Cries and
whispers
By
Thursday afternoon I lost my voice completely. The viral infection that I tend
to get once a year started with the familiar symptoms of a sore throat, runny
nose and eyes, aching joints and a lethargic feeling. I had no fever (I can be
close to death and not have a fever) and felt I had to go to school on the last
day, especially as I had prepared some small presents for the kids and had some
printouts of their photos in plastic sleeves to protect them from the humidity.
Olger and his classmates |
“I am
ill,” I wrote on the whiteboard when the students entered. “Look up the word
‘ill’ in your dictionaries,” I gestured. They dutifully did and decided that I
was “enferma”. Then the second sample sentence: “I have no voice.” Olger’s
younger brother, Pablo, who is just as bright as Olger, only fidgety, guessed it
straight away: “You cannot speak, teacher.” “So this is what we are going to
do: test papers, photos, Xmas cards and a surprise” – I wrote the last four as
a list of activities I planned for them. Feedback on the test papers did not
take long: once again, I could see that we needed to practise more. Whatever
they produce in speaking, they do not recognize in writing.
They
enjoyed the photos, though. I printed them on coloured A4 paper back in Cuenca and although the
images were fuzzy when enlarged, they could still identify themselves and we
could make up decent sentences like: “Maria is making maito” (the traditional
indigenous food when fish is wrapped in maito
leaves and is slowly cooked in the fire).
I can't hear you - speak up |
We then
made Christmas cards with “Merry Christmas” on top and a drawing of a bird or
plant or tree under it. I am always surprised at how fine and meticulous their
drawings are. Once done, we practised “Who is it for?” and, of course, there
were shy glances and chuckles when I suggested the cards might be for “my
boyfriend” or “my girlfriend”. Two groups, however, decided they wanted Oliver
to have them. The Hamburg
policeman definitely made a deep impression.
I was
pleased with myself for having prepared their presents at the beginning of the
week: I couldn’t have done it with my full blown tonsillitis. Nothing much:
notebooks I made from coloured paper, coloured felt pens or pencils, rubbers
and sharpeners I brought back from Cuenca, each present wrapped in freezer bags
that I got from the kitchen at the Lodge, with numbers in the box where you tick
off “meat”.
They all
had to draw numbers but I would only give the presents to them if they said the
number in English correctly. Fidel, who drew “19” almost lost his, but a classmate
was allowed to help out and practised saying the number with him a couple of
times.
“Bye,
guys, see you on Tuesday at the Lodge,” I whispered. “Good bye, teacher, see
you on Tuesday,” they whispered back as they left.
I looked
around the riverside classroom to figure out which would be the best place to
hang Alan’s laminated maps. He promised to send two large world maps and two
more of Latin-America when he got back to Seattle.
Right now there is nowhere to hang mine, because the classroom is open, it
would just dangle and would not be safe either. Ines promised mosquito netting
(I gave her some money for it), a door and a lock.
I looked
at the new plastic furniture: four neon blue tables (not matching in colour)
and the twelve white chairs. The kids seemed to be comfortable using them on
the last day, moving them together or creating islands for group work was no
problem at all. The cedar wood desks we had before were monstrously heavy.
Our future clients at the school |
I went to
see the lady doctor in the community walking past the traditional Achuar huts
in the pouring rain, the mud sticking to my trainers and soiling my trousers.
The health centre is basic with efficient, no-nonsense staff in a small, bare
building that has been neglected for decades. It reminded me more of Ethiopia than modern day Ecuador.
Once back
at the Lodge, I checked my e-mails and Facebook messages. And there it was:
Agi’s new, state-of-the-art London
school with a brand new sports hall, theatre, art studio and a forum space that
looked like the debating chamber of the UN.
And it
was only then that I started to cry.
Indiana Jones and the Lost Temple
of the Metal Library
“Have you
ever heard of the Hungarian archaeologist who claimed that he had seen the
mysterious Metal Library when he met the Indian tribe of the Shuar?” asks Omar,
one of the most knowledgeable naturalist guides from Quito who regularly
escorts tourists to the Lodge and takes them on various excursions with the
local Achuar guides.
In fact,
I have. Our chef, Joffre (famed for his Hungarian wife, Boglarka) was the first
to mention Juan Moricz, an aristocratic Argentinian-Hungarian entrepreneur
straight from an Indiana Jones film, who befriended members of the Shuar tribe
closely related to the Achuar. “He said he was able to talk to them in
Hungarian and the tribal leaders were so shocked that someone could speak their
ancient language that they decided to take him to a cave system and showed him
the Metal Library.”
Juan Moricz in ANOTHER cave |
This was
far-fetched enough, but another naturalist guide also asked me if I had heard
about the Hungarian ethnographer who was shown books made of metal that he
could read with ease because surprise, surprise – the inscriptions were in
Hungarian. Omar also offered an explanation: “He believed that the Earth is
like a big, round cheese with caves and caverns that are all connected and the
Indians were actually Hungarians who had come to this side of the globe by
walking thousands of miles through these tunnels from the other side of the
world.” Apparently, Móricz János firmly believed that Hungarian people had been at the
root of each and every civilization on earth.
It seems
that by now all the protagonists of this fascinating story have either died or
been murdered or have given up on finding the entrance to the caves which,
according to Moricz’ source, was under a river, although the very same source
claimed it did not mean that whoever entered it would get wet. He spoke of a
bend in the river that meets a fault line which in turn opens up into a cave
system. This is where the Metal Library is supposed to be hidden. The treasure
consists of thousands of large, metal books of 20 kilos each with geometric
designs and written inscriptions as well as translucent, crystal tablets
stacked on sloping shelves covered in gold leaf with sealed doors leading to
tombs.
Which
river, you ask? The Pastaza, of course - the slow and wide Amazonian river with
its mud banks and islets; the one I cross twice a week when I go to teach at my
jungle school.
Good
night.
No comments:
Post a Comment