104 Friday, March 29, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS I cW v + JUUUU iJ LJ U LJU 1.1 U LJT77597 I -0-Ertnr-a-tru-a-u-v-Erv-Ercru-znrircrcrirv l'Juvvwzry vuU UU I 0 0 0 0 • O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.) u ` • • BY NORMA ZAGER Special to The Jewish News The police called at three in the morning. I was half asleep when I head someone say, "You'd better come quickly. Your mother is threatening to throw herself off the roof of the Toys R Us building." I hopped out of bed and changed into the first thing I found piled on my dresser. Why would my mother do this, I wondered. As long as my brother was still alive she had resolved never to die and leave him without a hot meal. I knew this meant something serious was brewing. When I arrived two police- men were trying to talk her off the building while my father stood below and yel- led, "That's enough Harriet, you've made your point." What point, I thought. What could have happened to make my mother try and take her own life? Someone shoved a bullhorn in my face and my father walked toward me shaking his head. "I begged him not to do it," he kept repeating, "I begged him." "What Dad? What's hap- pened here?" "Your brother. He took away from us the key to his apartment. Your mother Art by Wangdon Lee sneaked in the other day and stripped and waxed the kit- chen floor to such a gloss, your brother slipped and broke his collar bone." "Oh, my Lord. She must be devasted. No wonder," I said. I put the bullhorn to my mouth. "Mother, it's me," I shouted. "Your third favorite child, excluding the cat." She looked in my direction. "It's all over," she shouted through her tears. "I have nothing to live for. Don't try to stop me." "Mother, don't be silly. You don't need a key. You can always bribe the super- intendent again." "No. Your brother paid him off for good. It won't work anymore. It's no use, my life is over." "Mother, it's okay. You can still cook and bring the food when he's home. Nothing will change." "No. It's not the same. His apartment will never be clean again. I couldn't live knowing his bathtub had a ring." "Mother, he's a married man. You have to let go and let his wife assume the respon- sibility for her own home. " "She can't clean like I do. Continued on Page 79