The Sacrificial Circumcision of the Bronx

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Authors: Arthur Nersesian

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BOOK: The Sacrificial Circumcision of the Bronx
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This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Published by Akashic Books
©2008 Arthur Nersesian

ePUB ISBN-13: 978-1-936-07051-0

ISBN-13: 978-1-933354-60-6
Library of Congress Control Number: 2008925941

Akashic Books
PO Box 1456
New York, NY 10009
[email protected]
www.akashicbooks.com

AUTHOR’S NOTE

The character of Paul Moses is a fiction, loosely built around a handful of facts as described in Robert A. Caro’s biography,
The Power Broker: Robert Moses and Fall of New York
(Vintage, 1974). The “Mkultra,” though fictionalized in this novel, was an actual series of science projects developed and financed by the CIA dealing largely with mind control; files related to it were destroyed by CIA Director Richard Helms in 1973.

Then the Lord said to Cain, “Where is Abel your brother?”

He said, “I do not know; am I my brother’s keeper?”

—Genesis, 4:9

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright Page

Author’s Note

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty One

Chapter Twenty Two

Chapter Twenty Three

Chapter Twenty Four

Chapter Twenty Five

Chapter Twenty Six

Chapter Twenty Seven

Chapter Twenty Eight

Chapter Twenty Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty One

Chapter Thirty Two

Chapter Thirty Three

Chapter Thirty Four

Chapter Thirty Five

Chapter Thirty Six

Chapter Thirty Seven

Chapter Thirty Eight

Chapter Thirty Nine

Chapter Forty

Chapter Forty One

Chapter Forty Two

Chapter Forty Three

Chapter Forty Four

Chapter Forty Five

Chapter Forty Six

Chapter Forty Seven

Chapter Forty Eight

Chapter Forty Nine

Chapter Fifty

Chapter Fifty One

1

P
aul had a tall skinny younger brother and a short shy sister. His mother, Bella, was an overbearing bull of a woman who despite everything always meant well. His father, meek and weak, was an utterly henpecked man. Robert, his brother, jumped when Mama spoke; since Paul was the eldest, the mantle therefore fell upon him to stand up to the Czarina Bella Cohen.

The first girl he ever loved was a stunning Jamaican named Maria who was about ten years older than him and always had a cigarette burning. Bella had seen how hardworking and honest Maria was at Madison House, the do-good organization, and hired her as a domestic. Young Paul couldn’t take his eyes off of Maria’s unbelievable curves. He was raised in turn-of-the-century affluence, with money from both sides of his family rushing in and swirling around him. His childhood was spent mostly up in New Haven, Connecticut, where the servants called him
Mr. Paul
and his younger brother
Mr. Robert
. He’d tell them to just call him Paul, but his brother was always Mr. Robert.

When Paul hit his teens, the flood of cash rushed the entire family through some subterranean pipeline, flushing them out into a plush new brownstone on 46th Street just off of Fifth Avenue. As he and his younger brother reached college age, their mother wanted them to go to Yale, their hometown university. Mr. Robert was glad to comply, but Paul found the old school stodgy and was looking for a more liberal education. Woodrow Wilson, the progressive, opinionated president of Princeton, had just announced that he was running for governor of New Jersey. This excited Paul to such a degree that the young man selected Princeton as his first choice.

When he got his letter of acceptance six weeks later, he tore open the envelope right at the dinner table and made the announcement. Though his father Emanuel seemed happy, Bella silently nodded her big head in dismay. By making a major decision for himself, Paul hoped to teach his younger brother that he didn’t have to be such a little mama’s boy. His father opened an expensive bottle of cabernet and made a toast. His mother just sat there. To further irritate her, Paul guzzled down several glasses of the wine as though it were water.

While the others at the table talked, Paul’s head began spinning from the wine and he had a strange daydream that he lay suspended, just floating in darkness. When he closed his eyes he felt as though he were submerged, bouncing along the sides of some kind of giant underwater conduit.

“Paul, what do you think?” asked his dad.

“I’m sorry, I wasn’t listening.”

Paul’s father suggested that he consider a career in banking or finance. Lightheaded, Paul pretended to listen as the alcohol just floated him along.

2

W
hile attending Princeton, Paul Moses had lofty ambitions of being either a scholar or statesman. During his freshman year, he hung out with young gentlemen who dressed in herringbone tweed and fussed over sybarite subtleties, such as unusual pipe tobacco and exotic teas. In his sophmore year, however, Paul decided that it was all just a competition of vanity that gave rise to legions of nancy boys and self-involved powder puffs. Soon, he dismissed the whole Ivy League as nothing more than an extension of European royalty, American aristocracy at its most pretentious.

