My father was, as I have often
told you, a dentist, that is, a doctor of dental surgery, DDS. He had wanted to be the other kind of doctor,
the medical doctor, MD, but it was the 1929 Depression and his family could not
afford the fees. Later he admired me
when I became a doctor, the really different kind, the PhD. But all that is another story or maybe
two. Now I want to tell you about some
of the strange dental conundrums and medical labyrinths he had to get in and
then out of, or as far as I can remember.
Sometimes such
dilemmas were simple enough, which is to say, they had two horns and he had to
choose one or the other. For instance,
an elderly rabbi would come in to have a check-up or to assuage a throbbingly
inflamed toothache. The religious
gentleman came in properly on a Sunday morning, take his seat in the chair
which could be raised and lowered with a pedal by my father, fold his hands on
his lap and wait for the examination and treatment to begin. Whether he said a blessing quietly to himself
or not was none of my father’s concern.
What did matter was this. A
dentist must place a small white cloth around the patient’s neck and over his
or her chest to protect the clothing from splashing liquids used in the ensuing
operation and the minute fragments of tooth or silver filling churned up by the
drill. But as my father meticulously
reached around to secure this bib with two small metal clips on a chain, he
suddenly realized that there were two ways he could perform this procedure:
either he could place the protective cloth over the rabbi’s beard and thus
shield it from the debris of dental surgery or he could tuck the cloth under
the lengthy grey beard of the talmudic sage and preserve the gentleman’s
dignity and prestige.
Should he, that is,
my father, as the scientific expert, a mayven here, in charge of the
surgery hide the beard and thus neutralize the rabbi’s distinctive mark of age
and wisdom by enhancing the neutrality of his appearance while the operation
went on, the patient becoming in this way a man like other men; or should he,
again my father, not only a dentist, a doctor with a speciality in oral hygiene
and dental surgery, but also a respectable and respectful member of the Jewish
community, a member of the local synagogue, and a regular and generous donor to Jewish charities, including
the Jewish National Fund and the Anti-Defamation League—should he therefore
place the bib under the beard and then take special precautions to keep the
symbol of mitzvah-performing, kosher-keeping and shabbas-guarding as
clean as possible? Would this last
choice compromise his professional standing and his deepest adherence to the
scientific principles he had imbibed during his university career? Would, on the other hand, the first choice,
though normal for other patients, yet not necessary for the actual examination
or treatment, be a gratuitous insult, a slur and a slander against the
essential talmudic principles of respect for the learned, the wise and the
elderly?
As he pondered this
dilemma, on the one hand this, on the other that, but what about such and such
a protocol and what about the other codes of practice and deportment, my father
grew more agitated, his hands began to tremble, and he wondered whether or not
he would actually be able to carry out the necessary procedures of his
calling.
At which point,
perhaps intuiting from the dentist’s hesitation and nervousness, marked no
doubt by changes in his facial expression and wavering or shukeling of
his body, the sanitary white cloth moving here and there and back and forth in
relation to the patient’s neck and chest, the rabbi spoke: “Nu?” he
said, this one Yiddish expression carrying thousands of years of cultural
baggage and talmudic knowledge.
To which my father,
trying to seem as poised and professional as possible, responded: “Over or
under?” The sage seemed to grasp at once
the nature of the ethical problem, quickly mulled it over in his mind, running
through all the permutations and combinations of analogy and linguistic
enhancement that midrashic argumentation would allow, and then hastily
responded, “So do what you have to do, epis.” Shocked into action by the cutting logic of
this solution to the dilemma, my father stood up tall, and, according to both
his inherited ethnic moral code and his licensed scientific principles, he did
what he had to do.
A second perplexing
problem he had to solve was one in which he required the advice, aid, and
cooperation of his life-long friend and professional colleague, the doctor—the
medical kind—who had delivered me in 1940 and who, outliving my father by many
decades, continued to be a researcher and philosopher of medicine until well
into his nineties. The scientific
problem was that when my father began to examine the pains complained about by
a certain patient and took the necessary x-rays to discover the source of the
aches he discovered something that he had never encountered before. What is that? you may well ask. It was that a particular tooth, a molar, if
you want to know more precisely, had for some unknown reason at the age when
adult teeth begin to erupt, thus pushing out the milk or baby teeth of a child
instead of travelling downwards had begun to move upwards. After several years, when the boy had already
turned into a youth and was beginning to transform into a young man, he first
experienced a discomfort, or finally realized that the intensity of the pain
was becoming unbearable, and hence needed to find some relief from a dentist, a
person which aroused in him a dread usually greater than the feelings of agony
in his teeth. What the x-ray revealed
was that this unusual upwards direction of growth was leading the tooth
directly into the nasal cavity. My
father found this so unusual that he asked the patient to return as soon as
possible in order to take another series of roentgen pictures to make sure that
he was seeing what he could almost not believe was there, namely, a molar about
to erupt inside a person’s nose.
