We just posted this powerful Neruda poem about Central
America on the B2B page that fellow B2B rider Tuchegas recommended. We included a photo of a homeless man in Granada, a
colonial town in Nicaragua. These words grip you.
Land as slim as a whip,
hot as torture,
your step in Honduras, your blood
in Santo Domingo, at night,
your eyes in Nicaragua
touch me, call me, grip me,
and throughout American lands
I knock on doors to speak,
I tap on tongues that are tied,
I raise curtains, I plunge
my hands into blood:
O, sorrows
of my land, O death-rattle
of the great established silence,
O, long-suffering peoples,
O, slender waist of tears.
I write as I sit on a prototypical Costa Rican beach. We rest from
some grueling, steep and hot riding. It is complete and utter paradise.
This kind of juxtaposition between light and dark has haunted me from the day we entered Central America from Mexico through a small, fucked up Guatemalan border town. What does a small, fucked up border town in Central America look like? Hustlers and hookers roam the streets, at lunch time. Iron on windows and doors. Physical disabilities that the West only sees in text books are everywhere. You can feel the easy drugs, the easy violence in people's careful steps. I like these dirty underbellies of god’s green earth. They remind me that outside of the popular volunteer havens like Antigua not all is rosy with our queer little species.
This kind of juxtaposition between light and dark has haunted me from the day we entered Central America from Mexico through a small, fucked up Guatemalan border town. What does a small, fucked up border town in Central America look like? Hustlers and hookers roam the streets, at lunch time. Iron on windows and doors. Physical disabilities that the West only sees in text books are everywhere. You can feel the easy drugs, the easy violence in people's careful steps. I like these dirty underbellies of god’s green earth. They remind me that outside of the popular volunteer havens like Antigua not all is rosy with our queer little species.
photos by Banano
Riding through Guatemala on a bike. What a dream. From
day one we call it Guatebeleza. It's immidiately greener compared to Mexico, but in “The Land of Many Trees” not that many
mammoth trees are left in the flats along the coast. Mostly I see rubber and
sugar plantations. I read up on the history of this land. Juxtapose. I am
saddened by our callous nature that we so easily give into. By centuries of
subjugation, all too evident today. I ride past a cane field, men harvest it
with machetes. No machines, just bone breaking, dusty, unbearably hot work. For
a couple of bucks a day. A modern day slave wage. I want to take pictures. But I
don’t. It hurts too much to think of all the sugar I have eaten in my life.
But the world is green, even if the road is lined with
litter and buzzards track us diligently. The people of Guatemala are
stone-faced friendly. You have to ask for their smile, they do not give it
as freely as the always welcoming Mexicans.
We ride a brutal mountain up to Lake Atitlan, a true natural wonder of the world, I think at least until I see Lake Nigaragua. Seems like there are Volcanoes sticking out of all kinds of bodies of water in every country that we travel through. And like the Volcanoes, and the impossibly steep roads that we climb daily, the opposites remain. Light and dark. Wealth and poverty. Inheritors of colonial power and Indigina. I imagined the people of Central America to be similar in temperament to Mexicans. But they are harder, more closed off. Years of torture will turn the sunniest disposition into a stony, protective shell.
We ride a brutal mountain up to Lake Atitlan, a true natural wonder of the world, I think at least until I see Lake Nigaragua. Seems like there are Volcanoes sticking out of all kinds of bodies of water in every country that we travel through. And like the Volcanoes, and the impossibly steep roads that we climb daily, the opposites remain. Light and dark. Wealth and poverty. Inheritors of colonial power and Indigina. I imagined the people of Central America to be similar in temperament to Mexicans. But they are harder, more closed off. Years of torture will turn the sunniest disposition into a stony, protective shell.
“Gringo go home”, I hear more than once. I smile back and
say that I agree.
I know we can not blame anyone specifically for what
happened in Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua. You yell at your granny for buying sugar in the 1950s, when Guatemalans
where massacred by the thousands because they had elected a democratic
government that tried to re-distribute the land back into local small farmers’
hands for the first time in 450 years. 450 YEARS!!! What would you want your
government to do if Massachusetts had been raped, plundered and pillaged for
centuries by foreign powers? You can’t call your mom out for
buying car tires (rubber) in the 1980’s when El Salvador was sinking into one of the
most brutal civil wars in living memory because her people just could not
stomach another foreign-sponsored military coup.
Costa Rica got lucky. You know why? It didn’t have any
resources. No gold, no silver, no land suitable for large scale, slave-driven, mono-culture
cash crops. When Columbus showed up here he called it Rica because he thought
it was going to be like all the other places in Central America, a gold mine
for his Queen. He was blessedly mistaken. And so it became that Costa Ricans do
not have this ugly torturous past forced onto them by one pillaging global
power after the other. If you have nothing, you are rich. Instead all the Spaniards showing up here to look for riches had to, OMG, do their own heavy lifting to build a life in the central highlands. This could explain the stronger sense of civic responsibility here.
When I have Wifi, I see what is going on in the Ukraine and
Venezuela. These are both rich places, oil in Venezuela and simply the sun on the Crimea for wintery
Russians, and have been the focal point of international power
struggles for centuries. It saddens me to know that Austria is one of the most
important money laundering countries to Russian Oligarchs. We call ourselves a
Neutral Country, says so in our constitution, we pride ourselves on standing
for peace and justice. But, oh my, “Das ist doch nicht mein
Verantwortungsbereich, wo das liebe Geld herkommt”. I am ashamed. I want to
return all my passports.
This ugly human thing, this conquest and war for profit,
remains a constant since time immemorial, since just after we were hunter
gatherers, when suddenly you had rulers, and the ruled. And the justifying
classes in between. The ones that would come up with the proper stories for the
ruled to blindly fall on their pitchforks, their bayonets, their home-made
explosive devices. For the longest times the justifiers used the religions of
the world, but now there is only one god left. His name is Mammon. In 10.000 odd
years we have not learned. Seldom is a situation as clearly defined between
good and evil as WW2, and as long as Hitler was “just” going after the Jews the
world didn’t really give a shit either.
What will it take for us to live by inalienable rights
for all humans and not just the ones lucky enough to be born in the right
place? When will a life be more important than a buck? I wish I had taken the picture of the men harvesting sugar cane. Sweat pouring of their heads, dirty clothes, no shoes. Hacking away at the cane with their broken backs doubled over. I want that picture now, so that you
could spill tears with me at the thought of it, and the next time you put three
spoons of sugar in your morning cup of coffee.