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My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah

A Memoir

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$16.95 US
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On sale Apr 09, 2024 | 192 Pages | 978-1-80533-753-9
A “beautifully written, funny and deeply moving” memoir about a son’s reckoning with his father’s political idealism, set against the menacing backdrop of apartheid-era South Africa (Finuala Dowling, author of The Man Who Loved Crocodile Tamers)

A bestselling South African writer known for tackling history and memory finally makes his American debut


Witty and deeply poignant, My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah is a breathtaking account of one man being confronted by his past and, ultimately, how his daughter proved to be the key in understanding his own father.

Recreating 1960s Johannesburg through his adolescent eyes, bestselling South African author Denis Hirson gradually reveals the details of his extraordinary 13th birthday as he explores the familial and political divisions in Apartheid South Africa that weighed on him and his developing consciousness of his Jewish heritage.

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah is a gem of a book about becoming a man. It’s also a valuable account of a forgotten time of white, Jewish activists, their families, their community, and most importantly, their children, who had to stumble through life in the aftermath of their commitment to racial justice.
“A potent story of a diaspora coming-of-age… [A] moving, historically significant memoir.” Foreword Reviews
Denis Hirson has lived in France since 1975, yet has remained true to the title of one of his prose poems, “The long distance South African.” Most of his books, both poetry and prose, are concerned with the memory of the apartheid years in South Africa. Two of his previous titles, The House Next Door to Africa and I Remember King Kong (the Boxer) were South African bestsellers. Following the release from prison of his father, who had served a nine-year sentence for sabotage as a member of the African Resistance Movement, Denis’s family left South Africa in 1973 when he was 22. His family had been given three days to pack up their home in Johannesburg and leave by ship from Cape Town.
My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah
  One  
 
 
Of course I had a bar mitzvah.
It took place on a cool, crisp afternoon in Johannesburg on the day I turned thirteen, towards the end of August 1964.
There were three other people present, or five, depending on whom one chooses to include. Five, let’s say, the men divided from the women according to the time-worn tradition.
There were no photographs, no gifts bought or made for the occasion; no singing or elevating sound, unless one counts the bellyfuls of steam rising up from the iron grid between the flagstones of the pavement across the road. But the steam hardly made a whisper and, anyway, I cannot be sure that I noticed it at all.
The ceremony lasted precisely thirty minutes, as had been agreed on well in advance, not a second longer. One of the people present announced the end in a voice as blunt as it was relieved.
Did I cross the threshold into manhood on that day, as one is, at least symbolically, supposed to do? I

Denis Hirson



don’t know. I doubt it. But I did at least in the wake of this event begin to understand a number of things I had not been confronted with before.
The person who might have been called my teacher would surely have wanted me to learn these lessons in an entirely different way, if I had to learn them at all, but there was no time beforehand, and not a moment left over at the end, to express any regret.
D  
There was no Hebrew spoken during my bar mitzvah, nor did I read out aloud a portion of the consecrated biblical text. Everything happened in one language, or possibly two, but Hebrew was neither of them.
I already knew a number of Hebrew words, for example those that mean good morning and good night, peace, excuse me, please and thank you, boy and girl, water and prickly pear. I also knew that ‘baruch’ meant blessed, and that ‘yael’ meant ibex, which is a kind of goat. Those were the names of my parents, Baruch and Yael. I was the fruit of the union between a blessed one and a wild mountain goat, the first of their three children, the eldest by seven and a half years, and also the eldest grandchild on both sides.
As might be expected, ‘baruch’ is a holy word; it is also the beginning of many prayers. ‘Baruch ata Adonai’, Blessed art thou, Lord. I would have

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


appreciated just a touch of holiness to add to proceedings during the thirty-minute ceremony, and why not even a prayer.
Someone might have raised a ladder of luminous words mounting rung by rung beyond the narrow, low-roofed confines where the occasion took place. This proved to be not only impossible but entirely unthinkable.
 
