I will stomp on the surface of this world...I will dance with giants and shake the mountains until they are dust in the palm of my hand...I continue to float in a confined space, moving but remaining within the walls of chance and circumstance...From a solitary position I can examine the sky and believe that of this legends are constructed...I must remember the grey days, the motivating rains that carried me away into the dreams of distant moons and startled sunsets...The essential smile, the tears falling from the hostile stratosphere and landing in lakes, only to become placid and forgettable...I continue to journey, to search for definitions long lost by my mother-tongue...It is within this land of the sun that my mind begins to vibrate and at last: Hope...Here, I can accelerate my whispers into the shouts of satisfaction, the scintillating creation of a silent afternoon...The stillness of sudden memory...
Friday, November 28, 2008
The Death of a Whisper
Posted by BryanSchaeffer.blogspot.com at 5:08 PM 3 comments
Friday, November 14, 2008
San Miguel Canoa
I spent the day yesterday in a small agricultural town called San Miguel Canoa. Actually, it's really two towns: Canoa, in the state of Puebla, and San Isidro de Buen Suceso, in the state of Tlaxcala. You simply cross this little bridge taking you from Puebla into Tlaxcala. I am writing a little ethnography about bilingual education in Mexico for one of my classes. I needed to go to this school in San Isidro called the Primaria Leonarda Gomez Blanco. The school has kids between the ages of 6 and 13 and the majority of them come to the school already speaking Nahuatl, the most-spoken indigenous language in Mexico. But, the kids don't know how to write in their native tongue and they also learn Spanish, the dominant language of Mexico. It was a really neat experience and took me like two hours to go 14km on two different buses! I'm getting used to the slower pace of life here so I wasn't too frustrated. The mountain is actually the dormant volcano La Malinche (it has been asleep for over 3000 years), named after Malinalli (also known as Malintzin), an Indian princess (according to one indigenous account after the conquest) who was sold as a slave by her parents to a different indigenous tribe and then she became the personal interpreter for Cortes (because she spoke Nahuatl and Maya and rapidly learned Spanish). She is known in Mexico as a traitor (there are differing opinions but that is the generally accepted one). Anyways, it was a great experience and makes me want to continue to learn about the indigenous languages of Mexico and possibly assist, in my own little way, in trying to change the negative views of indigenous languages spoken here.
Posted by BryanSchaeffer.blogspot.com at 3:46 PM 2 comments
Friday, November 7, 2008
Oaxaca and Monte Alban
I just love the city of Oaxaca (as many of you already know). There is a lot of poverty here but the people have such alegria and are very friendly. I absolutely love the weather and while I was here it was nearly perfect. I am very interested in Oaxaca, its people and cultures. The state of Oaxaca has the highest number of indigenous groups and languages (16 groups and many, many languages) in Mexico. I cannot wait to return and learn more about this beautiful region and people(s).
Posted by BryanSchaeffer.blogspot.com at 5:33 PM 3 comments
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Day(s) of the Dead
I love these days in Oaxaca!! Day(s) of the Dead is unique to Mexico (even though there is speculation about this kind of celebration of death and the dead in other countries as well). It was a privilege to be able to spend a second year in a row in Oaxaca (the name Oaxaca comes from the Nahuatl word 'Huaxyacac' which means 'in the nose of the squash') for Day of the Dead. There was so much going on during the nights of the 31st of October and the 1st of November. I love the imagery and the iconography that Mexicans utilize during these special days when the spirits of the dead walk among us in our physical realm (or so it is believed). It was a pleasure to spend four days here and hopefully I will be returning next year (we'll see). I know that there are other places in Mexico that I'm sure I would love just as much as Oaxaca for Day of the Dead, but Oaxaca will always have a special place in my heart.
Posted by BryanSchaeffer.blogspot.com at 9:17 AM 2 comments