Saturday, May 07, 2005

MEMOIR: "Meeting My Boyhood Idol on Chowringhee"



Growing up in the Bronx during the 1930s, my intellectual life was dominated by sports. I lived within walking distance of Yankee Stadium so my friends and I had a primary interest in baseball. We could rattle off statistics about batting averages and pitching records and recite the starting lineups of every major league team with extraordinary precision. If we could have devoted such scholarly passion to our schoolwork we all would have been candidates for Ivy League college scholarships.
I stood out among my friends by being the only one who was not a Yankee fan. My team was the Detroit Tigers. One reason may have been that the Tigers won the World Series in 1934, the year in which my interest in Big League baseball began to blossom. My fellow 10-year old friends, probably embittered by the Yankees' failure to win the American League pennant that year, were obviously not as impressed by the Tigers' achievement as I was.
My loyalty to the Detroit Tigers was also based on the fact that my father had once worked on a Ford Motor Co. assembly line, providing me with a provincial link to the city of Detroit that no other kid on the block possessed.
But the over-riding factor in my emotional attachment to the Tigers was my worship of Hank Greenberg, the team's star first baseman. His photograph, along with such other Jewish athletic heroes as the lightweight boxing champ Barney Ross and famed football players Sid Luckman and Marshall Goldberg, covered the wall behind my bed, much to the displeasure of my pious grandmother with whom I shared the bedroom. She would have preferred a more conventional sign of my religious allegiance to Judaism.
My Uncle George had given me Greenberg's photo, which bore both Hank's signature and a personal endorsement to me, his adoring fan. The link between Hank Greenberg and my uncle was a business one. My uncle owned a small shop manufacturing men's suits. One stage in the manufacturing process is called "sponging," in which the fabric is prepared for tailoring. Hank Greenberg's father was a sponging contractor. My Uncle George was his customer.
As I entered my late teen years, my intellectual passion for baseball began to wane. Now I was struggling with a full-time job while attending college at night and awaiting my induction into the Army. And, of course, I had discovered girls. I was starting to lose interest in Hank Greenberg's batting average.
In April 1943 I was inducted into the Army. After nine months of training in bases in Florida and Missouri, I was shipped to India from Hampton Roads, Va. and landed in Bombay after a month-long voyage via Capetown, South Africa. For the next few months, I was shuttled from one U.S. military installation to another while the Army was presumably deciding where I could make the most valuable contribution to the war effort.
I was eventually assigned to the 903rd Signal Co., which was initially based near a leper colony operated by Catholic missionaries in the province of Bihar. We were later transferred to a vacant Bengali jute mill about 50 miles north of Calcutta that had been converted into a U.S. Army air depot.
During my travels across India I got to see more of the country than most natives. I visited the Taj Mahal in Agra; the pornograpic Hindu temples outside Madras; the holy Hindu city of Benares; the Towers of Silence outside Bombay, where the Parsis deposit their dead to feed the vultures; the caged prostitutes in Bombay's Red Light district; and enough other famous sites to fill a guide book to India.
But the most startling sighting for me occurred in Calcutta one day in April 1945 as I strolled down Chowringhee, the city's main boulevard, while on a weekend pass. For Calcutta, a city I visited often, Chowringhee had the municipal stature of New York's Fifth Ave. and Broadway combined, but with sanitation facilities not much more advanced that the Stone Age.
Walking alone on a street ahead of me was a tall Air Force officer. From a distance, he looked vaguely familiar. As he approached me, I was stunned to see that the officer was Hank Greenberg. He was now a captain in the 14th Air Force based in China and was visiting Calcutta on a furlough. We exchanged salutes, and he stopped to ask me for directions to some place whose identity I've forgotten. This was Greenberg's first visit to Calcutta. I apparently had the look of an old Calcutta hand.
After replying to his query, I confided that he had been my boyhood idol. He was charmed to hear that and was pleased to discuss his baseball career with me. He even recalled that his father, the sponging contractor, had once had him autograph a photo for a customer's nephew. He was delighted to learn that I was the nephew.
We conversed for about 15 minutes. The weather was brutally hot. In front of us as we talked was the Grand Hotel, which housed a club for British and American military officers. Greenberg was about to invite me to join him for a drink inside when he suddenly realized that I would be barred from entering because I was a mere staff sergeant and not an officer. He was clearly embarrassed by the matter of military rank and apologized. I told him that I was unconcerned and that I had been thrilled to meet him. But I said that the Bronx, our mutual home town, would have been a better setting than Chowringhee.
We exchanged salutes again, shook hands, and said our good-byes. "It was a pleasure to meet you," he said as we parted. During three years in the Army, no officer had ever said that to me. But then I had never met an officer who had been my boyhood idol.

3 Comments:

Blogger Observer said...

Ah, good story though considering where I originate, I could never understand or become interested in baseball. (Soccer is the game). Also, I take it that you have settled down, became organized and found the time to write back at your NJ home.

Ivan

Sunday, May 08, 2005 3:04:00 PM  
Blogger Observer said...

Mort:
You must have noticed that despite 55 years in this country my English grammar, style and sentence structure is all screwed up. It is too late to do anything about that. At 78 I am too lazy or comfortable to pull from the public library some of the many books dealing with the language, especially writing. But reading your e-mails and the various ruminations you post on your Octo blog made me very conscious of my shortcomings. It is the tenses where I am always unsure. In the language in which I was schooled as a kid there was no past perfect or past imperfect. Though there were other complications and rules, life was simple. There was a past, present and future. Finito. None of this incomprehensible 'she gave me' vs 'she had given me', just to mention an example.--- During our Montreal times, around 1959-1960 my wife was attending post-secondary evening classes. We still have from those years that famous old book: Strunk & White "The Elements of Style". I will go through it(only 71 pages), perhaps something will sink in. My brain does not seem to absorb new information, only what it picks up through my REPETITIVE fiddling with the computer. I might also re-read your posted stories and use them as a guide to improve my written English. --- The time stamp below is wrong, I am typing this around 8:45 PM.

Ivan

Thursday, May 12, 2005 7:45:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Can you only imagine that today a 10 year old Red Sox fan from South Boston who joins the Army at age 18 and gets shipped over to Iraq and runs into David Ortiz, Air Force Captain on furlough from Baghdad in Abu Dhabi? The poor and uneducated will be fighting America’s wars for the next generations.

Thursday, July 06, 2006 12:37:00 PM  

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