Squirrel
Hill
Squirrel Hill. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Pictured above is the infamous "blue slide" from Frick Park.) "Squirrel
Hill" always sounded so silly to me. It is
hilly. There are loads of trees
and squirrels, gray squirrels mostly. I grew up in Squirrel Hill. I read
somewhere that the neighborhood was once a farm called “Squirrel Hill”, then I
read somewhere else that it was a Native American hunting ground known for an
abundance of squirrels. History is never really right, is it? It’s just stories
passed down and added to, like that little word game we played in a circle as
kids, adding words to change the arc of any story.
What I never read anywhere was that my childhood neighborhood
would ever be a part of history. Certainly not stained and haunting history,
sad antiquity, that of a mass murder. A massacre. Not only in my neighborhood,
but in God’s house. In a temple. A synagogue. A schul. Generations from now,
who will tell the story of Squirrel Hill and who will care?
Our family moved there when I was five. My
elementary school was right around the corner and across the street from my beloved
grandmother, so I was very cool with school. As a teenager, when I went to high
school somewhere else, I did have to
walk uphill and in the snow, just not precisely 2 miles as the comics today
tell it, changing the arc of that story too.
We wore galoshes. Plastic stupid rain covers that looked like Baggies for our boots or shoes. Moms made us do that and we listened to our
moms. We got wet. We didn’t ALL win or always get a trophy. We actually played
at each other’s houses and we never worried that studying or playing or praying
could get us killed. Because until President Kennedy was killed when I was in Miss Siverman's 3rd grade class, I didn't know what "killed" was. Walking home that day, everything felt different.
Our house was the last in a row of houses, next to a very high
hill, almost a mountain really, when we moved there. My friends and I climbed
up in that mountain where woods and lots of trees and animals were fun and
extra exciting to explore. The mice and snakes and dirt, not so much and my
mother couldn’t have been happier when a hospital moved that mountain away and
built their tall building half into our backyard, so it seemed to me. With a
white fence to separate us off, and forever close my access out of my tiny yard
with two cherry trees. I hated it. I missed my mountain.
Still, Squirrel Hill pretty much didn’t change other
than that. There’s a lingo and a tempo and a certain step around that everyone
seems to accept, learn, pass on, expand into.
“Are you going upstreet?” That phrase meant walking
Murray Ave., and then up Forbes, even though only a small portion was actually up a hill. Shopping at Little’s shoe
store, mandatory. (The only thing one can still do today.) Clothes at Newman’s,
a family owned store with wooden floors from one hundred years ago that
creaked. Fancy banks (It’s the land of Mellon, don’t forget), a post office
with that certain smell and faces of fugitives from anywhere except Squirrel Hill; Mineo’s Pizza (best in
the world), bakeries galore, including Waldorf, Rosenbloom’s,
Silberberg’s…bakeries every few feet when walking upstreet.
Predominantly a Jewish neighborhood then, delis and
bakeries ruled most corners in Squirrel Hill. I was good with that! On my way to school, I'd walk by
Rosenbloom’s each morning where the bakers stood by the open back door having a
break and a smoke and I’d inhale the baking bread smell for half a block before
I’d see the crusty baker men. Besides, Rosenbloom’s sold Gems. Dark chocolate
ganache dripped thickly over a dome-shaped moist chocolate cake. Pure magic.
The memories of childhood are magic for many of us.
My first horse, Whiskey was his name, at Schenley Park Stables. The stables
burned down when I was 12. It was a horrible fire. Today, tennis courts cover
the memories. My first scary sled ride with my father down a hill at Frick
Park. My first serious kissing, with a boy in a Corvette, at “Lover’s Lane”.
(It was all about the car.)
Pinball machines. Food. Friends. Drive-in movies.
Sidewalks. Courtesy. Smiles. Sanctuary. We were civilized. We weren’t scared.
We were Squirrel Hill. We also weren’t known anywhere else, weren’t popular ... or unpopular, for that matter – just a little unknown neighborhood secluded among
parks, part of Pittsburgh, but with a distinct utterly unappreciated, at least
by me, flavor.
Perhaps that flavor was Jewish. It’s positively the
part that put Squirrel Hill on the permanent map of forever now. Because of the
irrational hatred of one angry man for a people, Jewish people, based on their
beliefs and faith, friends of mine had to die one day in Squirrel Hill a month ago. People I knew. People everyone knew who grew up in Squirrel Hill. We
didn’t want to be famous. And no neighborhood wants to be famous for this. For
a hate crime, a mass murder, unexplainable pain the community forever has to
adjust to again, just like that day I walked home from 3rd grade in a daze.
We were friends with the Simons’. My parents knew
the Simon parents and they had four kids and we had four kids – and they had an
oldest girl and three boys just like we did and you know how things were back
in the days of civilized behavior, right? The cherished days before technology
and crazy took over and made all of us question the meaning of man. Computers
and crazy people have us all under control now. We have to undress, redress,
turn around, empty bags, and watch over our shoulders everywhere we are. (And do
bring something to wipe your feet off after inspection.)
