IF ONLY MY NAME HAD BEEN NICHOLAS
I wouldn’t have been
such a scared kid.
If my name had been
something, — anything,
just not Milton,
an alien name,
a yellow star of David.
How could it not catch
the eye of toothless oafs
who hoisted me up
in the air in 1936?
My 6 year-old legs
fluttered in the air,
wordless, — when
they demanded
to know: “Are you a Jew?”
My bruised mouth stuttered
to utter: “I’m a Greek,”
Hoping against hope,
I could pass for Christian,
and maybe Greek.
They wore swastika armbands,
forced me to salute Hitler
with a shout of Sieg Heil!
Father wanted to call me Nicholas,
but Mother preferred Mordecai,
after her beloved grandfather,
I could have been a tough kid
with a name like Nick,
and might have become a pal
of Tony, Frankie and Luigi,
instead of hanging out
with Hebrew School classmates,
Marvin, Norman and Howard.