Just on a whim, I decided to type in my
maiden name "Kossie" at the Yahoo search engine, and to my great
surprise, I discovered my parents' names "Barbara and Roy Kossie"
listed there.
Of course, I clicked on
this extraordinary "link,"
an electronic passage to a defining moment in my family’s
history. Within seconds, my co-creators, "Barbara and Roy"
appeared, minus their church titles, "Bishop and First Lady," but
radiant with smiles. They were celebrating their 50th wedding
anniversary, a rare blessing in these trying times. To
accommodate the schedules of family members from throughout the
country, the grand event was held August 25, 2001, at the Sheraton
North Houston, five days after the actual date of their marriage,
August 20, 1951.
How wonderful it was
that memories of the occasion were suspended in cyberspace for
adventurous e-travelers like me, who roamed the web for new ideas
and inspiration. Finding the photographs reminded me of how
important it is to record significant moments in our
lives. Indeed, we are all living epistles; the stories we write
are really up to us.
My mother chose
to write a story of dedication to God and family, and I am certain
that the rich narratives her descendants author will engage themes
she and our father underscored throughout her earthly
tenure.
There, "Queen Barbara"
sits and smiles graciously, her inner glow and external legacy
defying the physical frailty that preceded her eventual translation
from this life to the next. Recalling the fervent prayers my
brothers prayed in succession and the melodious songs my sisters
sang as I played in the background, I envied the sheer numbers
represented in my mother's divine contribution; she had been
fruitful and multiplied! My siblings and I were her "gifts" to
the world (Psalm 127:3).
To her great
delight, she and my father were blessed to have their entire family
attend the occasion, all nine children and their spouses, seventeen
of her nineteen grandchildren, and one of her three
great-grandchildren, along with many relatives and friends, from as
far away as Sri Lanka and as close as Scenic Woods.
For weeks after the stellar event, my mother
watched the videotape, joyfully affirming, "My life has not been in
vain! My children are for signs and wonders!" How proud
she was that her "first-born" had designed and baked her anniversary
cake and that her other "handsome" sons had shared tidbits of her
wisdom with the nearly 200 guests, whom her "sweet" but "peculiar"
eighth one had welcomed in four languages with the help of a
Siberian spouse. Her second child, "sunshine," had written and
directed the comical skit performed in honor of the occasion while
the "last-button-on-Jacob’s-coat" had emceed the
proceedings. Her fifth child, the "quiet one," had sung with
her sisters and helped with decorations. Finally, her fourth
child, the "boss-lady" had orchestrated the entire event, from the
customized "everything" to the proclamation from the city, to the
photographer, videographer, and commemorative candy
bars.
Though family members hesitated
to embrace the element of closure intrinsic in our mother’s first
statement, "My life has not been in vain," we found hope and renewed
strength in the prophetic phrase that followed. Regardless of
what any of us thought in retrospect, we were indeed mom’s signs and
wonders, her collective life’s work, her "gifts" praising her in the
gates.
Her fullness of joy
notwithstanding, God chose to grant her one more gift before
welcoming her home. Despite her weakened state, she survived a
dramatic post-anniversary vacation to Albany, New York, a place she
had "never been before," during a week we shall never forget- that
of September 11.
One month after
her miraculous return, one that came with an optional flight home on
a company jet should she so desire, mom informed my father, "I’m
leaving y’all today." Within hours of her prophetic announcement,
her life came to a sacred closure in her sweetheart’s arms just
before the noon of November 14, two months after she and my father
celebrated a half-century of love. Finally, the "circle" she
often talked about had been "broken." The legacy of the love she had
nurtured in her children and their children received a divine
pruning that nonetheless promised plenteous rebounding.
In light of this bittersweet reality, I now pause
to ask what gifts will grow in my brothers and sisters, and
especially, what gifts will flourish in me, Barbara’s eighth bundle
of new beginnings? As time and money are far spent to imagine my own
family of nine children, I set my focus on creative acts of a
different kind. Perhaps nine substantive scholarly works, nine
languages, nine collections of songs, or better still,
interdependent multiples of all three.
Whatever my collective contribution, the following
is true for us all: The epistles that we write are as rich as
our faith would have them be. Let us then celebrate our God by
stirring up our respective gifts and sharing them with others,
knowing as my mother did, that our labor will not be in
vain!
Copyright © 2002 by Karen Kossie-Chernyshev. All rights reserved
http://www.blackandchristian.com/articles/pew/chernyshev-04-02.shtml

