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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

EndNotes

Symbols of life and love

A loaf of challah bread, a traditional Jewish egg bread woven with several long pieces of dough, cools after being removed from an oven at Temple Beth Shalom.  (Photos by Jesse Tinsley / The Spokesman-Review)
A loaf of challah bread, a traditional Jewish egg bread woven with several long pieces of dough, cools after being removed from an oven at Temple Beth Shalom. (Photos by Jesse Tinsley / The Spokesman-Review)

My grandma used to say, “I have never seen a hearse with a U-Haul behind it!” That statement was grandma’s way of saying that you can’t take your stuff with you to the afterlife.

 However, our possessions can represent what does matter: family, relationships and a time in our lives that is treasured. 

Such treasures were recently returned to a survivor of the Nazi death camps. Lovely dishes from Ada van Dam’s family in Amsterdam, where she grew up, were recently returned to her. Ada lost her family to Auschwitz, but she survived.

 And now, thanks to the remarkable kindness and effort of Ada’s former neighbor, Ada has dishes from her childhood family, dishes that represent the family life she enjoyed as a child, dishes from her Sabbath table. And she has love from long-ago neighbors. Love that follows us from this life – to the next.

(S-R archives photo)



Spokesman-Review features writer Rebecca Nappi, along with writer Catherine Johnston of Olympia, Wash., discuss here issues facing aging boomers, seniors and those experiencing serious illness, dying, death and other forms of loss.