You get angry here.
Angry at the injustice. Angry at the absurdity. Angry at the
sheer preventability of the tragedy.
Today a child was left at school. Just before 3:00 we took
him home with us, as we are wont to do with the odd left-behind student.
Phone calls went unanswered. The student remained. For three
and a half hours.
No one had come looking for him. No one had tried to get
word to us. No one, it sounded, had considered the emotional trauma this
six-year old would experience being three-hours abandoned.
Beverly granted the parents grace. Tomorrow they should pay
25 Haitian dollars, or 100 gourdes, approximately 80 cents on the U.S. dollar,
or else their son cannot attend school. By the 30-minute tardy rate, they ought
to pay 50 dollars; by rights they should be on a strike list so if they are
tardy again their son loses his place at school. There is always another child
to fill a vacancy.
By rights their son ought to make them set around for him
for three hours, uncertain of his return time.
Rights are unfulfilled. Justice is unserved. Life’s not
fair. We knew that already. I remember hearing those words at a very young age.
Probably I’d complained that Mom’s rules were unfair as her instruction
disagreed with my own wants, and she replied with the harsh truth: Life’s not
fair. It never has been and it never will be.
But for some, life seems more unfair here. Life seems
intolerably unfair. Life is outright impossible.
You get angry here. Angry when you see kids desperate for
food. Wandering, scavenging, asking strangers for handouts.
As we walked down the road homeward a few weekends ago, a
young boy kept stride. He was skinny, tall and wide-eyed and serious.
“Bonswa,” he said, “Good afternoon.”
We returned his greeting.
“Where are you going?” he asked.
“We’re going home.”
“We’re going home.”
“Where do you live?”
“We live here,” we said, gesturing down the street to our
gate.
“Can I come home with you?” he asked, fixing those wide eyes
on us.
We laughed to prevent our hearts from cracking. “No,” I
said. “It’s our home, not yours.”
He asked for gum. We had none. Then he asked for a lollipop.
We had none. Then he asked for money.
“Why do you want money?” we asked in return.
“I want to buy food,” he said, nodding towards the end of
the road, to the Beach restaurant-bar. He was heading that way in hopes of
getting food.
That’s when we told him about where we lived, asked if he
knew who lived in that big house by the ocean, if he knew of Madame Rose. He
didn’t. So we got permission and invited him inside, brought him back to the
kitchen. Beverly went inside and dished him out a large portion of rice and
beans and sauce.
He was invited to come back every Sunday afternoon to eat.
Later we found out he lives in another neighborhood. He’d
just been wandering, scavenging.
The next week we were befriended by some other bold young
boys at our quiet place. We were seated on the ledge over the ocean, soaking in
sunshine and wind, when two boys accosted us, clambering up the wall in a very
monkey-like fashion. They asked for money, for food, then begun asking for
everything they could see: our sandals, our watches, Beverly’s wedding ring, my
phone. We said no to all these entreaties, and rather than becoming angry, they
took it in good humor. Soon we were on comfortable terms, laughing, singing,
playing, and steadily joined by more boys from the beach.
Before departure there were seven boys on the ledge with us,
teaching us how to make a flattened bottle cap spin on a string, practicing
English phrases, and singing “Deep and Wide” in Creole (Fon e Laj.)
We prayed together in a tight circle.
As three of them walked us out, Beverly offered a drink from
her water bottle. The boy carrying it, lanky and long-haired, perhaps twelve
years old, who’d greeted us earlier with “Hey, you, you, you!”, refused to
drink. Only after pressing him did he gulp down some water, passing the bottle
to his two younger companions. Flipping the pages of my Bible he saw a few
gourdes left there, and alerted me before closing it back up.
His original companion was a delightful nine year old with a
round head crowned with blotches of head fungus and a smile illuminated by
dimples. He couldn’t remember my name, and shook his snapping fingers in
frustration as he tried, putting back his head and squinting. When we repeated
his name he became embarrassed—sure these blans couldn’t care enough to recall
his name.
To these three Beverly gave some gourdes she’d tucked away,
and we parted ways outside the gate of the Weslyan compound, our quiet place,
Beverly and I headed homeward as the sun set, and these boys, one of them a
petite seven-year old without shoes, headed off in the other direction.
“Cheche pou nou.
Look for us,” I told them, squeezing their hands in farewell.
We wondered how long our friend had been plagued by that
head fungus, when we might see them again to give him some medicine, and how
many people would share in those few gourdes.
They’d crowded in for photos earlier, competing to hold our
hands and set on our laps. They’d asked for nothing after the initial demands.
They’d laughed and chatted and come close for cuddles.
“They’re still unsullied by the world,” I said as we walked
home beneath a salmon, gold and mauve sky.
“In a few years,” Beverly responded, “they’re going to have
the choice to follow Jesus, or not.”
We both sighed.
“We can only pray that they’ll do the right thing.”
