My new family exists in cyberspace.
They are not Facebook friends,
Or acquaintances I manage on MySpace,
But the genetic links a cousin
in London 
who has no children 
of her own discovered in her search
for a longer lifeline.
Except for Aunt Betty and Uncle Don,
and their three children, we lost touch
with my mother’s side long ago.
After my grandparents and great uncle
Died one after another in the early ‘50s,
Two cousins in London 
and another
In Alabama 
were all we thought
Remained on my father’s side –
But for one who was said to have come
to New Jersey 
in the ‘30s
and made a fortune as a profiteer.
Until this chain of strangers
Came to be, that is.
I’d not recognize any of them
were we to pass one another
walking our dogs on a quiet street,
walking our dogs on a quiet street,
even if we stopped to chat a bit 
about pets, politics or the weather.
I went with my son to the Holocaust  Museum 
In Washington 
a few years ago
And discovered the Hungarian town “Foldes”
Was one of several on the map
Of “disappeared” villages, confirming
What I’d always known --
That we are the last of the last.
An Hungarian I met in Greece  
Who is from the same industrial city
My father was born in said 
he didn’t know there were any Jews 
in Miskolc .
“That’s because they died in the camps.”
“Oh, I’m sorry,” he said. 
I am, too.
Then the e-mails began arriving
That the childless London 
cousin
had tracked down the profiteer’s family.
One after another, new names and faces
were added to the tree on Geni.
I watched the leaves grow – and wondered, 
“Who are these people?”
“What do they mean to me?” 
Really, we have nothing in common.
Really, we have nothing in common.
We did not grow up playing at the beach,
Hunting, fishing, or hiking together.
Our parents did not play pinochle, canasta
Or bridge past midnight, slapping cards
Onto the picnic table at the Brogue camp
On Great 
 Sacandaga  Lake 
Our children were not invited
To their birthday parties, nor they
To ours. We did not exchange cards
On holidays, attend weddings, 
Break bread at the same table,
Toast our elders on their 80th birthdays,
Share our grief at funerals.
The London 
cousin catalyzed 
A clan whose whereabouts
is bittersweet. Now we share memories
of events that could have happened
but never did, and see the meeting
of parallel lines
That solely exists in cyberspace.
MRF
11/22/09
This poem has been published in the print edition of the Patterson Literary Review, Volume 40
This poem has been published in the print edition of the Patterson Literary Review, Volume 40
Mike Foldes is the founder and managing editor of Ragazine, an online literary magazine.
editor@ ragazine.cc 
http://ragazine.cc
ragazinecc/Twitter
ragazineccblogging@blogspot.com
Join Mike on MySpace & Facebook
Mike is also the author of Sleeping Dogs, A true story of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping
Download at www.Smashwords.Com and www.Amazon.Com
Purchase the paperback at www.splitoakpress.com
* * *
http://ragazine.cc
ragazinecc/Twitter
ragazineccblogging@blogspot.com
Join Mike on MySpace & Facebook
Mike is also the author of Sleeping Dogs, A true story of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping
Download at www.Smashwords.Com and www.Amazon.Com
Purchase the paperback at www.splitoakpress.com
* * *
 
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