My granddaughter, Athena, will be five on Thursday. Three weeks later she will start kindergarten. Grandpa has been accorded the privilege of giving her, as a birthday present, the new backpack she will need for this momentous occasion. When Athena's mother, Diana, told me that Athena would be starting kindergarten, I recalled a brief excerpt from a tape recording that my father made of his mother's reminiscences in 1971. At that point, my grandmother, Ella Nislow Wolff, was either ninety-three
or ninety-four, depending on whose recollections one trusts. Her age had always been a matter of some
dispute in the family, because she was a year older than her husband, Barney,
and she tried, without success, to conceal this fact by lying about her age.
Here is my Grandmother's recollection, as I transcribed it from the tape, without, however, managing to capture the distinctive Vilna accent that she retained more than eighty years after coming to America:
Miss Moses was a school teacher
that my little sister - was not in her
class, but the little sister was one that caused a great discussion of having
kindergarten. She was so marvelous at
her age, she was four and a half years, not quite, then [that] they
started to talk about having kindergarten in America.
She died as a child, that’s why
Rosabelle has her name. So they came to the father to
tell the father why should a child as intelligent as this sort be working in a
shop. She should get a chance to get
somewhere, she should get schooling. So
of course there was no compulsory schooling then so they talked but my father
didn’t even pay attention to this. I
went on working. But my little sister
went to school, but unfortunately she got - that terrible winter that we had
with diphtheria that time in New York, she was one of those who passed away
that time.
The father who would not hear of his little girl going to kindergarten was Athena's great great great grandfather, my grandmother's father. There is this slender thread stretching across one hundred twenty years or more and six generations. Some day, I hope, long after I have died, Athena, all grown up, will read the book I wrote about my grandparents and learn something of her lineage. Perhaps, if I am very fortunate, that book will be passed on to her children, and her children's children. My fondest dream is that, as my grandfather's life in socialist politics inspired me, perhaps my life in the Academy will inspire Athena and her children.
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