A ct 0 414 sk The Return Of The Junkyard Menorah % ; K 7/ T-7 ) .1 N_ By JOEL L. GRISHAVER 1 My name is Judi and this story is all about how my father and I had a big fight one Chanukah. It happened two years ago when I was almost 8. It is the story of how I learned that it is sometimes important to be different. It is also when Josh became my friend and when we went hunting in the garbage dump. I was the only Jewish kid in my class at school. A year ago Robert Gotlieb moved into our neighborhood. That now makes two. We go to a synagogue that is more than 20 minutes away. In my Hebrew school class everyone is Jewish. Every year I hate December. Every year I have to stand up in front of my whole class, sing "I have a little dreidel," and explain about the Maccabees. Everyone looks at me like I'm weird. I hate feeling different. For a long time I didn't understand why we were the only family who celebrated lit • } r ever S94 Chanukah. I wanted to be just like everyone else. This is how this story happened. I didn't want to go to school and make a fool of myself talking about Chanukah. The kids in my class weren't interested. Two weeks before winter vacation, I told my father that I wouldn't take the family chanukiah to school. He said, "You should be proud to be a Jew." That was easy for him to say. He didn't have to stand in front of the classroom and dodge the spitballs that Brian Conroy shoots. Then my father told me the family menorah story again. He told me how my Great-Great- Grandmother Rosenberg brought the family Chanukah menorah from a place called Bavaria. I don't really L-6 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1988 know where that is. The rest of the story tells how my great-great- grandmother then took it from Baltimore to San Francisco in her hatbox. It had to travel on boats, trains, and even a covered wagon. It was a good story, but I still didn't want to stand up in front of my class. After the big talk, I knew that my father was going to make me take the chanukiah to school and tell everyone about the Maccabees, anyway. I had a plan. I took the Rosenberg menorah off the bookcase and hid it in a cardboard box. I didn't know that Mrs. Kapuchki, our cleaning lady, was going to think the box was garbage. That night, my father came into my room to tuck me in. I was still mad at him, but he wanted to have another long talk. He said, "Jews are different from other people. We don't do everything that everybody else does. We have our own important things. Our holiday is Chanukah and Chanukah is a holiday about being different. When Antiochus wanted the Jews to do everything that everyone else did and not be different, the Maccabees \\.\ . ∎ had to fight for their freedom. Chanukah teaches us to remember that Jews are different." Then he picked me up and hugged me. He said. "I want you to be special and different from everyone else. I love you. When you get older and everyone else does things like smoke or drink or take drugs, I want you to know that you can be different. When everyone else you know forgets to be kind to other people, I want you to be kind. When everyone else is afraid to stand up for what is right, I want you to be the one who leads people to do the right thing. Never forget, you are different and special." He kissed me, said "Good night," and turned off the light. I didn't really understand him, but I loved him again. The next day I changed my mind. When I came home from school, I went to get the chanukiah. I wanted to polish it before I took it to class. Then I saw that it was gone. Mrs. Kapuchki said she had put it outside. I ran out to the hallway, but the garbage was gone. The truck had taken it away. That afternoon I had to go to Hebrew school. It was the first night of Chanukah. I didn't want to go. All I could think about was that the Chanukah menorah which had ridden in the covered wagon was now in the garbage. When Mrs. Hessel took out the chanukiah and had the class practice the blessings, I ran out of the class crying. Josh ran out after me. He was the high school student who helped our class as an aide. He asked me what was wrong. I told him everything. One minute after the bell had rung, Joshua and I were on our way to the garbage dump. He rode me on his handlebars and we got there with at least an hour to look before dark. The garbage dump was really yuuucky. There were old shoes filled with rotten tomatoes. Soggy papers were everywhere. I felt like I would never get clean ever again in my life; but we kept on looking. We looked for an hour, and the sun was setting. I had given up. I said, "It's no use. Let's quit. I'm already in trouble. I'm going to be busted for losing the menorah, I don't want to be docked for the rest