D  
Several of my companions had already started learning Hebrew in preparation for their bar mitzvahs at the age of eleven or even earlier. On afternoons after school they disappeared behind the door of a room adjoining the newly built local orthodox shul, which stood like a sentinel among blocks of flats and scattered trees not three minutes from the school soccer field.
I watched them emerging an hour or so later as if they had been forcibly held under water, spluttering Hebrew syllables and exchanging jibes about their teacher, who was apparently no more than a doddering old clown.
Bevakakaka. Ani rotze, ani rotze, ani rotten tomatoes.
Bonded together in mockery they hopped around on the grass of the soccer field, the sound of their laughter rippling upwards like a single shared flag of

Denis Hirson



belonging above their heads. Though they might have needed to exorcise from their bodies the boredom of their lessons, there was no question of their wanting to escape the ultimate goal: they would all end up having a bar mitzvah in shul one Saturday morning or another in the foreseeable future.
They would walk down the carpet with the eyes of the men and boys, as also the women and girls in the upper gallery, upon them. They would approach the raised lectern, passing row upon row of men wearing yarmulkes and draped in talliths, then stand at the sacred scroll and read from it to the congregation before being showered with gifts and adoration and going on to have a feast and make a speech in a marquee.
Such a procession of Jewishness they brought together before me, those boys: Stanley and JP, who was an orphan and once had ringworm; Colin who (accidentally, with a cricket ball) broke my front tooth; Jonny with the swimming pool at the bottom of his garden where Doris Day had dipped her shapely body one fabled afternoon.
There was Derek with his smooth raven-black hair and his violin; freckle-faced David; Peter of the hospitable mansion with a boxing bag swinging in the middle of the garden and a great cage of singing birds to one side; Boykie and his inexhaustible supply of jokes; Malcolm, Stephen, Ashley, Jacky whose house

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


had recently been burgled; slothful, scheming Paul of the slack belly and bank-bags bloated with marbles.
Whatever has became of those boys, I wonder, every one of them from the plush and luxuriant, tree- lined northern suburbs of Johannesburg in the early 1960s?
Then again, was I not from the same suburbs, and Jewish too? What was so different about my family?
Well, we did live in the most ramshackle house on our block, with earthquake cracks across the inside walls, goose-pimpled plaster on the outside. And, unlike any of my friends’ houses, ours was filled with almost nothing new.
As of the age of eight or nine I was out with my father, weekend after weekend, scouting for furniture in other people’s homes: their inhabitants had fled the country in the wake of the Sharpeville massacre, the ensuing marches and violent repression of 1960. Added to this were the widely, luridly reported doings of the Mau Mau in Kenya. The writing is on the wall for the whites, went the rumour, and South Africa’s airports and harbours were a hive of activity that year as, with anxious alacrity, white families packed up and left.
We, of course, were never going to leave. Not ever. My friends’ parents might talk of buying a one-way ticket for London or Melbourne or New York, but not mine. And anyway we had just moved into our

Denis Hirson



new antiquated house. So on a Saturday afternoon my father and I would add ourselves to a little crowd following a well-fed auctioneer about from room to stripped room of what had once been an absent stranger’s stately abode. After a few hours we drove back home to proudly lay our loot before my mother: Kilim carpets, a pinewood Swedish desk, lamps, vases, kitchenware, imbuia armchairs, a Morris settee dotted with little maroon roses.
At first the effect of all these things, once installed, was somewhat theatrical, like a stage set for what really stole the limelight in our house: books. I knew no one else whose house was filled with as many books, pushing their way up from the pinewood floors to the moulded ceilings; books with my parents’ first names inscribed inside them, looped together and underlined in my father’s meticulous script, Baruch & Yael, as if this were both their joint fortune and the contract of their togetherness.
Our garden, too, was different. The grass was as worn as a moth-eaten cloth, the flowerbeds lacking in that lush, perky look that comes with constant care. We had a gardener, but he was absent for weeks on end, a withdrawn, soft-spoken man who may well have been involved in some kind of political activity. On several occasions I saw my father speaking to him quietly around the back of the house; perhaps he was eventually arrested. Whatever the case, he finally

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


disappeared, after which the grass was gradually worn even thinner than before.
But never mind the state of the grass, or the surfeit of books, or our adopted furniture. We were from the same suburbs as all my friends even if it felt as if we weren’t.
And what about the fact of being Jewish?
That was a secret which I myself could not crack.
From an early age I was somehow made aware that sharing this secret with strangers might possibly be dangerous. But it was also not to be spoken of within the walls of our own house, despite the fugitive signs that Jewishness was very much a part of our lives.
Take my father’s whistling, for example. In the late afternoon or evening he would come home from the university where he was a physics lecturer, walk through the front door and whistle, the same six brief, sharp notes ending with a seventh long one every time. In answer to this call my mother, if she was already back from medical school, would emerge from wherever she had been to greet him.
They had told me where this whistling tune came from: Hashomer Hatzair, the youth movement better known to them as ‘HH’. As a boy I learned, without really understanding, that ‘HH’ was Zionist and therefore Jewish, as well as socialist, and was one strand of the bond between them since they had both been members.

