
September 12, 2001 â The Bronx, New York
âArabic For Dummiesâ? The Qurâan? What the hell are these disgusting books doing in our house? Youâre still associating with that … that … savage, arenât you, Gloria? Answer me!â
âPapa, please, calm yourself. Itâs not good for your blood pressure. If youâre referring to Yusuf, he is not a savage. Heâs a sweet, gentle and loving man and youâd realize that if you got to know him. Heâs a student at the university studying religion andâŚ..â
âAnd the making of bombs and God knows what else! Gloria, heâs an Arab, a Muslim, for the love of God! Havenât you seen enough on tv to know what these people are capable of? You saw with your own two eyes what happened yesterday! Here, on American soil. Crashing planes into buildings! Innocent people jumping to their deaths because it was preferable to being burned alive! We wept for people we don’t even know, Gloria. We witnessed the unimaginable. They are animals, mass-murderers, all of them!â
âYou’re right, Papa; what happened yesterday was unspeakable. We will never forget such horror. Yusuf and his family are appalled and overcome with sorrow over this tragedy. But Papa, tell me â when did you become an expert on Muslims or Arabs? Youâve never even tried to get to know them. All my Arab friends are good people, decent, peace loving people. Weâve spent hours talking, exchanging philosophies and sharing meals.â
âI cannot believe what Iâm hearing. You actually sit down and eat with these people, if you can even call them that? This is a nightmare! How can you do this to me?â
âWhat am I doing to you, Papa? You havenât even given Yusuf a chance. You refuse to meet him, to sit down and have a conversation with him. Youâd see he is a man of peace, a good man incapable of hurting anyone.â
âAre you nuts? Have you lost your mind, Gloria? Do you actually think I would sit with him in my house? Please, God, donât tell me he has you brainwashed already! Thatâs what they do, you know ⌠draw you in to their cult and before you know it youâre hooked and thereâs no way out. Why canât you stick to our own kind, find a nice Jewish boy? An Arab and a Jew … whoever heard of such craziness?!?
“I can’t believe we’re fighting over this again! Why must you keep bringing it up, Papa? You didnât give Evelyn a hard time when she said she was going to marry Gino. And what about Kenny when he and Makayla got engaged? You now have an Italian son-in-law and a black daughter-in-law who you welcomed with open arms and you don’t want me seeing Yusuf simply because heâs an Arab!â
âOh no, do not be fooled, Gloria. Thereâs no such thing as ‘simply an Arab‘. They all have a hidden agenda! Are you blind to whatâs going on around you?â
âPapa, look at me. Iâm a grown woman capable of making my own decisions. Why canât you trust my judgement like you did with Kenny and Evelyn?â
âGloria, youâre not thinking clearly. Gino is a doctor, making an excellent salary. Your sister and their kids will never want for anything. Makaylaâs parents are lawyers and sheâs in law school herself. Your brother and sister made smart choices. They didnât bring some maniac suicide bomber into our family.â
âSTOP! Stop saying that! You know nothing about Yusuf and you have no idea what youâre talking about! Heâs a wonderful man with a big heart and we have developed deep feelings for each other.â
âDeep feelings. Deep feelings? What are you saying, Gloria? Are you sleeping with him?â
âOh my God! I canât believe you just asked me that! Iâm not a child and, frankly, thatâs none of your business.â
âNone of my business? As long as youâre living under my roof, itâs my business.â
âHere we go again! Well maybe itâs high time I moved out of this prison and found a place of my own!â
âPRISON! After all your mother and I have done for you, you have the nerve to say that! And by âa place of your ownâ, you mean shacking up with that terrorist, donât you? Why donât you just stab me in the heart and put me out of my misery!â
âGenug! Enough! Sei still!!
Whatâs going on here?
I can hear the two of you all the way downstairs!â
âHilda, ×××××Ş× (“my love”) I didnât hear you come in.â
âAs if you could hear anything over all the yelling in here!
Whatâs gotten into the two of you?â
âItâs your daughter. Sheâs being absolutely unreasonable. I donât even know who she is anymore.â
âOh, mein Gott! So now sheâs MY daughter? Sheldon,
the last time I checked she was OUR daughter.
