Sundays with Kate Smith
I could hear Mama’s large knife slicing
the thick roll of thin soup noodle dough
long before I got out of bed. She cut
as she sang with the radio on a ledge above
the Formica table while chunks of chicken,
celery, carrots, tomatoes, and potatoes
swam in the large pot on the stove.
When the slicing stopped, I pretended to sleep,
as Mama came into my bedroom, and whispered
“Wake up, angel, time to get ready for church.”
After helping me dress, we joined Papa for breakfast,
then turned off the stove, sprinkled flour on the noodles
to keep them from sticking together, and drove
to the Hungarian Mass at St. Stephen’s church.
Home again, the war child born in the year
of Pearl Harbour, helped Papa set the table in 1948
as Mama slipped her apron over her head and turned
on the radio to hear Kate Smith’s “Hello Everybody.”
Kate’s strong contralto was the final spice in the aromas
filling the kitchen as Mama gently stirred the soup
since Hungarians believed a woman’s cooking skill
could be judged by the clarity of her chicken broth.
After a few minutes, Mama turned off the stove
beneath the simmering noodles and drained them
as Papa and I danced to “When the Moon Comes
Over the Mountain” until he grabbed Mama, twirling
her around the room until she begged to finish cooking.
The “First Lady of Radio” who never had a music lesson
but recorded over 3,000 songs, six hundred of which
made the Hit Parade, sang on as Mama filled three bowls
with the clear soup and noodles as we took our places.
We said grace in Hungarian, after which Papa added
ketchup to his chicken soup, making it look like paprika.
As Mama cleared away the empty bowls, Papa and I
pretended to fight over the chicken neck we both loved
and finally shared with ketchup and the vegetables.
Fruit crepes topped with powdered sugar ended the meal
as we anxiously waited for the finale when Kate always sang
“God Bless America” written by Irving Berlin before the war.
As it neared, we stood, and Mama and Papa took their places
on either side of me. We put our hands over our hearts
as if the radio was the American flag and tears ran down
my parents’ cheeks as they sang in their Hungarian accents:
“God bless America, land that I love.
Stand beside her and guide her
Through the night with the light from above.”
Kate Smith always ended the hour-long show with
“Thanks for listening” but we were the grateful ones.
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