Plagues.
Haworth, Kevin
AS I WRITE THIS, I've just come from a Passover Seder for
small children. At this age, religious education involves a lot of
singing, loud percussion instruments, and plenty of room for wobbly
preschool dancing. Small children are demanding in the ways they receive
spirituality. They sit still only briefly for narrative; long
explanations cause them to engage in a range of anti-authoritarian
behavior including, but not limited to: whining, spilling juice, hitting
thy neighbor, or demanding to go home. So we kept the evening punchy and
short. Singing, clapping, a picture book about plagues and the wondrous
escape from slavery across the sea. Then we ate matzo ball soup.
My wife, a young and quite beautiful rabbi, knows a lot about the
plagues. She knows, for example, that the ninth plague, hoshech, was not
just darkness for the Egyptians, but complete isolation and
imprisonment. The darkness was so pregnant, she tells us on the way
home, that it had physical presence and force. Once it descended upon
the Egyptian houses no one could move. Sound was drowned out by it.
There was just thickness and blackness and paralysis, a darkness so
heavy that it crushed the Egyptians into their chairs or pressed them
against a wall. Each of them alone, terrified, with only their own
thoughts for company.
And the frogs! she says. They were everywhere. In the food. In the
cabinets. In your clothing drawer. And all of them croaking, all at
once. Fat bullfrogs and tiny tree frogs and squat, ugly bellowing toads.
Bellowing in every street and courtyard and bedroom with their terrible
sounds.
Have you heard a frog? she asks our son in the backseat.
He has. He agrees that they are very loud.
So you can imagine how painful this noise was, she says.
My son loves this midrash, the Jewish tradition of re-telling and
adding to stories. He loves their texture and their details, their
inherent creativity. He wants to know more about how the Egyptians
suffered. The burns from the hail, the itching from lice bites. The
terrible rank smell of their dead cattle. How they could have endured
all this, nine times, and not let us go.
HE IS NOT THE ONLY ONE TO WANT TO KNOW MORE. In March 1936, a young
Jewish poet named Muriel Rukeyser traveled from New York to West
Virginia to document the effects of a plague.
Six years before her journey, in a place called Gauley Mountain in
the West Virginia countryside, work had begun on a tunnel to reroute the
fast-running New River, sending it downhill hundreds of feet so that the
force of its descent could be captured by turbines and converted into
electricity. Such projects were not uncommon in Appalachia at the time.
Once the drills started, the rock inside the tunnel was found to be rich
in a valuable substance called silica and the project was expanded. The
tunnel was widened beyond what was strictly necessary to divert the
river. The silica was collected by dry drilling, a quick, cheap method
that threw clouds of dust in the faces of the men performing the work.
The laborers consisted of uneducated, unaffiliated, local white workers
and black men brought in from Kentucky and Ohio. They breathed this dust
and they began to cough. Then they died by the hundreds.
Rukeyser wrote twenty poems about Gauley Mountain: landscape poems
and historical poems and monologues in the voices of wives and
caretakers and documentary poems of a kind rarely seen before--angry
transcripts of testimony in front of Congressional committees;
quotations and accusations of witnesses, cut and stacked together like
geologic strata. She titled the sequence The Book of the Dead,
remembering the Egyptians, the complicated series of spells and
incantations they slipped into coffins to help their dead wander through
the afterlife.
LAST YEAR THERE WERE NINE PLAGUES. My son was three years old then,
and in his interest in dump trucks and washable paints and birds outside
the kitchen window there was no room for the finality of suffering. But
this year death has entered his vocabulary anyway.
It is a few weeks before Passover once again in Appalachian Ohio,
located just a few miles from the West Virginia border. My wife and I
are standing in the kitchen, preparing for the holiday. It is a lengthy
job to make a kitchen Passover-ready. It involves a complete exchange of
every dish and utensil, taping shut the dairy dishes and silverware
drawers, pushing back the meat dishes to where they can't be
reached, even by accident, then going down to the garage and unearthing
from dusty cardboard boxes the separate sets of Passover dairy and
Passover meat, then back to the kitchen again, where we run the
dishwasher through, completely empty, to clean it of any bread residue,
then wash, in separate loads, the dusty dishes--all of this preparation
for eight days of repeated meals of matzo and butter, matzo and cream
cheese, and those terrible hard bits of unleavened cereal that the
children will eat once and then push away every morning for an entire
week.
