Josh Weil, author of the recent­ly pub­lished The Great Glass Sea, is blog­ging here today for Jew­ish Book Coun­cil and MyJew­ish­Learn­ing.

Any run-in with a Russ­ian bath­house is bound to shock: men chug­ging bot­tles of beer-like kvass, felt hats help­ing them sweat, sweat fly­ing from birch branch­es as they beat their naked flesh. But what sticks with me most is this: step­ping into the sud­den heat, see­ing them perched all around me, their pri­vates dan­gling at my eye height. Feel­ing their stares. Real­iz­ing they are all uncircumcised.

I’ve nev­er been much of a Jew: can’t speak Hebrew, wasn’t bar-mitz­va­hed, don’t believe in God. In Williams­burg I feel aligned with hip­sters more than Chasids. I like may­on­naise on my pas­tra­mi. My grand­moth­er shakes her head. Though she’s accept­ed my goy­ish ways, calls my wife sweet­heart” when, sure­ly, her grand­moth­er would have said shik­sa” instead. 

Still, my father’s par­ents fled Ger­many just before the Holo­caust, his grand­fa­ther was sent to a con­cen­tra­tion camp, and, though, mirac­u­lous­ly, he made it out, I know I have great aunts and uncles who did not. My mother’s grand­fa­ther was forced from his shtetl into the Russ­ian army — for a Jew, near-cer­tain death. In my fam­i­ly, the sto­ry of his flight is leg­end. I believe it, the way I’ve nev­er ques­tioned my father’s stint on a kib­butz. Though for a long time I couldn’t com­pre­hend how his sis­ter could move to Israel, trade Montana’s moun­tains for Tel-Aviv.

I’ve nev­er want­ed to vis­it there, not even when, for near­ly a year, I lived a mere three hun­dred miles away. In Egypt, walk­ing the fields around the vil­lage where I lived, I’d have this con­ver­sa­tion, almost every day, near­ly verbatim:

Egypt­ian Farmer (wav­ing me over): What’s your name?”

Me: Josh.” (The Ara­bic, Yusha, would mark me as a Jew, so I used English.)

Farmer: George? Like Bush?”

Me: Yes, but I hate him.”

(Grins all around.)

Farmer: Are you a Muslim?”

Me: No.”

Farmer: Chris­t­ian?”

Me: Yes.”

The sug­ges­tion that I read the Quran always fol­lowed this. I’d answer that I had. Which would stun him silent. To have read it and yet still not believe was near­ly as incom­pre­hen­si­ble as the con­cept of an athe­ist would have been. Though still bet­ter than a Jew.

Farmer: Do you sup­port Israel?”

Me (always): I don’t know any­thing about it.”

Though I was begin­ning to. On Rosh Hashanah, I joined Cairo’s last hand­ful of Jews at the city’s last work­ing syn­a­gogue. It was sur­round­ed by cops with AKs, spe­cial forces behind riot shields; inside, beyond the dogs and met­al detec­tors, the main hall was patrolled by Mossad agents, staff from the Israeli embassy in the pews. To any­one who might try to sneak a weapon in, or plant a bomb, or sim­ply throw a stone, I was the same as them. And, after the ser­vice, shar­ing fresh figs and hon­eyed sweets, I felt it was true.

Kugel, mat­zo-brei, my grandmother’s pick­led her­ring: this has always been my com­fort food. The sound of Yid­dish makes me smile. Klezmer makes me want to dance. Study, self-bet­ter­ment, respon­si­bil­i­ty to the wider world, the stress and guilt and worka­holic unhap­pi­ness that come with it: some­times, meet­ing strangers, we smell it on each oth­er, a kind of a kin­ship; if we had tails, they’d wag.

But in Oradea — anoth­er syn­a­gogue, anoth­er year — all was still. Out­side the walls I could hear the Roman­ian dogs who’d rushed me, the shush­ing of the care­tak­er who’d beat them with a black­jack. He slept in the entrance, paid by one of the many Jews long gone. Ceaus­es­cu, the Iron Guard, the pogroms: who­ev­er had sur­vived had left. Inside, it was beau­ti­ful — huge domed roof, hints of gold — but silent. A rustling: the ripped remains of a cur­tain. A creak: plas­ter hang­ing from a cracked wall. And then the shock of my own crying.

Back in the banya — shoul­ders beat­en, skin scrubbed — my Russ­ian friend ges­tured awk­ward­ly at my crotch. Oleg is a sweet man, but I remem­bered my first trip to his coun­try, how I’d heard some­one out­side rail­ing against the Jews, a clang­ing against a wall, the cat I’d found that morn­ing, its chest rup­tured by an iron pole. 

Because,” I told him, I am a Jew.”

As I write this my wife is preg­nant with a boy. When he is born we’ll have him cir­cum­cised. To do oth­er­wise would mark him just as sure­ly, except as some­one he is not. Not because of his blood — I don’t believe in that any more than I do God — but for the same rea­son that I will one day take him to Dachau, to Rus­sia, to the town where his great-great grand­fa­ther was from, and, if they have a banya, I will want him to know why peo­ple stare. Almost as much as I hope that he won’t have to. 

Josh Weil was award­ed the Sue Kauf­man Prize from the Amer­i­can Acad­e­my of Arts and Let­ters forhis debut col­lec­tion, The New Val­ley. A Nation­al Book Award Five Under Thir­ty-Five” author, he has­re­ceived fel­low­ships from the Ful­bright Foun­da­tion, Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty, the Mac­Dow­ell Colony,Bread Loaf, and Sewa­nee. His fic­tion has appeared in Gran­ta, Esquire, One Sto­ry, and Agni. Read more about him and his work here.

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Josh Weil | Jew­ish Book Coun­cil

Josh Weil was award­ed the Sue Kauf­man Prize from the Amer­i­can Acad­e­my of Arts and Let­ters for his debut col­lec­tion, The New Val­ley. A Nation­al Book Award Five Under Thir­ty-Five” author, he has received fel­low­ships from the Ful­bright Foun­da­tion, Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty, the Mac­Dow­ell Colony, Bread Loaf, and Sewa­nee. His fic­tion has appeared in Gran­ta, Esquire, One Sto­ry, and Agni.

My Name is Yusha