Writing in the local paper. Local issues with a global take. I never translate literally and the editor trims at will to make it fit. Here's my version, then theirs.
I’ve come
to know a fair number of saints, both dead and alive, since I moved
out here to one
of the last stops before you
start hearing Portuguese and yet I’m always surprised when there is
yet one more to discover and then puzzle at its English translation
(try both major and minor St. Jameses on for size).
In fact, these holy
men and women have become such a part of my day to day life that I
now feel totally comfortable being on a
first name basis with them. Just the other day I strolled through
Santa Maria on my way to meet someone in San Juan, who lives down in
San Blas, in order to talk about what we were going to do on our day
off, which was of course thanks to Santo Tomas de Aquino. I never
forget my youngest daughter’s birthday because it happened on San
Jorge and when I cross San Francisco, he no longer takes offence that
I had once thought of him only as an earthquake prone city on the
west coast of the United States.
The worship of all
of these do-gooders or in some cases done-bad-toers seems to make
more sense to me than fawning on the venerable virgins that grace
every village, mountain, stream and town from here to the Pyrenees.
Monotheism and the first commandment aside, the image of a dapper
sword-swinging saint chopping the heads off of your wrong-religion
enemies surely lends itself to a fiesta more readily than that of a
doe-eyed 13-year-old girl dressed in billowy whites, but that could
be a question of taste.
It’s not the first
time, however, that I’ve managed to adapt to local mores. While
living in South East Asia I became quite familiar with the
Bodhisattvas that kept the drinking jars safe all the while keeping snakes at bay. I’ve even managed to chalk up a few celestial
points on visits to several different Marabouts all the way from
Rabat to Hadhramaut, of course when the fundamentalists were looking
the other way.
Who am I to refuse a
little extra protection? After all, there are more poisonous snakes
in Laos than there are political parties and the nearest
hospital was across the Mekong in Thailand. Whether it was the patron
saint of this fine city or that particularly hard working midwife
working in the San Pedro de Alacantara hospital who helped safely
deliver my daughter is for the Minister of the Interior, Fernandez
Diaz to uncover. He isn’t shy to let on that his sources inform him
exactly
which supernatural power is
interceding in the lowly day to day affairs on this peninsula.
I might not know
whether or not the aforementioned
patron is a double agent
working for Catalan separatism or if Santiago has anything to do with
Real Madrid winning the Champions League but I do know now that it
isn’t only the capital of Chile and can now put names to a lot of
anguished faces on the walls of the Prado. The strangest thing of
all, given that I have all these saints around me, is that I will
probably have to read the English press in order to be reminded whose
day it is today.
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