lunes, 26 de noviembre de 2012

always back to the rain...


 In the beginning of October, I left the war zone for Bogota (again) and the team retreat where talked of the future. It was a week of r and r from the intense sun of Uraba and a week to get my body back in order after the hard fall. Liza says maybe the back and forth will get easier the more I do it. She read poetry from The Sun Magazine. In Bogota I ate a breakfast bagel and nurtured a wandering mind. I dreamt at night and had visions of Ireland and of small town somewhere. I thought about paradigm shifts in my personal life and in the world.  I spent a lot of time with the team. We talked of the different stages of resistance and of survival and of grief and action. We talked about our nation of medication that doesn’t feel the indignation of what is happening in the world. The nation that is numbed to what our lifestyle creates for others and ourselves. A nation on medication that doesn’t think about renovation, doesn’t have time for contemplation. Individuals with no rage for the wars and violence and injustice around the world. Individuals that back the war in Colombia so that the USA can maintain a culture pumped full of panic medication when really, sometimes you gotta think anyone that is not panicking about the state of our world has no pulse. We talked of trauma survivor workshops and community building. We talked about how dreams are our reality and how from our fear comes our power. And we worked. A lot. And then I came home.

She was washing clothes and I was holding her baby as the rain came across the canyon. It was pouring when the lightening came crashing, 500 yards away and stuck a tree, blowing it up in crackling flames. We both dove to the ground as the cows came running across the plain. I thought it was combat at first. After the moment calmed she laughed and said, “your lucky I didn’t end up on your shoulders.” It was so loud, that crashing lightening. And a few days later that tall old tree died and fell to the ground.

Searching through my email one day in Apartado, I accidently found an old document from when I applied to my study abroad program. The last question was: why do you want to do this program? I responded: Because every moment is as substantial as it is fleeting. I was 20. When I read it I could picture where I was when I wrote it. Now I am 30 and I wonder what I write now that I will reflect on again when I am 40.

October in the war zone was walking along the riverbed as it rose and fell in the oncoming raining season… at first the rains come lightly. It was visions of Apartado on my way through several times, of boys rolling each other in tires and women sauntering with decorative umbrellas in the mid-day heat. It was children throwing rocks at the liquor trucks as they dropped off beer in poor neighborhoods and yelling, “bad bad bad!”at the men unloading it.  October was planting pumpkins and forgetting about Halloween, but laughing to myself that nobody here will know jack-o-lanterns are out of season when we carve them in January. October was a wasted dead bug in a web from which the spider had already moved on. My neighbor telling me that if I promise to stay forever she will help me build a house and donate a cow to me. October was combats and power outages and the potent smell of manderine trees in the jungle. It was the cotton tips of sugarcane ready to be cut. It was cutting and carrying sugarcane to be made into honey. It was the rain storm that damaged the water tubing and had us bathing in the ever rising river. It was baking cakes and a hummingbird that flew through my window and fluttered in my face for a moment before flying away, and then the pit that its absence left in my stomach. It was pouring runny honey into molding blocks in the fuscia sunset and borrowing a machete to cut the grass. It was Charlotte trying to lift my bag before we walked home and saying, “well, that’s a challenge.” October was citrus canker sores. It was late night working meetings with Charlotte and eating a manderine alone in the mid-night darkness and seeing nothing, hearing no one.

One morning in October I was half dreaming in the early morning hours when a neighbor came to tap on my window. And then I was not dreaming at all as a bomb exploded and I realized that the neighbor tapping on my window in my dream was actually the sound of machine gun fire on the far side of the hill. I backflipped outta bed and into the street where my neighbors were already gathered listening to the combat. We talked about where it was as I came to and my neighbor laughed at me and said, “pretty good alarm clock, eh?”and then my other neighbor said, “as long as I’m up I may as well go see if Jesusa made arepas for breakfast.” The combat didn’t last long, but it was quite loud. After the combat the helicopters flew low all day long and they were even louder, circling overhead.  Later a neighbor told me that her three-year-old daughter was scared. She said she understood why, with all that noise but that she told her daughter not to let those noises scare her, since those are the noises of the war and they live in a war zone. I was caught thinking about my dream- in every other place I have other lived it would have been reversed- I would have been dreaming of machine gun fire to awake to the gentle reality that a neighbor had come to visit. Here I dream of someone taping at my window to wake up to the reality of war.

A conversation with a two year old:
Did your dad die?
No.
Did your mom die?
No.
Well then, where are they?
They live very far away.
In Medellin?
Even further.
Further than Medellin? Like… on the moon?
Just about.

