scvel4 Feeling The ltig Of Great•Grandfather's Tallit By LOIS RUBY "Who's Aunt Rhoda?" "Oh, Judith, you remember. She's Aunt Ellen's husband's sister from Cleveland." "And she's coming to the bar mitzvah?" "Everyone's coming." Of course. You would think my brother Jeff was being crowned King of Israel, Kansas City branch, and I, the mere 10-year-old sister, was only a servant in the castle. "Get me the guest list, will you, Judith," my mother would say. "We're crossing off Uncle Sidney because he's having gallbladder surgery. Of all times." If you ask me, which no one would, Uncle Sidney picked a good time. He doesn't have to be here watching King Jeffrey parade through our house as if he were inspecting his army, tossing words of Hebrew over his shoulder. Outside of his Torah portion, I'm sure he knows only about six words. I learned a hundred times more than that just in my first year of Hebrew. What's he been doing for five years in Hebrew school? The presents pour in. Jeff rips the wrapping off and tears into each box, only to find Roget's Thesaurus, four more kiddush cups, six copies of Pirke Avot, and some Israeli bonds. No baseballs, no foreign stamps, no gift certificates from the such shamless pride: He has to write thank-you notes at the rate of 10 a day for the next month. I love that part. w/Y Mother is baking and freezing, and the freezer is catalogued like a library: 12.5 dozen pieces of strudel; 6.5 dozen brownies; 4 dozen miniature cherry blintzes, etc. On another shelf there are foil pans of noodle kugel and challah with sweet poppy seeds on top. Before this month she never baked a challah in her life. My father goes around smiling and saying, "Look how he's grown up, our boy," as if no one ever got bowling alley, and no chocolates. to be 13 before in the entire history of the Jewish people. I've got news Mother scurries around to make a list of who sent what, with a little for my father: Jeff will have to stand square Jeff is to fill in when he on a Coca Cola case to be seen mails each thank-you note. over the podium on the bimah. Jeff is supposed to be humbled That's the only thing that keeps me by the experience of becoming a going. That, and the thank-you bar mitzvah, isn't he? Oh, but notes. history never knew my brother Jeff! On Saturday morning everyone He has let the honor go to his is racing around and getting head. But he is to be punished for dressed. The aunts are putting the e ver L-6 SlA FRIDAY, NOV. 8, 1991 final touches on their little darlings, my cousins, and I've finished dressing in the closet. I knock on Jeffrey's door. A weak, unkingly voice says, "Come in." He's standing in the center of the room in his new blue suit and shiny shoes. There's a satin kippah on his head, almost hidden among his . But what strikes me most is the tallit draped over his shoulders. It was our great-grandfather's. He brought it with him when he left Russia 70 years ago. brown curls. But what strikes me most is the tallit draped over his shoulders. It was our great- grandfather's. He brought it with him when he left Russia 70 years ago. The satin is yellowed with age, and the embroidery of blue and gold threads is worn and flattened by the years. When Jeff was born, it was folded away in our cedar chest, waiting for just this morning. The tallit hangs nearly to Jeff's ankles, telling us how very tall our great-grandfather must have been. Jeff strokes the cloth gently with the palm of his hand. "Beautiful, isn't it?" he asks. I smile and nod, knowing suddenly that nothing else today will compare with this moment: not the presents or honor or speeches, not even the privilege of being called to the Torah. I know that this is the moment Jeff will become a true bar mitzvah, this moment when he has felt the tug of generations in the soft folds of our great-grandfather's tallit. And I am the only one who has shared it with him. Reprinted from The Jewish Kids Catalogue, Jewish Publication Society.