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Everyone On The Same Page About Inheritances
We're
dividing all of Mother's things
Deciding on her rugs and rings
I can't believe what's happening tonight
Can't split a painting on a wall
Or share a table in the hall
I never dreamt that we could fall apart
It would break our mother's heart
Tonight we're in a family fight
And yet as kids we'd talk away the night
But now, we're in a family fight
A family fight
The
lyrics of this up-tempo rock song, The Family Fight, are
about two brothers who were once close but now are fighting
over their late mother's personal items. The words are the
inspiration of Les Kotzer, a Toronto lawyer and former amateur
lyricist turned pro who is using music to show the tragedy
he often sees of families torn apart by fighting over inheritances.
"I
think mine is the first musical compact disc prepared by
a wills lawyer," said Kotzer, who has been practicing
law since 1989 and co-authored the book The Family Fight:
Planning to Avoid It in 2002. While the book covered the
subject well, "sometimes, though, to bring some people
to their senses and to make them realize that the person
they are fighting is not a stranger, it takes more than
words on a page," Kotzer said. We wrote about Kotzer's
book during the holiday season two years ago, hoping its
message would encourage readers to discuss -- with candor,
love and respect for all family members -- matters about
inheritances that would prevent ugly fights later on.
We
want to do the same with Kotzer's CD now. For the family
elders, with the children and grandchildren often gathered
under the same roof during the holidays, this is as good
a time as any to talk about their wishes for when they are
gone. "I am on a mission to get families to talk before
it is too late," Kotzer told us. "I find that
one of the major causes of family fighting over inheritance
is the lack of communication between parents and children
and siblings." Through his practice, "I have seen
my share of fighting over inheritance," Kotzer said.
"Siblings who were once close no longer speak to each
other, and if they do they do so only through their lawyers."
And
the bitter fighting often is about seemingly little things,
such as who will keep a rug or a painting. Kotzer's two-song
CD, titled A Family United, A Family Divided, Songs to Touch
the Heart of A Family, was produced in collaboration with
Lewis Manne, a professional Canadian musician and composer
who wrote the music. (For more information and to hear excerpts,
you can go to the Web site www.familyfight.com). Manne also
sings the two songs -- Family Fight, in which saxophone
and guitar sounds can be heard carrying on the "fight,"
and Photos in a Drawer, a touch-your-heart musical arrangement
by Manne of a poem Kotzer wrote in memory of his mother
after she died in 2001:
Photos
in a drawer
She
kept old photos in a drawer
Faces
and places haven't seen for years
All
that time erases the laughter and the tears
Photos
in a drawer ... Her very special moments
She
always thought of them that way. I just wonder where the
time went
Oh
now I miss these days
"I
had walked through her house after she passed away and I
opened a drawer and there were all these pictures,"
Kotzer recalled. "I did exactly what I say in the song,
I went on the floor and I took a tour through my past ...
The song is meant to get people to open up their family
albums and look back at who they were and the memories they
shared."
It's
a safe bet that Kotzer's CD won't win any Grammys, but it
will touch and hopefully open up some hearts. After it was
played on ABC radio station affiliate KGO in San Francisco
where he was being interviewed, Kotzer said he received
more than 600 calls and e-mails from listeners, many telling
him they had been inspired to contact a family member they
had not spoken to for a while. "The response was overwhelming
-- people loved him," said John Rothmann, the talk
show host who interviewed Kotzer at the station. "It
is not a subject people like to talk about it, but he handles
it with sensitivity and the music reveals his soul."
"I think I have hit a nerve," Kotzer said. "Hopefully
this CD will act as a bridge for communication between family
members."