Is this about that Arab boy again?â
âMama, please! I canât talk to Papa about this any more. If anyone is being unreasonable, itâs him.â
âGloria, calm yourself, meine liebe Tochter.
Why donât you go out for a while,
go to that nice coffee shop near the university?
Spend some time with your friends.
Sheldon, come sit with me.â
âHilda, are you crazy? Sheâs going to run right to him! Donât you see what youâre doing?â
âJust like you ran to me, Sheldon, when your parents called me a filthy Nazi?
Look at me, Shelly. Do you remember what it was like for us
when we first met? You a Jew and me a German.
Ach du lieber Gott! What were we thinking?
My father was so furious, he wanted to kill both of us.
But we knew weâd rather die than be separated.
Sheldon, you should know better than anyone
that you cannot judge one man
simply by the sickening actions of others,
by his looks, what country he’s from
or what god he worships.
Youâre a good man, liebchen.
You were a good man when we were teenagers
and youâre a good man now.
Youâre scared, Shelly, just like we were scared back then.
But we persevered and in time my parents saw the real you
and your parents saw the real me.
Do you remember what you told your parents
all those years ago?â
âOf course I do. I said âI love her and I would die for herâ.â
âJa. And do you remember what I said to your parents?â
âLike it was yesterday. You said âI love him and I would die without himâ.â
âThings havenât changed that much, Sheldon,
except now WEâRE the parents.
Shelly, you have to let Gloria fly on her own wings.
You have to trust her.
If you don’t we will lose her.
I hate to burst your bubble, meine schnitzel,
but they love each other
and itâs as simple as that.
Trust them.â
NAR Š 2023
I hope you’ll join me today
for some great tunes
straight out of the Motor City!
https://rhythmsection/blog/

Interesting story, but it has so much truth globally- from both sides. A nice story, Nancy
LikeLiked by 1 person
When will it end, KK? Not in my lifetime. I pray my grandchildren will see a more peaceful world.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It won’t end, Nancy, things are getting worse, but we shouldn’t lose hope. Hope is the best medicine, after laughter.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is a wonderful story. There is so much anger and hate in the world, I will never understand it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks so much, Diane! I think once we start to understand and accept the hatred, that’s when we are really doomed.
LikeLike
Somehow, many fail to see what they already know, and indeed, have experienced. I heard so much of this after 911, even from members of my own family who were normally open and accepting people.
That is what fear does to us.
LikeLiked by 1 person
100% correct, D! It’s so easy for fear and grief to turn into hatred and intolerance. I saw that happen big time here in New York after 911; everything changed that day.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Everything changed everywhere. Sadly.
LikeLiked by 1 person
A great tale that raises some relevant points! I love the image too. đ
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks so much, Layla! I really enjoy getting into my character’s heads.
Sometimes you get lucky and find a really great graphic; I found that image before I wrote the story.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Some blinder need to come off. Nice reminder
LikeLiked by 1 person
Absolutely! Too many people are blinded by prejudice, Sadje.
Thanks for your comments.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Itâs a pleasure my friend
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ignorance never ends!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Unfortunately it’s alive and flourishing.
LikeLiked by 1 person
A heartbreaking start to the story but the end restores hope that we can come together despite our perceived differences. I sort of understand why people (especially Americans) feel this way, in the face of such devastation, anger is often easier to cope with than grief.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Very well put, Sweets! We are an angry nation and that spills over into an angry world. I pray my grandchildren realize peace at last.
LikeLiked by 1 person
The aftermath of that event shifted global reality.
Your story, cara, portrays so beautifully the step-stones of what stands in the way of giving peace a chance.
(meine schnitzel!! lol )
LikeLiked by 1 person
Meine schnitzel … how could I resist?
When will we ever learn? âđź
LikeLiked by 1 person
I reckon this happens everyday all around the world, sis.
LikeLiked by 2 people
And I reckon you’d be right about that, sis!
As I said to Nick, “when will we ever learn?”
LikeLike