The second round of
x-rays confirming this situation, my father telephoned his old friend and
colleague, my Uncle Joe the Surgeon, and asked that the next time he came to the
house—which was usually every evening, since Uncle Joe was still a bachelor and
sought both long evening meals and social conversations in our kitchen virtually
every night of the week—to consult with him, as he had, in my father’s
meticulous and articulatory words, “a most interesting phenomenon” to share
with him. After enjoying the generous
foods laid out on the table by my mother consisting both of left-overs from
lunch and dinner that day plus the assorted cold cuts, drinks, pickles, and
breads brought in by other regulars—although neither Siggy nor Arthur or any of
the others came seven nights a week like Uncle Joe—the two medical
professionals began to discuss the phenomenon, my father having brought in two
sets of x-rays on hand-held racks, and to grow increasingly excited by what
they were seeing and what they were saying as well. The more they talked, the more they began to
formulate a plan, and the plan pleased them increasingly because it would
involve the two of them working together, first, to describe the way in which
the tooth had failed to erupt in its normal downward trajectory and instead to
turn itself around and impel itself into the patient’s nasal cavity; second, to
search the medical textbooks for any precedents to this phenomenon and
consequently any interventions practiced by other men of science to extract
this wandering tooth, whether, that is, to go in through the mouth, in which
case my father, as the dental surgeon would be the primary actor in the joint
venture, or through the nose, in which case Uncle Joe, as the surgeon proper,
would be in charge of the operation, the decision made thus also determining
whether the procedure would occur in a dentist’s office or in a hospital; and
third, to consider how they would write up their findings and formulate their
treatment in preparation for publishing a co-authored study in a scientific
journals, the same questions as to the name of the lead author and the kind of
journal resting on their agreement finally as to whether this was a dental or a
surgical operation.
Neither of these
gentlemen, my father or Uncle Joe, despite their excitement and joy at the idea
of working together on such an interesting case, could recognize or understand,
either at the beginning of their discussions or in later years when they
recounted this story to friends and colleagues, the humor of the
phenomenon. When other friends sitting
around my mother’s kitchen table listened to them speak, they laughed aloud,
and several found their wit stimulated to make a large number of puns, jokes,
and other witty remarks, emphasizing the grotesqueness of the image conjured up
of a tooth making its appearance in a person’s nose.
In the event, though
I don’t recall any of the details and the conclusion itself is hardly more than
a blur in my memory, the operation to remove the miswandering tooth happened in
a local hospital, Israel Zion on Fort Hamilton Parkway (now known as Maimonides
Medical Center), not too far from where
my grandmother used to live before she moved in with us just a year and a half
before she died, and because of this all the options that were once possible
reduced themselves to those that favored Uncle Joe’s career and not my
father’s; and whether or not a learned publication resulted I do not know, but
I know for sure that my father never spoke of one and thus, if it did get
written up, his input was minimal at best and his name on the title page most
unlikely.
And so we come to
the third problem in my father’s career as a dentist. Having gone into the army late in the Second
World War—because he assumed his age—already past thirty—and my birth in 1940
would mitigate against his being drafted, he was nevertheless given a not very
subtle choice between waiting for the conscription to active duty as an
ordinary soldier to come, as they increasingly did amongst older, married men
with one child or volunteering for service and gaining a commission as a dentist—he
missed out on the opportunity taken by other dentists of using whatever
influence they had to stay home and develop their careers.
Similarly, thanks to
his transfer from the European theatre of operations to the Pacific shortly
after VE Day—his was, he always told me with a somewhat ironical glint in his
eye, the last troopship to go through the Panama Canal on this mission—he did
not return to Brooklyn until well into the American occupation of Japan in late
1946, and thus also lost the second opportunity that those dentists who came
home soon had of picking up the threads of their practice and grasp the special
favors that were offered to those young men willing and able to take part in
the move of populations from New York City proper to the new suburbs on Long
Island and in New Jersey. Hence,
following his return home, the purchase of a big three-storey house on 47th
Street between 13th and 14th Avenue, the birth of my
sister in April 1947, the death of my mother’s mother shortly thereafter, and
other minor failures and frustrations in his life, not least my mother’s
deepening illness—her own depression after the disappearance of her brother in
Pearl Harbour, the death of both her parents, the growing awareness of what the
not yet named Holocaust meant to any relatives caught up in it during the War:
hence, my father decided early in 1950 he ought to rejoin the army and began
seriously to negotiate a deal whereby he would become a major and do his
dentistry where and how the heads of the recently renamed War Department as the
Department of Defence deemed necessary.
He was scheduled to
appear for induction in late June of 1950, but following the invasion of South
Korea by the armies of the communist regime to the north on the 25th
of that month, his own intellectual reluctance to become a military man was
exacerbated by my mother’s hysterical declarations that he was crazy, he
must want to kill her, and this mishagas
would ruin the lives of his two children if he went into the army again. Naturally, as a child I was unaware of these
negotiations and could only feel the mounting tensions in the house, and could
not understand the tears, the screams, the banging of doors and other visible
and audible signs of this traumatic occasion.
It seemed, at one point, that the world had come to an end. My gentle, peaceful, patient, and articulate
father walked into the kitchen from the front of the house where he had his
dental rooms, and as soon as he poked his head in to ask what was to eat, my
mother began one of her speeches on the foolishness and danger of his negotiations
with the military. I could see him turn red, turn around and around a few
times, walk to the coat-rack in the hallway, grab his hat, walk into the
kitchen, and throw this hat on the floor.
I had never seen such violence before in my life. My mother went silent,
sat down, and started to feed my baby sister. The next morning, when my father
was supposed to report to the local army headquarters, the newspapers were full
of the news of the invasion of South Korea by a vast and ominous Communist army
from the north. My father did not report
for duty.
I never knew these stories, very interesting, thank you.
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