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Related: About this forumMy welfare mom, our food stamps and my Jewish identity
Do you think you could leave some more toilet paper next time? The girl hollered from across the crowded school cafeteria. I didnt know her or the other girls at her table, but I knew the request was meant for me: I cleaned the bathrooms in their dorm five mornings a week. I was on line for the salad bar, trying to duck the growing attention by examining the scuff marks on my shoes. But she fired the question again and, like a torpedo, it found me. Heyyy, she yelled. Tomorrow: Could you leave a couple extra rolls?
It was the first week of my freshman year at Brandeis University. I had applied to the elite, predominately Jewish, East Coast school because it was a fine university and I figured I had a good shot at financial aid, being a low-income Jew with a 4.0. In fact, Brandeis practically paid me to come; except for the chunk of aid I had to earn through work-study. I chose the highest-paid job that took the least amount of time. From six to nine every morning, I scrubbed, mopped, polished and wiped away graffiti and the remains of recent bulimic purges. It felt awkward cleaning up after my classmates as they tweezed their eyebrows and curled their hair. It certainly didnt help me feel welcomed or accepted the way Id thought I would, among other freshmen, most of us Jewish and away from home for the first time. I felt like an outsider.
I should have anticipated as much. Months earlier, when my letter of acceptance and registration materials had arrived on Brandeis letterheadblue-and-white with Hebrew writingI began doubting whether I belonged at a school with such a strong Jewish legacy. I had always connected being Jewish with material wealth and privilege, attending Hebrew school and becoming bat mitzvah. As the daughter of a single, alcoholic mother who lived on welfare, I hadnt grown up with any of these things. In fact, I grew up knowing more Christmas carols than Friday night prayers in a home that defied every stereotypical notion of what being Jewish was about.
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meti57b
(3,584 posts)and story about how the edges of your tradition and customs become frayed, when you don't quite fit in anywhere. In the end, it does often all come together again.
Mosby
(16,311 posts)It's sad that she felt so much shame about being poor, when your poor being ashamed just makes it that much worse.