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Samuel returns to his native village after a long separation from his parents. He comes with a bag full of dreams, but....
The village of Lentshin was tiny. It was surrounded by little huts with thatched roofs or shingles green with moss. The chimneys looked like pots. Between the huts there were fields, where the owners planted vegetables or pastured their goats.
In the smallest of these huts lived old Berl, a man in his eighties and his wife Berlcha*[ *She is called Berlcha as she is the wife of Berl.
].He was short, broad-shouldered and had a small white beard. In summer and winter he wore a sheepskin hat, a padded cotton jacket and stout boots. He had half an acre of field
newport cigarettes, a cow, ago at and chickens.
The couple had a son, Samuel, who had gone to America forty years ago. It was said in Lentshin that he became a millionaire there. Every month, the Lentshin letter carrier brought old Berl a money order and a letter that no one could read because many of the words were English. How much money Samuel sent his parents remained a secret. They never seemed to use the money. What for? The garden, the cow and the goat provided most of their needs. Besides
marlboro cigarettes with stamp, Berlcha sold chickens and eggs and from these there was enough to buy flour for bread.
No one cared to know where Berl kept the money his son sent him. There were no thieves in Lentshin. The hut consisted of one room which contained all their belongings: the table, the shelf for meat, the shelf for milk foods, the two beds and the clay oven. Sometimes the chickens roosted in the woodshed and sometimes
good luck (53), when it was cold
newport menthol cigarettes, in a coop near the oven. The goat, too, found shelter inside when the weather was bad. The more prosperous villagers had kerosene lamps, but Berl and his wife did not believe in new gadgets. Only for the Sabbath would Berlcha buy candles from the store.