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	<title>WemonAde.com &#187; Jeannette</title>
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	<description>When Life Gives You...</description>
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		<title>Broken Birds &#8211; Grown Children Of Holocaust Survivors</title>
		<link>http://wemonade.com/generations/baby-boomers/broken-birds-grown-children-of-holocaust-survivors/</link>
		<comments>http://wemonade.com/generations/baby-boomers/broken-birds-grown-children-of-holocaust-survivors/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2009 22:31:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeannette</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Baby Boomers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[memories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[novels]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://wemonade.com/?p=248</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What would you do if your mother unexpectedly died, and left the family residence not divided up equally amongst her five children but entirely to a single child? You may say, Well it&#8217;s her money and she can leave it to anyone she likes. But is that how you would you feel down deep inside? ...


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What would you do if your mother unexpectedly died, and left the family<br />
residence not divided up equally amongst her five children but entirely to a<br />
single child? You may say, Well it&#8217;s her money and she can leave it to<br />
anyone she likes. But is that how you would you feel down deep inside? You&#8217;d<br />
been a loyal, attentive son or daughter. You called every day. You were<br />
there at their beck and call whenever she needed anything. But, in the end,<br />
that parent&#8217;s final message to you is I liked him better. People will tell<br />
you that that isn&#8217;t how it was meant, but that&#8217;s nevertheless how it feels.<br />
.<br />
My Mom died four and a half years ago. All too soon after her death, her<br />
widowed husband of fifty-four years and five children found themselves<br />
seated in the attorney&#8217;s office to hear Mom&#8217;s will read aloud. We all had a<br />
hunch there might be trouble found in Mom&#8217;s Last Will and Testament, but we<br />
were nevertheless shocked. Mom had bypassed Dad altogether and given the<br />
title of the family home to my brother.<br />
.<br />
It would take four grueling years to complete the battle for that house.<br />
During that time I realized how much she had buffered the five of us from<br />
each other when she was alive. Once she was gone, it took little time for<br />
this family, which she had once held together with the force of Jewish<br />
guilt, to splinter and fracture irrevocably.<br />
.<br />
In my fifty years of life Mom had taught me many life truths. It took a<br />
long time for me to understand that many of her ideas/truths/ways of looking<br />
at the world weren&#8217;t true at all. My fingers could barely type as fast as<br />
the words were coming to me and it took many many drafts to get the anger<br />
out.<br />
.<br />
Jewish or Gentile, <span id="lw_1238365395_0" class="yshortcuts">Black or White</span> as we Boomers age, many of us will head<br />
down the road to Inheritance hell. It isn&#8217;t about greed. It is about justice<br />
– and about feeling like our presence and contributions to family life<br />
have counted for something over the years.<br />
.<br />
&#8220;Broken Birds, The Story of my Momila&#8221; is the story of my journey. It<br />
explores <span id="lw_1238365395_1" class="yshortcuts">parent child relationships</span> and <span id="lw_1238365395_2" class="yshortcuts">sibling rivalries</span>, and how, after<br />
fifty years, some things just don&#8217;t change. I discovered some of my own<br />
truths and for me it was better late than never.  To view an excerpt please<br />
visit: <a href="http://www.brokenbirds.com/" target="_blank"><span id="lw_1238365395_3" class="yshortcuts"><span style="color: #003399;">www.BrokenBirds.com</span></span></a>.</p>


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