Friday, March 29, 2024 -
Print Edition

My mother’s fur. My solution.

My mother was pro-mink. She believed fur symbolized luxury, style, and to the manor born. Not me. I was decidedly anti-fur. I grew up in a cloth-coat, pea-jacket, egalitarian world.

My mother wasn’t alone in her love of fur. Jews and fur go way back. In the 18th century, Eastern European Jews dominated the fur trade. In America, mink and such were signs of assimilation and success.

“A fur coat symbolized American’s bounty and beauty,” wrote Jenna Weissman Joselit in A Perfect Fit: Clothes, Character, and the Promise of America. “In homes across the nation, especially those inhabited by immigrants and their children, the purchase of a fur coat was . . . material evidence of America’s blessings.”

I managed to evade fur until my late 20s. But when I was DC-bound for an exciting new job and, also the recipient of an insurance settlement from an injury, my mother pounced.

She dragged 29-year-old me into Saks Fifth Avenue’s fur salon, where, cringing and groaning, I tried on fur coat after fur coat. In the end, she and a well-coiffed, beguiling saleswoman cajoled me into buying an admittedly fetching mink cape. For some reason, the cape was left in the store overnight for pick-up the next morning.

That night, I had nightmares of baby minks being captured and clubbed, screaming my name as they took their last little bloody breaths. I called Saks at 9:01 a.m. to cancel the purchase. Then, at 9:07, I called Mom to proclaim my Mink and Maternal Independence Day. On that second call, with the wisdom of a Talmudic scholar, I noted the multiple biblical exhortations against cruelty toward animals.

Later that day, proudly independent, I purchased a wildly impractical snow-white wool coat. The coat spent more time at the cleaners than it did on my back.

Little did I know Mom’s furry revenge was yet to come. 
 When she died, she bequeathed to me her four furs — a coat, two jackets and a stole.

One jacket, I gave to my mother’s sister, my Aunt Ev. So, that was a guilt-free give-away. Mom’s silver fox stole, I donated to a well-respected charity, which annually conducted a high-society, fur-coat auction fundraiser, so I dodged the guilt bullet again.

One night I wore the other mink jacket. It was cold. I thought I’d give it a try. A friend quickly smirked, “Oh, somebody’s wearing a mom jacket.” Back into the way back of the closet it went.

For four years each spring, I dutifully schlepped the two remaining furs to Neiman-Marcus for “winterization” and storage. And for four years each fall, I dragged them out of storage, under no illusion that I would wear them in the non-blistery wintery non-cold of Las Vegas where I was living.

Finally, I swore, “Enough is enough.” I was done with the schlepping, the guilt, and the wasted storage and winterization cost. I was determined to molt the minks.

I called the charity that held the annual fur auction. They were no longer conducting the auction. Too much anti-fur controversy. Mink was out. Ermine and sable taboo.

Online sales didn’t seem an easy option. So, what to do?

I thought of gifting my best friend in NYC. Surely, she would welcome the coats.

But Laura declined the offer, saying she was already multiply mink-ed, thanks to her own deceased mom.

She was also aghast that I was considering deep-sixing Mom’s minks. She reminded me that I was a New Yorker at heart, and that the day would come when we two would be slow-moving old ladies, hobbling on our walkers to Broadway shows on cold blustery days.

It was an unpleasant but unassailable truth. Thanks to my friend’s wisdom, I saw the fur-coated light. I needed mink.

I resolved to get Mom’s massive, full-length unfashionable coat restyled. It was a guilt-free decision. It wasn’t like I was killing new animals. The minks that made up my coat had sacrificed their lives decades before. I was simply giving those lost little lives renewed purpose. I was, in fact, honoring the environmentalist creed of re-use and recycle!

So, that’s what I did. The fur was “shaved” and is now on the inside of a stylish fabric coat that is chic and toasty warm. Plus, as a bonus, with the mink cleverly concealed on the inside, I’m safe from paint-throwing anti-fur activists.

The only thing I’m not safe from is my mother, who is undoubtedly nudging my cigar-smoking father up there in heaven, both having a hearty laugh watching me wearing her mink — just as she had planned all those years ago.

Copyright © 2021 by the Intermountain Jewish News



Avatar photo

Read more of Karen Galatz’s work at https://muddling. me or contact her at [email protected].


Leave a Reply