Children make it difficult to observe Passover. They love the
holiday festivities but hate the diet. We are standing in our unprepared
kitchen, asking ourselves, Can they possibly eat matzo for a week? Then
the phone rings. It carries the news that one of my wife's
congregants, a professor's wife, has died from the sudden and
fierce onset of kidney cancer.
She was fine--we saw her just a few weeks ago. Then she began to
experience a crushing pain. Now she's dead.
We live a young community--a town filled with college students,
mostly--so funerals are rare. But already on the phone I hear my
wife's professional voice kick in. She is brilliant at funerals.
Death does not scare her. During her rabbinic schooling she served as a
chaplain at an inner-city hospital in Philadelphia. She was assigned to
the neonatal intensive care unit, the saddest place in the hospital,
where young mothers waited for their tiny premature babies' lungs
to inflate, their hearts to grow enough muscle to push blood out and
back through their small bodies. Often they did not.
She would leave in the morning in her prim cardigan and long skirt,
the uniform of the modest clergy, and come back late at night, tired and
worn from long hours of attending the slow deaths of the youngest people
in the world. She would sit at the sides of African immigrant women and
Haitian women and Puerto Rican women while they prayed, in their
respective ways, for their shriveled, premature children, incubated down
the hall. I don't believe in Jesus, she said once, as we sat at the
table in our small apartment, after one of these long nights. But I see
why one would want to.
Now, on the phone, she efficiently navigates the conversation from
condolences to logistics. Per tradition, the funeral must be as soon as
possible. There is the funeral home to inform (her job) and relatives to
summon (theirs), academic departments to notify. A phone tree will bring
the rest of the community, Tuesday at one in the afternoon, shiva to
follow at the home of the deceased.
FOR THE EGYPTIANS, DEATH MARKED not the end of struggle but the
beginning. Their afterlife was filled with hazards. One could be
devoured by a crocodile or mauled by a hippopotamus. One could be called
before Atum or Ra and asked to testify to the value of one's
existence. One had to know how to leap onto the celestial barge that
rode the 'four steering-oars of the sky' into the Otherworld
or be left behind forever. Journeying through this Otherworld was an act
of knowledge; one carried slips of parchment with instructions provided
by relatives. Scholars refer to those phrases as The Book of the Dead.
The black victims of the Gauley Mountain industrial disaster,
excluded from white cemeteries, were buried in a cornfield. Doctors,
paid by the company, sent home to the men's wives false lung
diagnoses of pneumonia, tuberculosis, pleurisy; anything but silicosis.
In the middle of the night, the funeral director drove the bodies in his
hearse into an open field. Rukeyser writes: blind corpses rode / with
him in front, knees broken into angles / head clamped ahead ... / He
buried them in rows of five.
In the Jewish tradition, there is no Egypt, only Mitzrayim, from
the Hebrew word for narrow. On Passover we tell of our journey out of
Mitzrayim, that narrow place of rules and force. The plagues cracked
open that narrow world and we walked to freedom across a wide desert,
stopping along the way at Sinai to receive the knowledge of the world.
The rabbis tell a midrash about this moment, the giving of Torah at
Mt. Sinai. After so many years in slavery, we could no longer understand
Hebrew, only the language of our oppressors. Thus the first words that
God spoke to Moses were in Egyptian, switching to Hebrew to signify the
change from slavery to liberation.
The words that God spoke, in Egyptian, were I am.
THE FUNERAL IS WELL ATTENDED, despite a late spring heat wave that
has joined us from over the West Virginia mountains. There are many
graveside mourners, but the deceased woman's brother catches my
eye. He sits quietly under a shade structure erected for the closest
family members, right next to the open grave, while the rest of us
loosen our ties in the hot sun. His face is tiny, wrinkled--like that of
a little Jewish gnome who has crawled out of the forest to bury his
sister. He looks at the casket with sad eyes.
By contrast the widowed husband is stoic, impassive. All of this is
just washing over him. He is so calm that he is making people nervous.
Everyone wants more.
There are many different ways to mourn.
