all her doctors’ major appointments and surgeries. I’m sorry to say I had to stop going to shop for clothes with her, because she would gasp at me whatever rag I tried on and say, “Oy, oy, Levana, you look gorgeous! This is some dress!”, leaving me to wonder when I reached my house with my silly purchases what I was smoking at shopping time.

Bubbie loved to shmooze with our customers.

She was apprised of every milestone in the lives of our regular customers at Levana Restaurant where she worked. Her “retirement” took place very late in her life and was a flash in the pan. There were numerous perks to being located in the heart of Lincoln Center. She was in constant contact with the actors’ in All My Children, which had their studio down our block and dropped by almost daily for her danishes. I remember her giving a commiserating hug to some soap actress when she had her screen miscarriage, to another when she had her ugly screen divorce, and railing at yet another for his odious screen blackmail (“oh I hate that guy!”, she would cringe). At her doctor’s office she would ask how his superstar sister Beverly Sills – née Silverman – was doing, and always insisted on serving our famous neighbor and customer Jan Peerce herself. How did she manage to communicate with my mother, Flory, her twice-Mechutenet (my sister Rackel married Maurice’s brother Avrum), without a common language to unite them? Their encounters were always at once touching and comical, as kisses, hugs and sweeping gestures made up for every missing word.

I loved to watch Bubbie and her younger sister, Zoia.

They were reunited after almost twenty years when she and her family immigrated from Russia. Their devotion and the wordless expression of their mutual love was quasi-mystical. Her love for all her children and grandchildren bordered on worship. She was friend and confidante to all of us, and my nephew Ari aptly called her his Ir Miklat (city of refuge). Upon the birth of every baby she added a baby-boy or baby-girl gold charm to her necklace with each name engraved on it (she included my sister Lea’s babies, as Lea had been her roommate until she got married, and they had a veritable mother-daughter relationship). “Look! I look like Mr T!” she would chuckle, jiggling the trinkets, when the necklace grew along with the family.

Once when she played Monopoly “against” her youngest son Sam, she noticed he skipped his turn and asked him why. He said he didn’t have the money now to buy the house, he’d wait for the next round. Not missing a beat, she replied vehemently “Sammy, nonono, buy the house NOW! I’ll give you the money!” She was groomed to the point of fastidiousness, but thought nothing of sticking an impeccably manicured hand deep in our babies’ diapers, scanning what she retrieved as if it were chocolate sauce, and exclaiming excitedly “Yes! He made!” or opening her skirt invitingly to a sick child and whispering to him “here here shepsele! Brech, brech!”

All kids big and small piled in Bubbie’s small apartment

There are no treats she didn’t lavish upon us:  lasagna, fried flounder (which she pronounced flan-dray), stuffed cabbageborscht, latkas (which she made year-round, at the drop of a hat), cinnamon babka, challah, carrot cake, cheesecake and other unforgettable goodies taken from her short but dazzling repertoire. She gamely anointed me cookie queen, and I’m pleased to say the royal distinction endures to this day. Once our son Yakov, then just seven or eight, chose to write about her for his homework. “Everyone comes to my bubbie, and she cooks for all of them, she is like Avraham Avinu”. We would tease her about her Russian friends with the Seussian names that rhymed with her own: Sima, Anya, Yetta, Guenia, Manya.  We caught up on all the television and newspaper gossip. She got a kick out of reading about James Brown heading for jail yet again: “Great news: the hardest working man in show business can rest now!”

I’m only sorry that our youngest children didn’t know her before she started declining, and couldn’t get the full measure of her formidable presence. They missed a good time! Rest in peace, Bubbie Fanya. Your have made immense contributions in all our lives, and taught all around you to live their lives usefully, without ever moping or passing the buck! And thank you for the very last lucid thing you did in your life: Introducing our Bella to Meir, your then-colleague at Levana Restaurant, now one of our children!

 

4 replies
  1. bryna aster
    bryna aster says:

    I didn’t know of her death.(We live in Israel)
    I met Mrs. Kirschenbaum once or twice at Rochel”s(when we lived across the street)

    Condolences to your husband. May her memory continue to be a blessing

  2. sharone goodman
    sharone goodman says:

    gorgeous piece, thanks so much for sharing with all of us. i had tears reading it. i’m sure that her neshama is constantly being elevated by all of yours and your families mitzvahs. may we be reunited with our loved ones very soon. love, sharone d

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