Denis Hirson



But when they mentioned this, which was not often, the Zionist part was passed over in silence and the Jewish part went mysteriously missing, like a piece of an almost completed jigsaw puzzle that is found to be lost, whose shape can clearly be guessed at but unfortunately not filled.
I knew it was there, hidden somewhere out of sight, but the words for it were not available to me.
Why was this so?
I did not know, nor did I try and find out.
Perhaps that was simply the way things were.
Perhaps I had, or made sure I had, other things on my mind, such as catching a new kind of beetle for my beetle collection, or boiling another golf-ball. The people next door sometimes chipped a golf-ball into our back garden, and I boiled it, slicing off the dimpled outer resin skin and cutting through the densely meshed rubber thread below to get to the bag of yellowish gel hidden in the middle.
That tiny bag was a sort of secret, and I liked secrets. I was a solitary child, and secrets were part of the way I kept to myself. There were lots of them in the stories I read, they were what made me turn to the next page. They had power, but only as long as they were not yet revealed. In other words, you had to know about their existence, though their inner meaning might remain elusive for a considerable amount of time.

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


Like Jewishness.
If I was the least bit curious about it then I buried my curiosity. I did not want any angry answers entering the quietness of my world. And vaguely, distantly, I sensed that if I asked the wrong question then anger would come rumbling forth from my father, though I hardly knew why.
There were also other secrets in our house, and I definitely knew I should not ask about them. I don’t know whether I needed any proof that these particular secrets had power. But, as if I did, there came a day when one of them exploded, and then nothing was ever the same again.

About

A “beautifully written, funny and deeply moving” memoir about a son’s reckoning with his father’s political idealism, set against the menacing backdrop of apartheid-era South Africa (Finuala Dowling, author of The Man Who Loved Crocodile Tamers)

A bestselling South African writer known for tackling history and memory finally makes his American debut


Witty and deeply poignant, My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah is a breathtaking account of one man being confronted by his past and, ultimately, how his daughter proved to be the key in understanding his own father.

Recreating 1960s Johannesburg through his adolescent eyes, bestselling South African author Denis Hirson gradually reveals the details of his extraordinary 13th birthday as he explores the familial and political divisions in Apartheid South Africa that weighed on him and his developing consciousness of his Jewish heritage.

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah is a gem of a book about becoming a man. It’s also a valuable account of a forgotten time of white, Jewish activists, their families, their community, and most importantly, their children, who had to stumble through life in the aftermath of their commitment to racial justice.

Praise

“A potent story of a diaspora coming-of-age… [A] moving, historically significant memoir.” Foreword Reviews

Author

Denis Hirson has lived in France since 1975, yet has remained true to the title of one of his prose poems, “The long distance South African.” Most of his books, both poetry and prose, are concerned with the memory of the apartheid years in South Africa. Two of his previous titles, The House Next Door to Africa and I Remember King Kong (the Boxer) were South African bestsellers. Following the release from prison of his father, who had served a nine-year sentence for sabotage as a member of the African Resistance Movement, Denis’s family left South Africa in 1973 when he was 22. His family had been given three days to pack up their home in Johannesburg and leave by ship from Cape Town.

