My friend Evelyne's
elderly mother died on Sunday morning. It has been a long, hard road for both Evelyne and her mother, and the last two years her mother was confined to bed and non-verbal. The
funeral was scheduled for Thursday at 3 pm in the cathedral.
I've traveled so much the past few years that I've actually been out of town every time a friend's loved one has died, so I hadn't yet been to a memorial service in Haiti. I asked a co-worker about appropriate attire and she suggested white, or, barring that, black. I should wear heels if I had them, although after the funeral I would need to walk several blocks to the cemetery. I asked if I could wear my hat (I have a skin condition on my face which is aggravated by the sun). She said, “The big one?” Apparently my floppy Target hat is not fancy enough to wear to a funeral. A pillbox type, or even a big Easter-type hat would be fine, though.
I've traveled so much the past few years that I've actually been out of town every time a friend's loved one has died, so I hadn't yet been to a memorial service in Haiti. I asked a co-worker about appropriate attire and she suggested white, or, barring that, black. I should wear heels if I had them, although after the funeral I would need to walk several blocks to the cemetery. I asked if I could wear my hat (I have a skin condition on my face which is aggravated by the sun). She said, “The big one?” Apparently my floppy Target hat is not fancy enough to wear to a funeral. A pillbox type, or even a big Easter-type hat would be fine, though.
I change and head out
and see my friend Solencia just up the street. She's just left the
office and is on her way to her home in Limbe. Instead of taking a
taxi-moto to her bus stop she walks with me to the cathedral. We get
to the cathedral and she waits there with me a bit since there's a
delicious breeze coming through the large, open central doors. We
don't see a casket, but Solencia says that funerals often start late.
Eventually she leaves to catch her bus and I take a seat. Mass
starts, but there is still no sign of a casket. After several
minutes I think that perhaps the funeral was to be in the smaller
chapel next door. I walk outside but the chapel is closed. Two
young people standing by tell me that there are no funerals there
today, but there is a funeral at the Sacre Coeur Church, “Lots of
doctors and nurses were there.” I say I didn't know that that was
the correct funeral (my friend's mother was a laundress). But then I
remember that her daughter volunteered for the Red Cross. “Oh,
yes, there were lots of Red Cross people there.” The Sacre Coeur
is 17 blocks away and it's already nearly 3:30, so I go to hail a
taxi-moto. I have to wait to cross the street since a marching band
is passing by – Flag Day is this Saturday and the marching bands
practice for weeks beforehand.
Flag Day 2011 |
At the end of the
funeral I give my condolences to Evelyne's niece and also greet
Michel, who works where I live and has helped with some of the
arrangements. We follow the caskets out the door and stand at the
entrance to the cemetery. He says he wants to wait to greet Evelyne.
While waiting I see another friend – it turns out that Madame T-
is his wife's great-aunt. Eventually Evelyne comes out of the
cemetery and we express our condolences.
Michel hops on a moto
and I start to walk back. The Sacre Coeur is near several street
markets and I have a few things I want to see if I can find. Two
blocks in I see someone selling nail polish. I ask if he has polish
remover – check. I have no idea how much it should cost, so when
he tells me 30 gourdes I say, “Isn't it always 20?” He says,
“No, it was 25 but it's gone up.” He asks if I want to buy a
lovely face powder. No, thanks, just the nail polish remover.
I go in further,
looking for deodorant. After half a block a pre-teen boy sitting on
a stoop with a woman who looks to be his mother calls out,
“Foreigner!” I say, “Good afternoon.” He smiles, and his
mother asks what I'm looking for. “Deodorant, but I don't see any
here.” “The guy next to me has some.” The guy at the next
stall looks to have only electronics, but apparently he has some
deodorant in a box in the back. I see lots of no-name brands. The
last one he pulls out is a tiny Avon, which I've at least heard of,
so I buy it.
I go back to the main
street, since I know that in a few blocks there will be a lot of
peanut vendors. I meet one at 8 L and ask to try her peanuts. Bleh.
