The Other Side's Temple
Written Summer 2002


     I was at Grandmom and Granddad’s house that Saturday night, because my parents were going to a Carey Ziegler convert. I was sitting at the dining room table and listening to my Three Dog Night CD in their CD player that they had gotten not three months before, my brother Joe sitting next to me and trying to sing along with the singers when my grandmother came in. A short lady with curly gray hair, my maternal grandmother is quite religious. One big difference between her, my grandfather, and the rest of my mother’s side of the family and my immediate family is that they are Christian and we are Jewish. Anyway, she came into the room from the kitchen as “Black and White” was ending.
   “I want to go to church tomorrow,” she said to my brother and me. I paid no attention, thinking that it wouldn’t much affect me if she went to church. I was wrong, though. I knew that with the next thing she said. “Since you are here, if I go, then you have to, too.” I turned around in my seat and looked directly at her, surprise in the bit of my brown eyes that was showing through my long, almost black hair that was covering part of my face. I probably care more about being Jewish than my brother, my mother, or even my father. Jews do not go to church, and I didn’t want to go!
     My grandmother must have seen the look on my face. “I understand if you don’t want to go, and you don’t have to.” Her tone of voice told me that going to church was really, really important to her. I couldn’t let her down like that! I’m not that bad a granddaughter!
   “Oh, I’ll go,” I said.
     Grandma was so happy that I agreed to go! She said that it was okay that neither Joe nor I had any dressy clothes with us to wear; we could just wear our regular clothes, thank goodness!

     Early the next morning we went over to the church, me with book in hand. I figured that I could just read the whole time, but I was wrong again. Just goes to show how little I know when it comes to my grandparents and their religion. Boy, I need to get this church thing right! I thought, as Grandma told me that I had to leave my book in the car. I reluctantly put it away.
     As we entered the church, Grandma whispered in my ear, “Now you’ll get to see how the other half lives.” I didn’t really see why she said that, since I’ve seen plenty of her religion from her friends, so I paid little attention to it. We were going to our seats in the middle of the third-to-last row, first Grandma, then me, then Joe, and Granddad bringing up the rear, and I was looking around. The church was much like Temple Kol Ami, where I had last been to services. It had a bima, although of course it was not called that; it was probably called a stage. The stage had flowers decorating it, and a place for the leading prayer person to stand. The rows in which the people who come to pray sat were regular old rows, just like at Kol Ami, nothing new there. The windows had stained-glass scenes that I had never seen before, but that was to be expected. Nothing much was new until we actually got to the row. Instead of sitting down, both Grandmom and Granddad kneeled on the floor! It was an unusual picture, as I had never seen either of my grandparents on the floor. I was about to copy them, thinking that I was being disrespectful, when Grandmom said that it was okay for me to just sit in the row.
     The beginning of the service was boring to me. The guy on the stage talked in monotone, as if he did not care all that much about G-d and the service, he was just doing his job. Grandma was listening intently to the guy, but when she turned and looked at me she saw one of my famous I’m-bored-get-me-out-of-here looks on my face, and she suggested that that I look through the back of the prayer book to see if I knew any of the songs in it. I tuned out the voice of the guy on the stage and paged through the back of the book for most of the rest of the service. I had spotted one song I knew, ‘Michael Row Your Boat Ashore,” when I came out of my little reading world and noticed that people were going up to the front of the church and getting something from the guy on the stage, eating it, and coming back to sit down. This concept was totally unknown to me, and when my grandmother got back I asked her about it. I don’t remember exactly what she said, but whatever it was made sense to me and I went back to my song searching.
     I was quite surprised a little while later when I found a song that I knew from being in the Temple Kol Ami Jr. Choir, in Hebrew. “Shalom chavarim, shalom chavarim, shalom, shalom,” it read. I hummed it and then showed it to my brother, who found the page for himself. My grandmother heard my humming and put her finger to her mouth, but she had a look on her face that told me she didn’t really mind. I spent the last few minutes going over the song in my head.
     Finally, the service was over and we exited the church. My grandmother greeted many people on the way out, each time explaining how she had her sweet little Jewish grandchildren for the weekend who were kind enough to come with her to church. Boy am I glad to be out of there! I said to myself as I got outside. I didn’t say that to my grandmother, though. When asked what I thought of church, I simply slowly replied, “It was an interesting experience, but I would not like to go again.” She seemed to accept that.






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