LOOKING BACK mountaintop with a bench where a kid could go to think when things got tough. Oak Park Park, as we call- ed it, not only had the distinc- tion of sounding like something out of an Abbott and Costello routine. Deep in its forbidden woods, daring adolescents exchanged their first experimental kisses despite countless warnings of sinister strangers lurking amidst the tall trees. My son generously feigned mild interest, although the rhythmic bopping of his head made me suspect that the bet- ter -part of his brain was still in Rapland. "And here was our house," I said, pulling up to an eternal- ly familiar yellow brick ranch To my son, Nine Mile and Greenfield looked `city-ish. Art by Angelo Antonnicola Down Memory Lane Visiting the Old Neighborhood isn't easy with your 13-year-old along for the ride WENDY ROLLIN Special to The Jewish News One sunny significant day a few months ago, I knew the time had come. A momentous rite of passage was at hand. My 13-year-old son was ready for the pilgrimage to My Old Neighborhood. Together, my boy and I would visit the hallowed territory of my youth. "Do I really have to go?" my son pleaded. "Mom, you're be- ing s00000 mean!' Since becoming a teenager, his entertainment passions have been rap music, video games and horror stories. Anything that doesn't beat, blink or bleed is probably bor- ing. But I wisely made a few, shall we say, "musical conses- sions" . . . and we were on our way. As negotiated, a cassette of stirring rap classics provided the traveling music while nostalgic mother and reluc- tant child went forth. Exiting The New Neighborhood via Northwestern Highway, we rolled right along down to the Lodge — the expressway to my past. When we reached Nine Mile and Greenfield, I turned off the music, much to my son's displeasure. "What did you do that for?" he protested. "We made a deal!' "I promise I'll turn it on again in just a few minutes," I told him with rising excite- ment. "Forget Jazzy Jeff, child. Look around you. This is where your mama grew up!" Casting an ever-critical teenage eye on the blocks of houses to either side of us, my son said, "It looks kind of .. . well . . . cityish." "Cityish?" I asked. "What does that mean?" "I mean," he said, "the houses look . . . well . . . real close together. And see those guys standing over there? Their clothes look very poor. Why are they all standing there?" "They're just waiting for a bus," I explained, realizing that as far as my son was con- cerned, busses took kids to camp and school and that was it. As we waited for the light to change, the image of the bus riders dissolved into a picture from long ago: me and my girlfriends, ponytails bouncing in the breeze, strolling the Nine Mile route to Northland for a Saturday afternoon of trying on clothes and devour- ing Sanders hot fudge sundaes. The memory was rich and smooth. Then, the flash of a green traffic light brought me back to the present. "Just wait," I told my son, wanting him to savor it all with me. "I'll show you my old house! I'll take you to Oak Park Hill . . . to Oak Park Park!" Through the passage of time and the retelling of old stories, these sites had attained a mythological magnitude. Oak Park Hill was Olympus — a with its landmark fire hydrant in front. "This," I pro- claimed, "is where your grandma and grandpa, Aunt Cathy and I lived?' "Aren't you forgetting so- meone?" my son asked. "Bon Bon, the world's most in- telligent poodle?" he added with a sweet smile. The kid knew this shtick well. While the sun shone bright on my old Kenosha home, I could see my son looking around, sizing it up. Purchas- ed in 1956 for just under $27,000 — not an insubstan- tial sum at the time — it had three good-sized bedrooms, plus a master bath, plus a den, plus a full basement. My mother worried, when she and my father bought it, that they'd overextended them- selves. "Gee, Mom," said my son. "It looks kind of . . . well .. . smallish!' I could see I had my work cut out for me in the area of cultural transmission, of con- veying to my child the flavors, sights and values of a pre- Nintendo childhood. But somehow it seemed important to me on that particular sun- ny significant day. "Listen," I addressed my off- spring, "my Oak Park wasn't just another mere suburb. It was a very singular small town. With a whole bunch of memorable characters, both good and bad. And a feeling, anyway, that everybody knew everybody else. Sort of like Anatevka in Fiddler on the Roof. Remember?" My offspring wasn't reac- ting. If only Stephen King had written Fiddler . . . or perhaps if Shalom Aleichem had writ- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 61