I don't know what to say, so I say, “Another time,” and move on
to 9 L where I'd gotten some good ones last week. Ah, there's the
merchant I bought from last time. I try her peanuts, since I've not
bought from her consistently and I don't yet trust the quality. (I'm
looking for a new peanut seller since my last one – who never had a
bad batch -- stopped selling months ago to take care of her sick
husband.) The peanuts are okay today, so I buy some. She asks if I
want the skin removed, which I did last week, since I was buying for
some friends who were going to make peanut butter. I say no, since
I've heard they stay fresh-tasting longer with the skins on and these
are just for me.
Next to her is woman
selling mangos, which is the last item on my list. She says they are
Rosali mangos, 10 gourdes per pile. She wants to put them in the
plastic bag that I already have, so I move the breakables aside and
she loads them in. Her next customer helps hold the bag for me.
It's been a hot day,
and I'm pretty thirsty, so I decide to stop by a juice shop. My
favorite juice there is guava, but today they only have papaya and
pineapple. I choose pineapple and ask them to hold the sugar –
they usually add sugar even to that super-sweet fruit! The guy
manning the counter says he hasn't seen me for awhile. I sit down in
the air-conditioned loveliness and look up at the television, which
is showing a documentary on meer cats dubbed into French. A little
girl walks closer to the tv and stares. I love seeing behavior that
crosses cultures like this – she's got her eyes wide and mouth open
in typical childlike wonder.
I finish my pineapple
juice, say good-bye to the guy at the counter, and leave for home. I
tend to enjoy walking through the city – as long as I've already
gotten it straight in my head that it is a public event. Moto- and
car-taxis slow down and ask if I want a ride, and I now
nearly-automatically give the correct head-and-hand-shake which means
no. Street kids ask me for money or tell me they're hungry and I
chat a little with them, giving them some crackers or peanuts if I've
got some (today I do) or telling them “another time” to which
they smile and say “okay.” Random people say hi, kids call out
“foreigner” and smile when I greet them in response. If their
parents are with them I get a smile and a greeting from them, too.
If I ignore them because all of the attention is embarrassing, I miss
the smiles. And if I ignore the young men – well, if I respond
with a “thank you” when they tell me I'm beautiful, or say hello
when they greet me, then they smile and say something funny, to which
my best response is to laugh, and then everybody laughs, and all the
time I've never once stopped walking. But if I forget and ignore
them they can start yelling or get icky – this happened earlier
today.
I get home and Madame
Elias, the evening cook where I live, says she saw me at the
cathedral. She had gone there for the funeral, too. She said she
looked down for just a moment and then I was gone. She asked some
people where I went (I was the only obviously-looking foreigner in
the church) and they said out the side door. But she couldn't find
me. I explained about the funeral having changed locations, and I
was sorry I hadn't seen her, we could have gone there together.
I go up to my room to
paint my toenails for the first time in years. I have worn toe rings
ever since going to India in 1998, which, along with a monthly
self-pedicure (sans polish) has always seemed to make my feet
pretty enough. But now I take my toe rings off when traveling to
rural villages or to trainings in other provinces, since in many
places in Haiti it is not considered appropriate for Christian women to wear
any rings except on the third or fourth finger of the hand or as an
earring. I told this to my friend Chrissy last month, and said that
my feet always look so bare to me without the toe rings. Well, on
Tuesday I received a box of goodies from some friends in Arizona and
Chrissy had slipped in four different nail polishes!
As I'm painting my toe
nails “Pretty Petunia” I hear another marching band. Now, I've
lived in several countries where the normal response to hearing any
kind of commotion is to stop what you're doing and go look at
whatever is happening. My North American self has tended to resist
this – I'm either occupied with something else, or I don't want to
gawk, or I think it won't be all that interesting anyway. But years
on this has finally changed – I'm curious, I'm more relaxed, and
I'm also more easily entertained. So instead of finishing my toes I go outside to watch the band. Here they come, marching proudly
down the boulevard, everyone matching in white t-shirts and jeans.
As they reach the curve of the street they pause and march in place
while continuing to play. A girl about 6-years-old comes running up
along the beach to see the band and starts dancing as soon as she
gets up to them. Her bright pink shirt makes her easy to spot as a
few seconds later she moves to stand in the midst of the band,
imitating their movements as they continue to step in place. They
start moving forward and she marches with them as they turn the
corner out of sight.
Flag Day 2011 |