To read Latin
American authors and poets like Carlos Fuentes, Mario Vargas Llosa, Gabriel
Garcia Marquez. Pablo Neruda, and Octavio Paz is to see, first, what they have
in common. It is a commonality of culture that goes beyond the Spanish
language.
It is a culture
that understands that the past is never past, that even distinguishing past
from present (not to mention the future) is an aberration, an anomaly.
We North
Americans nod and say we understand that, sort of, but the culture our writers and
poets write from is actually very different. U.S. culture, and to a similar
degree Canadian culture, is about remaking, reinventing, constantly focused on
forward. The past is what happened 15 minutes ago.
I experienced
this routinely when I worked for a Fortune 500 corporation. For more than two
decades, the company was sloughing off its past like an old snakeskin and
attempting to reinvent itself. When not actively rejecting its history, it
imagined a future unaffected but the past or even the present. But its people,
including its senior management, were still being shaped daily by what had
happened a year ago, 10 years ago, 50 years ago.
At one point
late in the attempted cultural revolution, the company deliberately began to
toss the archives. The first files that went to the dumpster were the old
employee photo files. A hysterical phone call from the archivist set in motion a
short chain of events that stopped the lunacy. I found myself on a hot July
day, wearing my suit, in a large dumpster, salvaging those files. I felt something
like an archaeologist, digging through trash to find the treasure. Or perhaps a
forensic criminologist, discovering the details of a crime in the shapes of
spilled manila folders.
We give a nod to
our past, but we destroy it without thinking. And we pay for that. During my
last two years before retirement, I watched my department, charged with making
huge changes, repeat the same strategy that had wrecked the company’s
reputation in the first place. No one understood the why – which meant
understanding the past – because the past wasn’t considered important.
In Dark
Times Filled with Light, the Argentinian poet Juan Gelman writes of loss
far greater than a company’s archives. He writes of the loss of his son and
pregnant daughter-in-law, arrested and then “disappeared” by the military
regime that ruled the country for more than a decade (Pope Francis also came
out of this experience). Gelman took the refuge of exile in Mexico, but his children,
likes thousands of others, were never heard from again. Some were tortured and
murdered, buried in forgotten graves. Some were dropped from airplanes over the
open ocean.
In a collection
of poems entitled Open Letter,
published in 1980, Gelman wrote that he would never accept the death of his
children, Marcelo and his pregnant wife Claudia, until he saw their bodies or
their killers. Their baby was born, and given to friends of the junta. It took
Gelman 30 years to find her. That was a past Gelman could not reinvent himself
out of, a past that remained with him until he died, a past that will remain
with his granddaughter and her children and grandchildren.
Crestfallen My
Burning Soul
crestfallen my
burning soul
dips a finger in
your name / scrawls
your name in the
night’s walls /
it’s no use / it
bleeds dangerously /
soul to soul it
looks at you / becomes a child /
opens its breast
to take you in /
protect you /
reunite you / undie you /
your little shoe
stepping on the
world’s
suffering softening it /
trampled
brightness / undone water
this way you
speak / crackle / burn / and love /
you give me your
nevers just like a child
-
Juan
Gelman, Open Letter, dedicated to his son Marcelo
At Tweetspeak Poetry today, the
discussion is continuing about Dark Times
Filled with Light. Please visitthe post and contribute if you’re so inclined.
Photograph: People suspected of being
leftists being arrested by military troops in Argentina in the 1970s.
Your choice of poem this week is one of the most heart-rending in the collection and, at the same time, one of the most hopeful. Gelman never gave up. . . looking or hoping.
ReplyDeleteI keep thinking at how apt this Book Club selection is at this time.
I posted yesterday on my FB page a quote from Rebecca Solnit's 'Hope in the Dark':
"The past is set in daylight, and it can become a torch we ca carry into the night that is the future."
Thank you Glenn for posting this...bkm
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