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When I was in
high school, my mom was more into my dad being Jewish than he was. We would
celebrate the holidays – like my mom would go out and buy the menorah and the
candles for it. And buy gefilte fish and things like that. My dad just sorta
went along with it.
But one time we were in a store looking for shoes, and I
wanted the Doc Martens. They were really popular at the time. They were black
boots laced up real high.
And my dad refused to buy them for me, walked out of
the store, and I followed after him and I was like Dad, what's going on? He
just *turned on me* and he said 'Those are the shoes that are used to kick my
people to death.' And that was the first time I ever saw my dad associate with
being Jewish at all and it scared me and I dropped the subject and I never
spoke of the shoes again. I just thought they were shoes.
"Poles are Inherently Comic
Janitors" Bieganski Interview # 2
"My Father Began to Conceal His
Jewish Origins" Bieganski Interview # 3
They Worked Like Moles Their Whole Lives
Bieganski Interview # 4
"She Never, and I Mean Never, Threw
Anything Away" Bieganski Interview # 5
"They Always Kept One Token
Jew" Bieganski Interview # 6
"White Privilege? I Laugh"
Bieganski Interview # 7
"Stalin Died and I Was Set
Free" #8
"The Jew is Clever. The Pole is
Obnoxious, Loud, and Stupid." #9
"My Grandfather Let Anastasia
Escape" #10
"I Have Always Been Afraid to Get
Close to Any 'Real' Jews"# 12
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Bieganski the Blog exists to further explore the themes of the book Bieganski the Brute Polak Stereotype, Its Role in Polish-Jewish Relations and American Popular Culture.
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