You get angry here. Angry when children suffer from maladies
all but eradicated in the First World through vaccinations and basic hygiene.
Angry when babies are unsupervised. Angry when tears are condemned and trauma
is ignored.
A few weeks ago one of our five year old students came into
school with his Maman. He was smiling shyly, hiding his face in her skirt as
they entered the office. Maman explained Richard was sick. He lifted his shirt
and we saw an angry series of bumps curling around from above his bellybutton
to his back. Madame Rose looked at it and deemed it zona.
I Googled “Zona Haiti” and was rewarded with a gruesome
series of photos and a keyword: Shingles.
Our visiting Pharmacist agreed with the prognosis and we
discussed steps. We never stopped shaking our heads that a kindergarten student
was struck with an immensely painful ailment that rarely attacks these days—and
is confined to adults.
Richard never stopped smiling his bashful smile although he
confessed to pain and burning.
It’s been two weeks and he’s not returned to school. The
shingles must still be inflamed.
That same week a three year old came to the office every
morning for burn cream. The inside of his calf was open and raw, burned from
the motorcycle taxi he took every day to and from school. (Moto taxi is the most
common mode of transportation in Petit Goave. These calf-burns are a common
resulting problem.)
When it was my turn
to dab cream on the oozing flesh, I flinched, watching Anderson’s little face
for cringing and screaming. Instead, he sat expressionless as I covered the
burn and then deemed him finished. He toddled off to class.
I took off the glove I’d used to administer the cream and
turned to Madame Rose.
“Li pa’t kriye. Li pa’t
fe anyen.” I shook my head. “He didn’t cry. He didn’t do anything. Usually
kids will scream when they have pain. He
has pain! Li gen doule anpil!”
Madame Rose nodded, her eyebrows raised. She shrugged. “Yeah!
I don’t know.”
Later I’d reflect on this with another American.
“Probably he thought someone would scold him if he cried,” I
said.
She nodded. “Yes. He’s been told so many times to be quiet,
he just thinks now, ‘What’s the point?’”
You get angry. Angry that a three year old has already been
scolded for crying so often that when severely burned he sits in silence rather
than shed tears for his pain.
You get angry when you talk to the young adults. The ones
with a trauma record longer than your resume of part-time jobs. The ones who’ve
been burned, beaten, lost, abandoned, ignored, starved and humiliated so often
they don’t remember what it is to cry. Their feelings have never been
recognized. Their turmoil never discussed. So now they carry everything inside,
until the moments when something bursts.
You get angry when you discover how deep this pain runs. You
get angry with every new bit of the story. Every tidbit of abuse, neglect, and needless
suffering.
You get angry often here.
Angry at the ignorance. At the lack. At the rudeness.
You get so angry you can’t see the joy anymore. Sometimes.
So angry you think there’s no point in trying any longer. So angry you think
you’d better leave before you collapse under the anger, before you lose your
mind to the frustration, when you can’t accept the injustice. The unfairness of
life. The head fungus marring the head of a boy with brilliant dimples. The
shingles advancing around the torso of a five year old hiding his face in Maman’s
skirt. The stoic wide eyes of a severely burned three year old. The shaking
shoulders of an eighteen year old who’s about to be left behind again.
That’s when God comes in.
That’s when it’s time to step back. To retreat. To seek
sanctuary in a quiet place.
That’s when you cry. Shed all the tears that those children
don’t. That those young adults can’t remember how to release. That those
parents scold.
You cry and you rage. Sometimes you beat your fists on the
mattress.
After a while you start praying, asking God why.
After a while you open the Bible and start flipping pages,
telling God He’s got to speak to you.
After a while you actually start listening.
You hear that God is angry, too. You hear that God weeps for
His children. You hear that God hates the poverty. Hates the suffering. Hates
the ignorance. Hates the disparity. Hates that in a world He created beautiful
and diverse and flawless, in a world rich with resources, many of His most
beloved Creation go hungry, sleep under tarps, squat in ditches, scratch
mosquito bites with dirty fingernails and birth infantigo.
You hear that God has already won the war and one day He
will return. One day He will wipe away all the tears, shed and unshed, and
welcome His faithful into a place without tears, without hunger, without pain
or sadness or suffering. Without fear. Without anger.
To this hope we cling, through all the anger.
And we don’t have to accept those injustices. We don’t have
to like the words “Life’s not fair.”
We do have to keep going. We do have to seek the Joy amidst
the pain, focus upon the dimples, the smiles, the laughter, the hugs, the games
and the jokes. We treasure the moments of sweetness and innocence yet unsullied
by this broken world.
In this broken and unjust world we will always be angry. God
will always be angry, too, and will always weep at the brokenness.
But He will always remind us of hope, and always give us
grace to endure. He will fight for us. He has won the war, and while we wait
for His return, He expects us to shake out the anger and do the work set before
us.
Revelation 21:4
"He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death, or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away."
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