We did holidays and vacations with the Simon family.
We ate at their house, they ate at ours. Bernice Simon was a kind woman, a
nurse, who spoke softly and kindly and I liked her just for that alone. Her
husband, Sylvan, also a soft soul, which at the time was not so fashionable for
a man. He liked to kid around, played with all of us kids and always had a
smile, something I still envy.
Shelly (Michelle) Simon was my friend for many years. Oddly, it was with Shelly that I went on my 1st cruise ever,
a Carnival cruise. I got sick and hated it and it would be a couple decades
before I found a peculiar calling to actually consider working on cruise ships,
albeit never again Carnival, by choice.
Anyway, we all grew and scattered, as families do, and lost
touch a long time ago. I moved to Florida, later, Atlanta.
Decades passed, I travel the world ... then the Tree of Life massacre put Squirrel Hill as
center of the Universe. I knew I would know someone. I just knew. I was fearful
like thousands of others, waiting for the names to be released. Then, waiting
for the photos.
They astonishingly looked exactly the same to me. Bernice and Sylvan Simon. A tad aged, older, wiser, wearier, but not one iota sweeter. Syl still had that same smile, Bernice still glowed; they still touched each other just as I always remembered they had, holding hands, always, always touching warmly in love – that’s what I still saw – sweet as ever. Like it was yesterday.
They astonishingly looked exactly the same to me. Bernice and Sylvan Simon. A tad aged, older, wiser, wearier, but not one iota sweeter. Syl still had that same smile, Bernice still glowed; they still touched each other just as I always remembered they had, holding hands, always, always touching warmly in love – that’s what I still saw – sweet as ever. Like it was yesterday.
But today, they’re gone. So are the brothers I knew.
The dear sweet brothers everybody at some time or another saw around Squirrel
Hill.
Anybody who ever grew up in Squirrel Hill lost
somebody they knew or knew somebody who lost somebody else.
To find anything to be grateful for in grace is the
hardest part of all. I guess that they went together, Bernice and Syl Simon… it’s
all I have to hang on to as far as grace. They always clung to one another and
God somehow made it that these beautiful people, parents and grandparents, were
able to cling their way on to whatever eternity awaits their souls stolen while in
prayer. They would not have made it alone and I thank God they left as they
lived, together and touching.
What I never appreciated at all was how lucky I was
to have grown up in a place like Squirrel Hill. I only always wanted out. Many
of us did. We wanted to be anyplace except Pittsburgh. To see the world. Make a
mark. To matter. A few stayed. It’s so different there now. The bakeries and delis
gone, dissolved into new demographics, pay to park everywhere, congestion,
confusion, modern mayhem.
But I can still walk up Murray and remember. I can turn onto Forbes, I can still savor
Mineo’s pizza, walk a few more blocks and after a week had passed last month, I
finally felt brave enough to do just that. I walked past the stores and
landmarks. Past a few streets and beautiful gardens in front of houses I’d seen
since I was a child. I walked to the Tree of Life Memorial that looks like so
many memorials we sadly see on TV every day, except this one is in my
neighborhood. Now it’s come home. And I’m not okay with that. Not one bit.
I didn’t appreciate the Squirrel Hill I had. And now
it’s gone. Everybody knows its name now.
Squirrel
Hill.
In loving memory of Bernice and Sylvan Simon
Just
Another Lori Story
Lori, A beautifully written story.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sarita.
DeleteTears in my eyes.
ReplyDeleteAs in mine. Thank you for reading and sharing.
DeleteThank you for sharing a beautiful story about two beautiful people that I loved and miss so much. And about our Squirrel Hill.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words. They were beautiful people, Bernice and Sylvan Simon. They are angels and together now.
DeleteI will forward this to Marc Simon.
ReplyDeleteVery kind. I appreciate that, and wish him peace and love.
DeleteSo perfectly, touchingly described
ReplyDeleteHow very kind. Thank you for reading.
DeleteI love this, Lori, but when you said, "We were Squirrel Hill. We also weren’t known anywhere else, weren’t popular ... or unpopular, for that matter – just a little unknown neighborhood secluded among parks, part of Pittsburgh, but with a distinct utterly unappreciated, at least by me, flavor", I thought, "No Way." I was brought home from Magee to Squirrel Hill, but ultimately I'm from the East End. Grew up across from HighlandPark. Went to Peabody. You Squirrel Hill kids were our envy and our role models. You were cool. You led the way, and you were anything but unknown and unpopular.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jane.
DeleteI grew up in Greenfield and we spent weekends in Squirrel Hill and later I lived and worked there. We all knew someone lost in the shooting. Squirrel Hill was like that, a small town in a big city. Great article. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
Delete"Going "upstreet". Funny, my mother used to use that term regarding Regent Square.
ReplyDeleteYes, very common colloquial Pittsburgh expression. Thanks for reading my story. ~Lori
DeleteJust a beautiful tribute Lori kudos
ReplyDeleteThank you very much. X
Delete