SINGLE LIFE Of relationships, yahrzeits, transitions and the Shoah, while awaiting the return of the jacaranda. MARLENE ADLER MARKS Special to The Jewish News ike had read the One Minute Man- ager and the One Minute Salesman so now he hoped to become the "One Minute Casanova. "Listen," he says to me on the phone. "I'm a business- man, so let's be efficient about this. We'll meet for cof- fee, let's schedule, say, 20 minutes. O.K.? I mean, you'll know and I'll know in 20 minutes what we have be- tween us. And if we like what we see, then we make a date." Usually it takes me more than 20 minutes to pick out my earrings but I figure, what the heck? Mike has convinc- ed me already that he is everything I could want in a man, so I am ready to be impressed. But then . . . Mike is sitting at a window table not far from the door when I arrive. "Hi!" I say, and as I walk toward him, he ever so fur- tively checks his watch. Twenty minutes later this is what we have between us: two drained coffee cups and a small arugala salad. The fork hasn't had time to unchill when he shakes his head. "I'm sorry,' Mike says sad- ly. "There's just no magic here. I know magic when I see it. This isn't magic." Marlene Adler Marks is managing editor of the Los Angeles Jewish Journal. Do you think I make these stories up? Recently, I met Bruce, an attorney with a toupee. Another quick study. Two short dates and he had big plans. "So what do you think of our relationship?" he asks. "Relationship? This isn't a relationship, Bruce, it's only lunch." In dating these days, time is of the essence and attention is focused on the bottom line. "Is he worth the effort?" a friend asks about a possible fix-up. Who can be bothered with merely a nice dinner, or a guy in a nice suit? I say, peo- ple should come to first dates with letters of reference from three close friends. Maybe Mike, the "One Minute Cassanova," is cruel, but he isn't so off-base. In 20 minutes, either there's magic or there isn't and hey, baby, life is tough. Two years have passed since my husband died. The jacarandas are in bloom again. With a halo of cool blue flowers on green feathery leaves, the jacaran- da is the peacock of the tropics, but now I dread its annual show. The jacarandas were in flower the month my husband lay dying, and by the time of his funeral, blue petals littered the streets, trailing our cortege. "Have you always been so tough?" my friend Ed asks me. Who knows? The year Burt died I cracked four teeth, but inside I never broke. "We are survivors," my motherr tells me, "You're not made of spit." Of course not. But a few weeks ago, in a moment of whimsy, my brother and I had our tarot cards read on Venice Beach. "You are in a period of transition," says Mya, looking at a card of a woman by a boat. "Don't choose pain." Well, of course, I am recovered now. I've had new The year Burt died, I cracked four teeth, but inside I never broke. loves, new dreams. I have heard "our song" on the radio and couldn't recall why I once liked it And yet . . . the other day, a note came from my synagogue, which caught me up short. "Dear Marlene," it began, with a near black hand- writing filling in the ap- propriate blanks. "We are called upon to re- mind you that the Yahrzeit of your beloved husband . ." How tough am I if a form let- ter from a synagogue can register shock? When I was a child, the scariest night of the year was not Halloween; the scariest night was when my mother lit the Yahrzeit candles, in memory of her parents. Once a year, the flame flickered for 24 hours through the cheap glass jelly jar with the white paper label, casting eerie shadows on the kitchen walls, announcing to us, night and day, that the dead, for all their silence, must be served. The question is, how to serve and how much? What is eternal and what is irrele- vant? Do I note Burton's Yahzreit on May 13, the day he died, or on the 14th day of the Hebrew month of Iyar, which varies by the year? (This year it's May 19; next year it's May 9; in 1991 it's April 28.) Obsessing about detail can be therapeutic, a last ditch attempt to hold on. "I never knew my mother's Hebrew date," my mother tells me. The news comes as a relief. I can fudge a little; no one will tell. "Weep ye not in excess for the dead," said the prophet Jeremiah, "neither bemoan him too much." But what is too much? If I marked only Burton's Yahrzeit, dayenu, But if I also note his birthday and our anniversary and the day we met (I don't), you have to wonder, what gives? We recently marked Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remem- brance Day. These two Yahzreits are mixed in my mind, the personal and the collective. I suppose it's im- politic now to call this corn- memoration a "mistake," but still it gives me pause. Acor- ding to Michael Strassfeld, in his book The Jewish Holidays, Yom HaShoah was created by the Israeli Knesset, a civil holiday of questionable religious authority. (Why does it fall on the 27th day of Nisan? Only because it comes convenient- ly between the Warsaw Ghet- to Uprising and Israel's Memorial Day.) Today Yom HaShoah has come to dominate both our Jewish calendar and the secular world (with its annual TV specials and documen- taries from the camps). The Shoah, for good reason, grabs the imagination and doesn't let go. But is the Holocaust, the ultimate unfathomable tragedy though it is, really a different variety of martyr- dom than the destruction of the First and Second Temples, and the expulsion from Spain? The Jewish calendar already allows a day of na- tional mouring and fasting, Tisha B'av, in mid-summer, when all of our tragedies are symbolically joined as one. By singling out the Holocaust, a certain historic warping occurs. What do we do with memory? Can we honor the past without choking on it? A tragedy recedes; a candle is lit, a story earns its 20 minutes, and we wait for the jacaranda to bloom. ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 89 ENERATION Living In Memory