I
thought I would reflect on Father’s Day, not with my standard
fare of global social and political analysis, but on a personal
note for a change.
Father’s
Day has a special significance to me, in a month filled
with life’s milestones. After all, my birthday is in June,
as is my father’s birthday, my parents’ anniversary, and
the anniversary of my father’s death. My father, Al, died
two years ago this month. And my older son, Ezra Malik,
died nine months before my father, born sleeping after 34
weeks in his mother’s belly, taken away from us by a placental
abruption. The placenta tore from the uterus, cutting off
Ezra’s oxygen supply in utero. Never in my most hopeless
and helpless state did I ever envision mourning the death
of my father and my son - much less months apart from each
other.
As
for my father, he lived a long life of 82 years. In many
ways we were different. I was born and raised in New
York, and lived around the country and the world before
settling in Philadelphia.
Albert Love was born and raised in Augusta,
Georgia,
in a segregated South. His mother was black and his father
was Irish, as he reminded us. He fought in the Korean War
and came back with medals. He was a union man who worked
a printing press in Manhattan
so that I could attend Harvard. And he was active in his
church and with the local VFW post. He didn’t fully understand
my world and the opportunities available to me - and I can
only imagine the difficulties he must have faced in his
life - but I came to appreciate him. And I regret that he
spent his final days in a nearby veteran’s nursing home,
dying suddenly a few weeks after complications from surgery,
and away from home, rather than with his family beside him.
While
my father lived a full life, my son Ezra never had a chance
to live life. I met Ezra in the hospital, where fathers
typically meet their newborns. The big difference was that
my son was born the day after he died, and only a few weeks
short of his due date. I helped my wife as she went into
induced labor at the hospital, knowing our son was already
lifeless, no heartbeat, as that final ultrasound ultimately
had told us. To make matters worse, during our living nightmare
spent in the maternity ward, a new father in the elevator
asked me if I was a new father as well.
Meeting
my son for the first time, holding him and kissing him,
with his full head of hair and flat feet, was unlike any
experience before or since. I was overjoyed to see Ezra,
but overcome with a debilitating and painful grief, the
kind of pain you can feel in your bones, in your soul. Reality
is suspended, yet you are compelled to experience a reality
like no other, the loss of a child.
His
mother and I read him a bedtime story before we buried him.
Ezra Malik was wrapped in shrouds over his alligator pajamas,
covered in his blanket to keep him warm, and buried in a
Jewish cemetery in the ways of his mother’s people. Ezra
is Hebrew for helper. Malik means King in Arabic (Melech
in the Hebrew). His name reflected his parents’ commitment
to social justice. To think of all of the hopes and dreams
that would never be. I can’t help but believe that somewhere
in that spirit world, Ezra’s grandfather, Al, is taking
care of the boy, in between all those extended trash-talking
sessions, and even an occasional moment of wisdom, from
the old black folks from down South and the old Jewish folks
from the old country.
Late
the following year, just a day before New Year’s Eve, Ezra’s
younger brother, Micah Amir, was born. Micah was named in
remembrance of his brother (M for Malik) and his grandfather
(A for Albert). Micah means “resembling God” in Hebrew,
and Amir means “prince” in Arabic and Hebrew. This prince
has given me nothing but unspeakable joy from the moment
I first met him, and I am proud to be his father. But sometimes,
I dream of having both of my sons with me, playing with
them at the same time. Other times, I imagine Micah sitting
on my father’s lap, the two of them belly laughing as only
they can. The boy reminds me so much of the grandfather
he never got a chance to meet, with his sense of humor and
warmth towards others, and the obvious physical resemblances.
My
sense of grief two years ago was quite different from now.
At that time, the pain was overwhelming much of the time,
as if I had been hit by a train, or had run into a brick
wall. Tears and crying came without notice, or triggered
by a song on the radio. And I dreaded Father’s Day like
the plague. These days, grief tends to hide in the background,
from a distance, and visits on occasion. And when grief
returns, it reminds me of my humanity, of the things and
people in my life that are important to me.
Father’s
Day will always be a bittersweet day of reflection for me.
And every June, I imagine I will find myself engaged in
this delicate balancing act, this cruel negotiation between
the joy of being a father today, and the sense of loss over
what used to be and what could have been.
BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based
in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service,
In These
Times and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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