Excerpt

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah
  One  
 
 
Of course I had a bar mitzvah.
It took place on a cool, crisp afternoon in Johannesburg on the day I turned thirteen, towards the end of August 1964.
There were three other people present, or five, depending on whom one chooses to include. Five, let’s say, the men divided from the women according to the time-worn tradition.
There were no photographs, no gifts bought or made for the occasion; no singing or elevating sound, unless one counts the bellyfuls of steam rising up from the iron grid between the flagstones of the pavement across the road. But the steam hardly made a whisper and, anyway, I cannot be sure that I noticed it at all.
The ceremony lasted precisely thirty minutes, as had been agreed on well in advance, not a second longer. One of the people present announced the end in a voice as blunt as it was relieved.
Did I cross the threshold into manhood on that day, as one is, at least symbolically, supposed to do? I

Denis Hirson



don’t know. I doubt it. But I did at least in the wake of this event begin to understand a number of things I had not been confronted with before.
The person who might have been called my teacher would surely have wanted me to learn these lessons in an entirely different way, if I had to learn them at all, but there was no time beforehand, and not a moment left over at the end, to express any regret.
D  
There was no Hebrew spoken during my bar mitzvah, nor did I read out aloud a portion of the consecrated biblical text. Everything happened in one language, or possibly two, but Hebrew was neither of them.
I already knew a number of Hebrew words, for example those that mean good morning and good night, peace, excuse me, please and thank you, boy and girl, water and prickly pear. I also knew that ‘baruch’ meant blessed, and that ‘yael’ meant ibex, which is a kind of goat. Those were the names of my parents, Baruch and Yael. I was the fruit of the union between a blessed one and a wild mountain goat, the first of their three children, the eldest by seven and a half years, and also the eldest grandchild on both sides.
As might be expected, ‘baruch’ is a holy word; it is also the beginning of many prayers. ‘Baruch ata Adonai’, Blessed art thou, Lord. I would have

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


appreciated just a touch of holiness to add to proceedings during the thirty-minute ceremony, and why not even a prayer.
Someone might have raised a ladder of luminous words mounting rung by rung beyond the narrow, low-roofed confines where the occasion took place. This proved to be not only impossible but entirely unthinkable.
 
D  
Several of my companions had already started learning Hebrew in preparation for their bar mitzvahs at the age of eleven or even earlier. On afternoons after school they disappeared behind the door of a room adjoining the newly built local orthodox shul, which stood like a sentinel among blocks of flats and scattered trees not three minutes from the school soccer field.
I watched them emerging an hour or so later as if they had been forcibly held under water, spluttering Hebrew syllables and exchanging jibes about their teacher, who was apparently no more than a doddering old clown.
Bevakakaka. Ani rotze, ani rotze, ani rotten tomatoes.
Bonded together in mockery they hopped around on the grass of the soccer field, the sound of their laughter rippling upwards like a single shared flag of

Denis Hirson



belonging above their heads. Though they might have needed to exorcise from their bodies the boredom of their lessons, there was no question of their wanting to escape the ultimate goal: they would all end up having a bar mitzvah in shul one Saturday morning or another in the foreseeable future.
They would walk down the carpet with the eyes of the men and boys, as also the women and girls in the upper gallery, upon them. They would approach the raised lectern, passing row upon row of men wearing yarmulkes and draped in talliths, then stand at the sacred scroll and read from it to the congregation before being showered with gifts and adoration and going on to have a feast and make a speech in a marquee.
Such a procession of Jewishness they brought together before me, those boys: Stanley and JP, who was an orphan and once had ringworm; Colin who (accidentally, with a cricket ball) broke my front tooth; Jonny with the swimming pool at the bottom of his garden where Doris Day had dipped her shapely body one fabled afternoon.
There was Derek with his smooth raven-black hair and his violin; freckle-faced David; Peter of the hospitable mansion with a boxing bag swinging in the middle of the garden and a great cage of singing birds to one side; Boykie and his inexhaustible supply of jokes; Malcolm, Stephen, Ashley, Jacky whose house

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


had recently been burgled; slothful, scheming Paul of the slack belly and bank-bags bloated with marbles.
Whatever has became of those boys, I wonder, every one of them from the plush and luxuriant, tree- lined northern suburbs of Johannesburg in the early 1960s?
Then again, was I not from the same suburbs, and Jewish too? What was so different about my family?
Well, we did live in the most ramshackle house on our block, with earthquake cracks across the inside walls, goose-pimpled plaster on the outside. And, unlike any of my friends’ houses, ours was filled with almost nothing new.
As of the age of eight or nine I was out with my father, weekend after weekend, scouting for furniture in other people’s homes: their inhabitants had fled the country in the wake of the Sharpeville massacre, the ensuing marches and violent repression of 1960. Added to this were the widely, luridly reported doings of the Mau Mau in Kenya. The writing is on the wall for the whites, went the rumour, and South Africa’s airports and harbours were a hive of activity that year as, with anxious alacrity, white families packed up and left.
We, of course, were never going to leave. Not ever. My friends’ parents might talk of buying a one-way ticket for London or Melbourne or New York, but not mine. And anyway we had just moved into our

