Simon Says...
As I crossed the Brooklyn Bridge last midnight in a cab, my grandpa's memory flashed beside me. I knew he was suffering in his sick bed in Istanbul. I knew his death was imminent. I knew he had lost his connection with us and much else. But I still wanted him to hold on -- I was not used to the idea of not passing Dominican cigars to him, not hearing my dad checking on him every night, not carrying jars of pickles from his house to ours.
I checked my watch. 7:30AM in Istanbul. I would call in the morning to see how his morning was. I did not have the courage to talk to him. I wanted to remember him like I always knew him: stong and independent with the driest sense of humor in the world. I feared the wheezing sound of his chest, his short-stopped breath and his painful cries as nurses moved him from side to side.
I woke up at 9:00Am in New York. I kept my eyes semi-shut as I made my way to the bathroom. I didn't want to wake up just yet. I could go back to that lull phase and have a few more nonsensical dreams. I slid back under covers. The air-conditioner was getting louder by each tick-tock from my watch. I was sleeping in a boat's engine room. No use in staying here, I thought. I needed to get up and start folding clothes that I had carelessly thrown around throughout the week. Did I want eggs? I had stocked on skim milk finally. Maybe coffee and cereal? I needed to be in the city by noon. OK, let's give it another shot.
10:25AM. I was passing by the phone as it rang. I hoped with all my heart that it was my friend Rachel asking me how the hell we were going to get to this midday birthday party on the beach. She was not the type unable to find her way around, but she may have wanted to double check if I were coming. It was not her.
I knew it before I heard my father's voice. My grandpa had passed away five minutes ago. I was amazingly collected at first. I had been crying on and off for the past three months anyhow. But I still had something left in me. My dad's consolations were useless. I knew grandpa had to go, but that didn't mean I was going to miss him any less.
I dialed my mom's cell. She was at the hospital, newly orphaned. She told me to be reasonable and not to come. I could not make it to the funeral. It would be crazy to fly such a long way. I was too weak and cowardly, so I said "OK."
I'll be awake tomorrow at 7:00AM. That's when my grandfather's funeral will start in Istanbul, 2PM. I will wait in my living room until the procession reaches the Jewish cemetry in Ulus. After they lay him down, I will leave my apartment. I will go down four flights of stairs, together with his caskett. I will go underground in the subway, as they cover him with soil.
Simon Sofer - lived a full 85 years of life starting in Bucharest, ending in Istanbul. He came to Turkey at 18, escaping from the horrors of WWII. Met his green-eyed bride Ida and went off to the army for four years. He worked hard all his life and provided for his family. His two daughters were the apples of his eyes. He toured Baghdad Street on the Asian side of town on his 1950s Vespa, with his grandchildren in tow. He barbequed for 10 at a time, with oregano and a tinge of onion meshed into marinated red meat. He was a master of crossword puzzles, sharp as he was. A pipe smoker who knew how to have "keyf" and a man with direct words who didn't beat around the bush. I loved him very much. He was Dede because he was my mother's father and he was my Buyukbaba because he resembled Heidi's grandpa in that 70's cartoon show.
Simon would always joke about the time he would go to Patagonia; the end of the world for him. Simon says, it's time to go.
I checked my watch. 7:30AM in Istanbul. I would call in the morning to see how his morning was. I did not have the courage to talk to him. I wanted to remember him like I always knew him: stong and independent with the driest sense of humor in the world. I feared the wheezing sound of his chest, his short-stopped breath and his painful cries as nurses moved him from side to side.
I woke up at 9:00Am in New York. I kept my eyes semi-shut as I made my way to the bathroom. I didn't want to wake up just yet. I could go back to that lull phase and have a few more nonsensical dreams. I slid back under covers. The air-conditioner was getting louder by each tick-tock from my watch. I was sleeping in a boat's engine room. No use in staying here, I thought. I needed to get up and start folding clothes that I had carelessly thrown around throughout the week. Did I want eggs? I had stocked on skim milk finally. Maybe coffee and cereal? I needed to be in the city by noon. OK, let's give it another shot.
10:25AM. I was passing by the phone as it rang. I hoped with all my heart that it was my friend Rachel asking me how the hell we were going to get to this midday birthday party on the beach. She was not the type unable to find her way around, but she may have wanted to double check if I were coming. It was not her.
I knew it before I heard my father's voice. My grandpa had passed away five minutes ago. I was amazingly collected at first. I had been crying on and off for the past three months anyhow. But I still had something left in me. My dad's consolations were useless. I knew grandpa had to go, but that didn't mean I was going to miss him any less.
I dialed my mom's cell. She was at the hospital, newly orphaned. She told me to be reasonable and not to come. I could not make it to the funeral. It would be crazy to fly such a long way. I was too weak and cowardly, so I said "OK."
I'll be awake tomorrow at 7:00AM. That's when my grandfather's funeral will start in Istanbul, 2PM. I will wait in my living room until the procession reaches the Jewish cemetry in Ulus. After they lay him down, I will leave my apartment. I will go down four flights of stairs, together with his caskett. I will go underground in the subway, as they cover him with soil.
Simon Sofer - lived a full 85 years of life starting in Bucharest, ending in Istanbul. He came to Turkey at 18, escaping from the horrors of WWII. Met his green-eyed bride Ida and went off to the army for four years. He worked hard all his life and provided for his family. His two daughters were the apples of his eyes. He toured Baghdad Street on the Asian side of town on his 1950s Vespa, with his grandchildren in tow. He barbequed for 10 at a time, with oregano and a tinge of onion meshed into marinated red meat. He was a master of crossword puzzles, sharp as he was. A pipe smoker who knew how to have "keyf" and a man with direct words who didn't beat around the bush. I loved him very much. He was Dede because he was my mother's father and he was my Buyukbaba because he resembled Heidi's grandpa in that 70's cartoon show.
Simon would always joke about the time he would go to Patagonia; the end of the world for him. Simon says, it's time to go.