As my wife leads the funeral, the brother loses his composure. He
sobs quietly as her friends cite her generosity, her giving to the arts
and social services, her steadfast friendship as they themselves lost
husbands or wives to divorce or death. He cries, his beard bobbing, as
he stands and stumbles through the kaddish. He cries as he turns over
the shovel and throws dirt into her grave and cries when he hands the
shovel to his brother-in-law, as a single coffin is lowered into a
single grave. Beneath the mask of his heavy brown beard he looks much
like his dead sister.
After the funeral, we pick up the children from school to attend
shiva. This too is part of their education.
Who died? My son asks from the back seat.
Someone's friend.
His good friend?
His very good friend.
Oh, my son says. He looks out the car window at the blue spring
sky.
I had three sons who worked with their father in the tunnel, a
mother tells us in Rukeyser's poem "Absalom." Shirley was
my youngest son; the boy. Shirley's father dies from silicosis,
then his two brothers as well, an entire family choked to death in a few
months time. After eighteen months working in the tunnel, the boy, 17,
can no longer breathe well enough to stand up. I would carry him from
the bed to the table, his mother says, from his bed to the porch, in my
arms.
An unnamed speaker in Rukeyser's poem says I open out a way,
they have covered my sky with crystal ... I force a way through, and I
know the gate / I shall journey over the earth among the living.
TWO DAYS BEFORE PASSOVER, in the basement of the synagogue, my wife
stumbles upon a little box of Jewish kitsch. She was downstairs looking
for a water leak--this is the rabbi's job in a small town--when she
found a cardboard box of items from the Lost Age of Hebrew School.
Inside the box, unopened for many years, lay felt menorahs and
make-your-own dreidel kits and holiday flash cards, and there, at the
very bottom, a bag of children's masks, ten total, one for each
plague. She brings them home and we take them out of their cellophane
wrapping.
There is a green mask with rolling froggish eyes, a red mask in the
shape of drops of blood. The mask for darkness is a black cloud over a
burning orange sun; hail is a line of fire, like a science fiction
invasion, charging across the forehead. The masks, despite their
undeniable strangeness, are cute. The mask solemnly labeled 'First
Born' indicates death with X's over the eyeholes, like a
1930's comic strip.
My wife calls the children and they grab the masks, eager to play.
They run around the house wearing the plagues as their faces. They are
the hail that burned the Egyptians. The darkness that smothered them.
And they have been liberated by these disasters, freed from Egypt
thousands of years ago.
The company that sent the men into the Gauley Mountain tunnel was
the Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation based in Chicago, and whose
operations, at that time, were limited to the United States and Europe.
Later they would open a plant in India.
This is the region of the breastbone, Rukeyser writes. This is the
heart (a wide white shadow filled with blood).
According to Rukeyser's FBI file, 121 pages long and initiated
because of her association with writer's groups of
'Communistic' tendencies, The Book of the Dead "deals
with the industrial disintegration of the peoples in a West Virginia
village riddled with silicosis ... she is against everything in any
organization which represents the brutal life of enforced regimentation
and national slavery."
THE NIGHT BEFORE PASSOVER, my children sit on the floor of the
living room, their plague masks hitched high on their heads, ready for
use. They have safety scissors in their hands and they are cutting sheet
after sheet of snowy construction paper into tiny shards. We're
making hail, my son reports. He holds up a bit of paper and squeezes it
until it is hard as a small marble. Passover is coming and he wants to
do his part for the plagues. He and his younger sister carry their
armfuls of hail into their room to demonstrate their activity. They
climb on chair and dresser and reach for the ceiling, holding piles of
crumpled paper in their hands. With their free hands they lower their
masks and ready themselves to act out a miracle.
Gauley Mountain in West Virginia was narrow and there was nowhere
for the dust to fly except into the workers' throats. The
miners' breathing grew short and tight and their lungs sharpened
into fibrous nodules. X-rays measured their life spans in months, days.
Their chests bled silica white: A snowstorm struck their lungs.
My children open their hands and hail falls from the sky.
Eighty years ago, at the end of each workday, hundreds of Gauley
Mountain miners would drink from cups of water thickened with white
dust, slap the dust from their clothes and hats, and empty their pockets
of the dust as they walked to their houses. They left trails of silicate
snow behind them wherever they went. When they came out of the tunnel,
that narrow white place, they were not liberated. They walked home
dying.