I slice myself on barbed wire and think about the last time I had a tetanus shot. It was such a clean cut that didn’t feel anything until the blood started dripping. Then it spent the entire month of November not healing in the tropical climate.

November brought the arrival of my new co-worker, Alejandro from Mexico. He arrives to a large poisonous scorpion in his shower. He arrives to rainy season’s coral sunrises and fuscia sunsets.

At the fifth grade graduation (the highest grade in our village) the professor talks about how the kids should keep studying. The kids put on their gowns and walk across the stage and receive their diplomas. I try not to tear up. It will be the end of formal education for many of them. 

When the rumors start circulating that a young man left to join the FARC, one of his friends comes to me and says, “if this is true, we will be having another funeral in a matter of weeks. There will be another mother crying and another headstone in the cemetery." When the young man in question returned after several days away, I could not have been more happy to see anyone.

November was removing beans from their shells, and eating snap peas from the garden. There was a clear night sky in the middle of a rainy week and a sliver moon emerged with the full outline behind it’s penumbra.  November was building houses and planting seeds, it was moonless darkness on rainy nights and the coral onset of the sunrise. November was Red velvet cake on a homemade oven, then chocolate almond cake on a homemade oven and then banana cake on a homemade oven… all practicing my open flame culinary skills for my 30th birthday. November was the arrival of a package from Lee with all sorts of goodies and an unforeseen disaster in the garden when I accidently weighed too much and caused one of the arms of the papaya tree to come crashing down on the tomato and pepper plants. It was the rainy season in full force- with rushing rivers and wet water filled boots from the crossings we make on our way down to town. November was hanging off of the back of jeeps and walking home through swarms of butterflies. It was the one year anniversary of Ottoniel's death and planting flowers at his gravesite as the sun set. November brought the election of Obama, but my absentee ballot arrived a day too late to be sent back. November is passion fruit juice and cockroaches in the computer. It is me walking in Apartado as the Christmas decorations come out and feeling a pang of nostalgia and sadness in knowing I won’t be going home for the holidays. The week of my birthday brings a crisp moon in the western sky that night after night outdoes the beauty of the tropical sunset on the other horizon. People say the full moon makes Soila even crazier. Sapa is so pregnant she can barely fit through the bars on my window and is hungry 100% of the time. She chews my pen when I try to write and sits on the magazine if I try to read. She needs attention, apparently. November is heavy downpours and knee deep mud. It is hot and humid air before the rains and wispy clouds in the blue sky after. It is the reflection of golden sunsets in the small puddles all the way down the street.

The local municipality celebrates “farmer’s day” and floods San Jose with people who actually live in poor neighborhoods of Apartado. They tape the military handing out rice and oil to the “farmers” and they bring in at least ten times the amount of people that actually live in the war ravened town by the bus loads. It is eerie and strange as I walk through town on my way to a meeting. A neighbor says to me, “how embarrassing that people in other parts of the country watch this on TV and buy that propaganda. How embarrassing to think farmer’s aren’t capable of cultivating rice… how sad for Colombia that there are people poor enough in Apartado to be bought by a publicity stint for a kilo of rice and some oil…”

A nearby combat between paramilitary and the FARC causes all kinds of chaos mid-month. It is long and severe and many young men die. On a quiet night with no light, a casket is built in the central kiosk. Women and children come to my house and we drink hot chocolate in candlelight and wait for the men to come back with the body for burial. We drink hot chocolate to the sounds of saws and hammers and nails. Later a neighbor says she saw one of the wounded before he died, as they were trying to get him to the hospital. He was already near the end and she looked down at him crying and said, “I never thought I would see this boy like this…”and she related how he silently had tears rolling out of his closed eyes at hearing her voice.

Ivan Marquez is on the cover of the local Semana magazine and an old man here tells me how he met the FARC commander twice about twenty years ago- once in San Jose and once in La Esperanza. This month the FARC are seen around in larger numbers, and they go on the heavy offensive. November 20th brought the swelling of peace negotiations between the government and the FARC and a unilateral ceasefire, but it’s hard to believe the fighting will cease in Uraba.

I turned thirty on a sunny morning and went walking in the jungle to find wood to cook rice milk over an open flame. I turned thirty on a rainy afternoon spent decorating four cakes that I baked with home made pink frosting. I turned 30 on a humid evening and I walked house to house through the mud reminding people of their utterly important responsibility to come dance with me (rain or shine). I turned thirty on  a starry night; people dressed up despite the mud and came to the center of town and ate rice milk and cake and danced with me. I danced vallenato until midnight, in rubber boots, with my neighbors who get up at 5am for work. I turned 30 in a rural peace community village in the middle of the war zone and there was nothing else to do but dance.