by Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz
My father’s name is Kantrowitz. He changed it to Kaye in 1942.
At the dyke bar in Portland I tell my best Jewish friend that I’m thinking about taking back my mother’s maiden name. “Kaye is a made up name,” I say, “It has no history.” Amy, historian, tells me, “Just because a history isn’t pretty doesn’t mean it isn’t history.”
Kaye is both history and closet. History is a kind of closet. Kaye is Kantrowitz Kaminsky Keminetsky Kowalsky Klutz Korelowich Ka… (think about asking every Jew you know: what was your name?)
adopted from Nice Jewish Girls: A Lesbian Anthology
by Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz
poetry by Zelda
by Rabbi Leila Gal Berner
by Seena Candy Sweet
by Karen Alkalay-Gut
by Phyllis Pacheco
by Esther Gerstenfeld Radick
by Ann Klaff Lontein
by Rabbi Zeise Wild Wolf
by Rachel S. Havrelock
by Sophia Batsheva Rosenberg
by Maxine Silverman
by Mara Benjamin
by Troim Katz-Blacker Handler
by Sylvia Rothchild
by Kiera Aviya Koester