2006-11-04 - Canyon Kids-Shimon Camiel |
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through the canyons of memory jewishsightseeing.com,
November 4 2006 |
SAN DIEGO —
Shimon Camiel’s
newest book, The Canyon Kids, will
make any reader laugh out loud. It’s a World War II-era cross between The
Catcher in the Rye and “Spanky and Our Gang,” with as polyglot a group
of children as that presented in the old television series. Jews, Mexicans,
Italians, and until they were taken away, Japanese kids, among others, romp
together in a true San Diego setting. The
book is more truth than fiction, but with names sometimes changed or omitted
because Camiel alternatively didn’t want to embarrass anyone or didn’t
want to be a defendant in a libel suit. The
Canyon Kids tells
the stories of elementary school-aged boys and girls in central San Diego
learning about life, and more or less peacefully learning about each other —
even as adults were getting themselves killed and the world was being torn
apart. Filled
with local color, the book takes you into such venues as the canyons near
Camiel’s North Park-area home, to local movie theatres, to the beach, and
down the block as youngsters are confronted by life and put their own humorous
interpretations on what they see. A
lot of the real people whose lives were the bases of many of the stories
gathered on Oct. 21, in the Morley Field area of Balboa Park — near the
scene of many of their youthful high-jinxes — to celebrate the publication
of the book, Camiel’s third. At a picnic, many of the 70 in attendance
laughingly “denied” almost everything that Camiel wrote. Normally,
such a reunion would be a time for unmitigated joy, but in fact this occasion
— coinciding with Camiel’s 70th birthday — had its poignancy.
As he has made public on other occasions — and most recently in a story in
which he was pictured in the San Diego
Union-Tribune — Camiel has been afflicted with Alzheimer’s Disease. He
still has good long-term memory, and how he grinned and bantered with speakers
at the celebration, when they told the stories of their mutual pasts. But
Alzheimer’s has robbed Camiel of his short-term memory, and things that once
were easy for him — recalling names of someone he has just met, writing with
a pen — now are major chores. Although
Camiel had changed his first name to “Shimon” during a period of his life
when he lived in Israel, for many who attended Jefferson Elementary School
with him, it was hard not to use the name “Stanton” by which he had been
known. Camiel’s
wife, Joyce Glassman Camiel, who orchestrated the celebration, noted that she
and Shimon had decided to go public with the story of his condition in the
hope that it might encourage friends, relatives, and the general public to
contribute to the San Diego chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, which
shares a building at 4950 Murphy Canyon Road, San Diego, CA 92123 with the
United Jewish Federation. Everyone
seemed to have a favorite story from the book, and that was true of me as
well. Mine was “Stalingrad: 1942” that I excerpt here with permission: *
* * Stanton,
Billy, Buddy, Don, Sophie, Lorenzo, Bob Cohen and Hannibal (recently renamed
Hank) decided to wage the battle of Stalingrad in a place called Switzer
Canyon. Their route passed through the small Dale Street canyon and then into
the pitch-darkness of a drainage system. From there, with a few twists and
turns, they arrived in bright daylight into Switzer Canyon. At
first, the kids looked around for bad tough guys in the Canyon. But the coast
was clear…. They
drew straws to determine who would be the allies and the enemy for the day.
Everyone agreed that the good-guys should be the Soviet Army and the bad guys
should be the Nazis. “Jesus,”
said Bob, “How can I be a Nazi? I’m Jewish!” “Never
mind,” said Stanton. “You can be a Soviet guy posing as a Nazi.” Sophie
played the role of the Greek nurse in charge of casualties, for both sides of
the conflict. It
was a perfect day for a war. The battle zone chock full of tall weeds,
eucalyptus trees, pepper trees, mounds of dirt, anis plants swarming with fat
caterpillars, battered construction material, mysterious empty bottles, mounds
of river stones, wild horseradish bushes, wild mustard, dried dung, ice plant,
empty beer cans, garter snakes, a few coyotes, shy foxes, skunks slumbering in
their dark holes and trash. What more could a kid want? The
main sources of ammunition for this war were comprised of dirt clods, river
stones and trash. She
took her gawky figure over to a nearby pile of rocks under a eucalyptus tree.
This would be the aid station. She also carried a stolen roll of toilet paper
— filched from her parents’ bathroom to simulate bandages. Hank
led his troops in the direction of the nearby municipal golf course —
stopping a few times to line his troops up for a “Heil Hitler.” Then the
German contingent disappeared into the brush. “Hit the dirt, comraden!”
Hank commanded. “Unt ve fire off our first salvo.” A
river stone fell from the direction of the Soviet army but bounced harmlessly
out of range. The
good guys — the Russian army — spent the next few minutes stacking up more
ammunition. Bob
thought it would be a good idea to capture Sophie and use her as a hostage in
case the initial plan didn’t work. If it didn’t work the boys could at
least torture her to get some information. But
just then, Buddy noticed a black widow spider on the back of the cardboard. “Let’s
get out of here,” hollered Hank as the terrified boys fled to a shadowy
clump of wild horseradish, where they discussed alternative strategies. “Look
at that, comarades,” said Stanton, peering over at the Germans. “What
iz?” asked Hank, adding a touch of Russian jargon. “Look
at that bush over there, comrade.” A
bare butt poked brazenly out from the German lines. “Sophie!”
Stanton yelled, “Don’t look over there. It’s too horrible!” The
fearless Sophie was not to be intimidated. After a long look at the obscene
posterior, she picked up a river stone, raised her mighty arm, and fired the
missile into the enemy bushes. “Bulls
eye,” proclaimed Hank looking through his imaginary glasses. “Ouch,”
hollered Buddy, “no fair.” “Why
not?” she yelled back. “You’re
supposed to be neutral”
“We have an injured soldier here,” hollered Buddy.
“Who is it?” Sophie shouted.
“It’s me, Buddy, from behind the German lines.”
“Where are you hit?” asked Sophie, suspiciously.
“You know where. I need first aid.”
Sophie cackled.
“Not in a million years,” said Sophie as she fired another dirt
clod into the German lines … *
* *
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