During school breaks, nonetheless, he displayed his newly acquired sensibilities to his brother and sister, reciting French Symbolist poetry and discussing the latest advances in European art. Although Paul’s father was proud to hear his son’s growing sophistication, Bella rolled her eyes. Paul further enjoyed irking his mother by taking an active interest in the Zionist movement. Gradually, as he read more and more about how fellow Jews were being mistreated around the world, he became firm in the opinion that only when their people had the security of their own homeland would the persecution end.

“None of this would happen if they simply blended into the countries they’re living in,” Bella would say.

“But
we
are Jews,” Paul would shoot back. “Do other groups have to deny who they are?”

The Jewish settlements in Palestine occupying unpopulated lots in the desert gave hope toward a permanent homeland for all Jews. Paul’s other liberal sentiments were rooted more firmly in the plight of the working man, particularly as championed by Eugene Victor Debs and the Socialist Party of America. It was primarily for this reason that he joined the Democratic Reform Club, a leftist organization at the college. In a fit of zeal he soon accepted the nomination and ultimately the office of its presidency. Although the position didn’t offer many privileges, he did meet more girls.

What captivated him most about Millicent Sanchez-Rothschild was her strong, defiant face and cascades of shiny thick, black hair. He was delightfully surprised when he heard her explaining to another student why Oliver Wendell Holmes was the greatest juror who ever sat on the high court.

Millicent had just arrived from the University of Pennsylvania to hear a lecture that his club had organized. Williams Jennings Bryant, the Democratic presidential candidate of 1900, was giving a talk on how the Supreme Court was stonewalling labor reform.

After spending the majority of the evening talking with Millie, Paul asked her on a date.

“If you want to make the trip down to Philly, I’m all yours,” she replied.

He took the first train the following week. In Philadelphia, they spent the afternoon just chatting. Or rather, she talked and he listened. She was from a wealthy Sephardic Jewish family who had settled in Mexico City. Despite the fact that her parents were rich conservatives, she was very progressive in her views. Rights of the working man, socialism, the suffrage movement—they were in agreement about nearly everything.

Though Millie had many suitors, Paul continued seeing her throughout the semester, taking the train down from Princeton on weekends and holidays.

Over the next few months, she shared various aspects of Mexico—its history, its conquest by Cortéz, the destruction of the native culture by the Catholic Church. “The Mayans produced vast libraries that Bishop Diego de Landa ordered his priests to collect and burn in huge bonfires,” she explained, “though a few books survived as the Maya codices, preserving some record of their heritage.”

Millie’s family, which made its fortune in mining, had benefited greatly under the repeated presidential terms of Porfirio Díaz. Yet she was part of a consortium of young Latin compatriots studying in the United States who despised “El Presidente.”

Aside from her own desire for social justice, her beloved cousin, Pedro Martinez—her rebel mentor—was a prominent member of an anti-Díaz group. Following a national convention of various liberal clubs in 1901 and 1902, the Díaz regime arrested a group of their leaders—including her cousin—and suppressed their publications. When Pedro was finally released, he migrated to the United States along with other radicals and they unified as the Mexican Liberal Party. In 1906 they published a manifesto entitled
El Programa del Partido Liberal
calling for, among other things, guarantees of civil liberties, universal public education, land reform, and a one-term limit for all future Mexican presidents.

“How many times has Porfirio been elected?” Paul asked on one of his visits.

“Six, but last year he promised to retire at the end of this term, so we’re all waiting anxiously.”

Suddenly, Paul felt a strange jolt through his body and his knees buckled.

“You okay?” Millicent asked, taking his arm.

“I just feel a little light-headed,” he said, and when he closed his eyes and let her lead him, he felt once again as if he was submerged in warm liquid.

“Paul, what’s the matter?” Millie demanded, brushing his arm nervously.

“I’m sorry. I think I have a touch of the flu.”

3

D
uring spring break, Millicent joined Paul on a trip home to meet his family in New York. They arrived late in the afternoon and Millie found herself seated with Paul’s parents and siblings for a wonderful dinner. His sister Edna brought up a recent strike that had been in the news. Millie commented how the American government was behaving like a Pinkerton private security force for various robber barons. Paul’s mother Bella politely responded that things might be changing, as indicated by the fact that Teddy Roosevelt had been the first president to stand up to big business, ordering them to negotiate with labor unions during a major strike several years earlier.

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