A FUNERAL WITH ALL
THE TRIMMINGS
May 15, 1990
Dear Children,
In 15 days I’ll be 71. As you know, I’m not religious, but I do like a good party. About my funeral: Use the gentile funeral home, Fioritto in Lyndhurst, to deliver my body to the Workmen’s Circle Cemetery. Just bury me. Invite some family and friends. No rabbi! I’ve never gone to synagogue, so don’t start with that now.
Pick a convenient Sunday afternoon to throw a memorial service at the Workmen’s Circle hall on Green Road. There is plenty room, a loudspeaker and a kitchen. Anybody who wants to speak, can speak — except Bernstein.
I want a nice sendoff: trays, Scotch, music, dancing, food, coffee, pastry, wine and cold beer. Whiskey too. Hire a klezmer band — Bert Stratton’s band. But remember, one hour of klezmer is enough.
Get the trays at Bernie Shulman’s at Cedar Center. They’re good and cheap, but you have to pick up the goods yourself. Get pastries from Acme supermarket at Mayfield near Green. Their pastries are excellent and much cheaper than the Jewish bakeries.
I want coffee — lots of coffee. The Workmen’s Circle can make it by the gallon. And plenty of soft drinks and wine — good wine. No Champagne. Hire kitchen help.
Mom will say I’m nuts. She can stay home if she wants! This is what I want.
Love,
Dad
—
Footnote: The author — a friend of my parents — died in 2006, 16 years after he wrote this letter. He lived to 87. He had a graveside service with no band and no food. No hard feelings.
I slightly “enhanced” his letter. I added except Bernstein to “Anybody can speak — except Bernstein,” and I added “One hour of klezmer is enough.” Couldn’t help myself. The letter is real.
3 comments
Precious! Thanks!
Like the writer his references are gone. Maybe you could write a contemporary version (references are all here today) to get some idea of both your thinking as well as the alter kochers you now. Would be a remarkable difference.
Better write it now. Ya’ never know…. (And you might add you don’t want Archie Bunker to do the eulogy, or Fiorello La Guardia, who gave the eulogy for Walter Winchell as quoted in Philip Roth’s THE PLOT AGAINST AMERICA.)
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