Sunday, May 31, 2009

Aracataca and the Ghost of Gabriel García Marquez

I spent the weekend in Barranquilla, a medium-sized city a couple hours north of here on the coast. I made the trip with my housemate Carlos, who is originally from there.

We spent Saturday at the market downtown, browsing the colorful stores with their homemade bags and counterfeit name-brand jeans and shoes. That night we went to a soccer game in which Barranquilla-based Junior played a team from the Southern city of Cali.

It was a tie, which I quickly learned merely meant twice as much post-game drinking: the jubilation of not losing combined with the sorrow of not winning. On Sunday we went to a resort hotel in nearby Santa Marta, rotating between the pool and the beach while listening to the Brazilian music wafting from the speakers.

It was a fun weekend, but it was the trip I took on Monday that made it really special for me. Barranquilla is only a couple hours away from Aracataca, the birthplace and hometown of Gabriel García Marquez, Colombia’s most famous writer and winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature. I had found the phone number of a guide named Rubiela buried in an online forum, and had arranged to meet her to take a tour of the city.

Marquez is known for popularizing the literary style known as magic realism, which is the use of magical or fantastic occurrences embedded in everyday, normal events. In his stories and novels these occurrences are not the center of the plot, and they aren’t treated as especially surprising either by the narrator or the characters.

The result is that the reader is torn between a resistance to hearing about babies born with pig tails and children flying around on magic carpets and the suspension of disbelief that he is able to provoke by speaking of these things as totally normal. I came to this town in part to understand how this country boy could go from the backwaters of Colombia to being praised as one of the most important authors of the twentieth century. I saw it as a kind of literary pilgrimage, a journey to the place of origin of a great writer with the goal of understanding how he came to be, and the humble hope of taking away some lessons for achieving similar imagination in my own writing.

The scenery on the bus ride into the interior was classic Colombia: the jungle-covered mountains of the Sierra Nevada rose on the left, their melancholy peaks shrouded in mist, standing shoulder to shoulder as if guarding a highland treasure. On the right banana and plantain plantations stretched as far as the eye could see, the bright green and yellow leaves marshalled into neat rows contrasting with the unrelenting disorder of the surrounding jungle.

The road was mostly deserted, except for the occasional wayside store catering to motorists and the dirt roads that periodically veered off the highway toward their mysterious destinations. The bus stopped periodically to let passengers off or take more on, while inside they all watched Conan the Barbarian on the hopelessly small, dark screen at the head of the aisle. The movie just wasn’t the same without Arnold’s thick Austrian accent, and I spent my time staring out the window not thinking about anything in particular, which I am particularly skilled at.

Arriving in Aracataca, I was taken by a mototaxi to the old telegraph office, where I met Rubiela, who was to be my guide. She showed me around the building, which was kind of a makeshift Gabriel Marquez museum and displayed a number of faded newspaper articles covering his numerous awards and honors, especially his 1982 Nobel Prize. There were paintings of him and his friends, statues depicting characters from his books, and the old telegraph equipment that his father had used working as the town telegrapher.

A few blocks from the telegraph office the city had built a reproduction of the house Marquez grew up in, a sprawling plantation-style hacienda where generations of extended family had lived and grown up. Rubiela pointed out some of the real-life locations behind Marquez’s most well-known stories, and explained how the family dynamics and history of the place had shaped both his memories and perceptions.

It seemed every aspect of the town had found its way into his novels: I saw the tiny room at the back of the property where the family kept the two Indians that they had bought for 300 pesos; the room where they kept the 72 chamberpots that they were forced to buy when the entire student body of the local school for girls spent the night; the company store on the corner where a young Marquez had first seen the “magic” that was ice; the train that the banana company had used to haul off the hundreds of victims of the massacre it had committed, to dump them into the sea.

I had a realization seeing Marquez’s novels coming to life before me that, in retrospect, should’ve been obvious even without ever having set foot in Aracataca. His novels are known for their “magic realism,” the art of combining magic and reality in a way that is both exhilarating and disarmingly familiar.

But as anyone who has spent any time on the Colombian coast can tell you, that’s just how life is here. Just look out your window or walk down the street: you can’t help but be confronted with a world of mystery and superstition, where the most common events are explained with appeals to the magical world; a place where the absurd and the mundane are interchangeable, where any attempt to apply the logic of the modern world is rebuffed with a resounding round of laughter that seems to ring out of the very soil. If I may offer my humble opinion on a literary master, I would suggest that Marquez’s talent is not necessarily imagination, but rather the rare ability to describe the naturally magical nature of this place to those who have never experienced it for themselves.

In Marquez’s book “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” the city of Macondo (his name for Aracataca) experiences a storm that causes it to rain for 4 years, 11 months and 2 days without stopping. Sitting in a restaurant with half a dozen local residents and watching this same rain pour down for what seemed like hours, I realized that the secret to writing (and life?) is not traveling to exotic locales or having spectacular experiences; the secret is seeing the uniqueness and the magic of whatever is happening right before your eyes, even if you are “just” a little boy in an insignificant village in the jungles of the Third World.

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Average Family Minivan in Colombia

An article on your basic family minivan in Colombia:

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

More Adventures in Barranquilla

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Adventures in Barranquilla

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Friday, May 15, 2009

The Streets of Cartagena

Just a little video of a bus ride through Cartagena, in case you want to see what it's like. Until suddenly the unthinkable strikes...



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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Life in Cartagena

Here's some photos from my daily life in Cartagena:

Here's a street in my neighborhood.

Here's my street. Notice the Colombian flags painted on every lampost. Puts our little American flags in SUV windows to shame.


The view from the balcony of the house where I live:


I could not survive without juice. I have juice at this stand probably twice a day average. It is the only thing able to keep my raging sugar cravings in check.


A long line of fruit stands that I pass on the way to and from work every day.


The fare collectors on the buses are so cool. They double as baby-carriers, old lady-helpers, grocery bag-transferrers, and traffic signalers.


This is a typical business that we fund through OptINnow: the ubiquitous snack stand.


An internet oasis! I'm saved!


A typical community in which we work. It is basically a slum that began as an illegal invasion of land and eventually established itself as a neighborhood. That's not to say that the people aren't very poor.


Visiting the businesses funded through OptINnow to take pictures, talk with them, and post updates to the site.


Another typical business we fund. A business like this can feed (barely) a family of 8. Hard to believe, isn't it?


Relaxing in the rocking chair after a long day of trekking around.


Mari-Luz rocking out with some sweet shades.



A Trust Group of entrepreneurial women being funded by Opportunity International. One woman said her goals were to own her own home, increased business revenue, a good education for her children, and peaceful international relations. Now that's ambition!

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Thursday, May 7, 2009

"Happiness" by The Fray



Happiness is just outside my window
Would it crash blowing 80-miles an hour?
Or is happiness a little more like knocking
On your door, and you just let it in?

Happiness feels a lot like sorrow
Let it be, you can’t make it come or go
But you are gone- not for good but for now
Gone for now feels a lot like gone for good

Happiness is a firecracker sitting on my headboard
Happiness was never mine to hold
Careful child, light the fuse and get away
‘Cause happiness throws a shower of sparks

Happiness damn near destroys you
Breaks your faith to pieces on the floor
So you tell yourself, that’s probably enough for now
Happiness has a violent roar

Happiness is like the old man told me
Look for it, but you’ll never find it all
But let it go, live your life and leave it
Then one day, wake up and she’ll be home
Home, home, home

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Saturday, May 2, 2009

The Fruit Never Falls Very Far From the Tree...


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