Denis Hirson



new antiquated house. So on a Saturday afternoon my father and I would add ourselves to a little crowd following a well-fed auctioneer about from room to stripped room of what had once been an absent stranger’s stately abode. After a few hours we drove back home to proudly lay our loot before my mother: Kilim carpets, a pinewood Swedish desk, lamps, vases, kitchenware, imbuia armchairs, a Morris settee dotted with little maroon roses.
At first the effect of all these things, once installed, was somewhat theatrical, like a stage set for what really stole the limelight in our house: books. I knew no one else whose house was filled with as many books, pushing their way up from the pinewood floors to the moulded ceilings; books with my parents’ first names inscribed inside them, looped together and underlined in my father’s meticulous script, Baruch & Yael, as if this were both their joint fortune and the contract of their togetherness.
Our garden, too, was different. The grass was as worn as a moth-eaten cloth, the flowerbeds lacking in that lush, perky look that comes with constant care. We had a gardener, but he was absent for weeks on end, a withdrawn, soft-spoken man who may well have been involved in some kind of political activity. On several occasions I saw my father speaking to him quietly around the back of the house; perhaps he was eventually arrested. Whatever the case, he finally

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


disappeared, after which the grass was gradually worn even thinner than before.
But never mind the state of the grass, or the surfeit of books, or our adopted furniture. We were from the same suburbs as all my friends even if it felt as if we weren’t.
And what about the fact of being Jewish?
That was a secret which I myself could not crack.
From an early age I was somehow made aware that sharing this secret with strangers might possibly be dangerous. But it was also not to be spoken of within the walls of our own house, despite the fugitive signs that Jewishness was very much a part of our lives.
Take my father’s whistling, for example. In the late afternoon or evening he would come home from the university where he was a physics lecturer, walk through the front door and whistle, the same six brief, sharp notes ending with a seventh long one every time. In answer to this call my mother, if she was already back from medical school, would emerge from wherever she had been to greet him.
They had told me where this whistling tune came from: Hashomer Hatzair, the youth movement better known to them as ‘HH’. As a boy I learned, without really understanding, that ‘HH’ was Zionist and therefore Jewish, as well as socialist, and was one strand of the bond between them since they had both been members.

Denis Hirson



But when they mentioned this, which was not often, the Zionist part was passed over in silence and the Jewish part went mysteriously missing, like a piece of an almost completed jigsaw puzzle that is found to be lost, whose shape can clearly be guessed at but unfortunately not filled.
I knew it was there, hidden somewhere out of sight, but the words for it were not available to me.
Why was this so?
I did not know, nor did I try and find out.
Perhaps that was simply the way things were.
Perhaps I had, or made sure I had, other things on my mind, such as catching a new kind of beetle for my beetle collection, or boiling another golf-ball. The people next door sometimes chipped a golf-ball into our back garden, and I boiled it, slicing off the dimpled outer resin skin and cutting through the densely meshed rubber thread below to get to the bag of yellowish gel hidden in the middle.
That tiny bag was a sort of secret, and I liked secrets. I was a solitary child, and secrets were part of the way I kept to myself. There were lots of them in the stories I read, they were what made me turn to the next page. They had power, but only as long as they were not yet revealed. In other words, you had to know about their existence, though their inner meaning might remain elusive for a considerable amount of time.

My Thirty-Minute Bar Mitzvah


Like Jewishness.
If I was the least bit curious about it then I buried my curiosity. I did not want any angry answers entering the quietness of my world. And vaguely, distantly, I sensed that if I asked the wrong question then anger would come rumbling forth from my father, though I hardly knew why.
There were also other secrets in our house, and I definitely knew I should not ask about them. I don’t know whether I needed any proof that these particular secrets had power. But, as if I did, there came a day when one of them exploded, and then nothing was ever the same again.