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fter
the horrors of this past week, I am glad to have something to write
about which is not directly relevant to the attacks, yet which fits,
in a very small way, with the national mood.
The terrorist
attacks on the U.S. came, of course, on Tuesday, September 11th.
Nobody is going to forget that in a hurry. In the life of
the Derbyshire family, however, the previous Friday, September 7th,
was a day to remember too, for happier reasons. Shortly after 11
A.M. that Friday morning, my wife became a U.S. citizen by naturalization.
Rosie was born
in the city of Changsha, China, in 1962. We married in Jilin City,
northeast China, in August 1986, and she came to the U.S. that November.
Once the culture shock had worn off, she wanted to be American right
away. Of course, and quite properly, "right away" doesn't
happen; there are procedures to be gone through. She plowed doggedly
through all of them, applying for each change of status each
step closer to full citizenship the moment she could. Unlike
her husband: I am a lazy and dilatory person, with a great loathing
of paperwork of any kind. I shillied and shallied and put things
off, with the result that she was soon way ahead of me on the citizenship
track. I have since got my act together, and hope to attain citizenship
next year; but it was plain she was going to make it to the finishing
line first.
Make it she
did, and on the morning of the seventh we set out at 6 A.M. for
the federal court building in Brooklyn. The time of the oath ceremony
was given as 8 A.M. and Brooklyn is only a 45-minute drive away
in good conditions, but, said Rosie: "There's no way I'm going
to miss this!" We took the kids both citizens by birth
with us, to make a civics lesson out of it, and as we drove
down the Long Island Expressway, explained to them what it meant
that Mommy was to become an American. The six-year-old didn't quite
get it. In a slightly puzzled tone, he asked: "Does that mean
she won't be able to speak Chinese any more?"
The ceremony
itself was almost all anti-climax. There were 200 people in there
being processed. "Green cards" had to be turned in, identities
established, misunderstandings to be sorted out. Many of the latter
were linguistic: If there is still any requirement for new citizens
to be competent in English, it sure doesn't show. I watched one
applicant have an extremely simple instruction explained to him
by a court official at least five times, slower and more clearly
each time, as the applicant stood and listened with a blank expression
of complete incomprehension on his face, till a relative came up
and translated the instruction into Cantonese. The morning dragged
on: nine o'clock, nine-thirty, ten, ten-thirty. The six-year-old
was asleep. The eight-year-old was absorbed in Harry Potter.
The part that
was not anticlimax was, of course, the actual oath. It was administered
by a federal judge, a woman of Chinese origins herself, as she explained
in a pretty little speech to us beforehand. After the speech all
applicants took the oath. Again, the formalities of the oath-taking
seem not to be very rigorously enforced: I saw two people whose
lips did not move at all. Most, however, approached the thing with
grave solemnity, and there were some wet cheeks. After the oath
the new citizens all recited the Pledge of Allegiance. The sheet
containing the oath and the pledge also had the first verse of "The
Star-Spangled Banner." I assumed that we were going to sing
it, and had been clearing my throat in preparation. I love to sing,
so long as it is as a member of some crowd or congregation where
no-one can actually hear me. "The Star-Spangled Banner"
is an exceptionally fine song, and not at all as difficult as people
say, if you start off in the right register. However, I was disappointed.
There was no singing, I don't know why. I'd like to know
why what's the point of being a citizen if you have never
sung the National Anthem?
Afterwards
it was now mid-day we went for a celebratory lunch
at TGI Friday's, and Rosie and I indulged ourselves in some interesting
drinks, assuring each other that in a family restaurant like Friday's
there wouldn't be much alcohol in the drinks. This proved to be
a misjudgment, and the rest of that day is sort of blurred.
Saturday, however,
was our street's block party. Among our many other blessings, we
have terrific neighbors not just a couple but a whole street-full,
the majority young couples with kids, like us. Barriers were put
up, the kids all got their bikes and scooters out, trestle tables
were filled with food, and the local fire truck came to visit. Then,
the neighbors having got wind of Rosie's naturalization, they held
a little ceremony of their own to welcome her to America. At this
point I must admit that even I myself teared up. Are there any other
people like Americans? None that I've found. There was a cake, iced
to look like Old Glory, and gifts, and cards of congratulation,
and a bunch of stars-and-stripes helium balloons. The deejay played
"This Land is Your Land." (That was my doing; everything
else was our neighbors', bless them all.)
We tied the
helium balloons to our mailbox. Sunday morning was damp, and under
the weight of condensed moisture, the balloons had sunk to the ground
when I went for my newspaper at seven. I untied them and took them
inside, explaining to Rosie how heinous it is to let Old Glory touch
the ground. I myself have a lot to learn about America (a whole
lot, according to my more critical readers) and so does she; but
that's part of the joy of the thing, filling in the gaps in each
other's knowledge like this, sharing what we learn, passing it on
to the kids.
Rosie, this
land is your land, if not yet my land. Knowing you, I know you'll
cherish your new country, and struggle to be worthy of her. As America
has walked through the valley of the shadow of death these past
few days, I have watched you walking proudly with her, adding your
tears to her tears, making her grief your grief, her anger your
anger. We can't say truthfully that this was a very strenuous test
of your new patriotism: Your involvement was only to watch the horror
on TV and take the phone calls from anxious relatives. You felt
it deeply, though, I could see that; not just for the humanity,
but for the insult to your country. It's been a memorable baptism.
You start out your life as an American knowing that, as lovable
as this country might seem to you, it is an abomination in the eyes
of others: knowing that, in the midst of all our silly hedonism,
we can suddenly be called to sacrifice, like the heroes is
there any reason they should not be awarded plots in one of the
national cemeteries? who took on the hijackers of Flight
93: knowing that being an American citizen can carry a terribly
high price.
Well, those
are not bad lessons to learn starting out. Your Dad was a soldier,
who fought for his country in Korea. He gave you a Chinese name
meaning "red rose" because he foresaw, correctly, that
you would be beautiful, but equipped with sharp thorns to present
to any enemy fool enough to approach you. I know he taught you the
soldierly virtues. God forbid you should ever have to pay that ultimate
price for your citizenship, Rosie: but if you have to, I know you
will, bravely and without flinching, like a soldier like
an American!
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