This is an updated, edited repost of an earlier diary. Sorry, folks, I'll try to complete my previously announced post next week.
There is a town by the name of Santa Rosalia on the Sea of Cortez, in Baja California. When you hear a Santa Rosalia native say the name, the word "Rosalia" has the most lyrical and lovely sound, and you imagine the town as a woman, dark hair captured at the nape of a long and elegant neck, red rose behind the ear, smoky eyes. A sultry rolling "R", a slightly flat "O", and softer "S" - "Rosalia".
It is a salt water town with a most unique history. In the United States we too often ignore our own past and the building of this country by immigrants who were unwelcome but instrumental in erecting the industrial foundation of our economy in the 1800's. The Irish, the Chinese, the Scandinavians; add just about any other nationality to the mix and you'd have the right of it. Santa Rosalia echoes a similar melting pot past to our own United States history.
The town of Santa Rosalia was the site of a gold and copper rush in the 1860's, a time when the occupation of Mexico by France and the governance of Emperor Maximilian was on the decline, but French business interests still sought wealth in an untamed country far across the sea from Mother France.
Copper was discovered, and then gold, and soon the mines began. Terrible, dirty mines constructed by a French company and operated with virtual slave labor. Yaqui Indian prisoners by the thousands were forced to work in the Santa Rosalia mines in the late 1880's to the early 1900's. The Yaquis are an indigenous population and were severely persecuted by the Mexican dictator, Porforio Diaz, for over thirty years. After resisting conquerors from the Aztecs to the Conquistadores, Yaquis were inevitably the target of a mass ethnic cleansing campaign by the Mexican government, decades after our own United States fought the last military-centered "Indian wars".
In addition, Chinese and Japanese laborers were brought over to work in the mines and on railway lines that would support the mining industry. With a promise that there would be land to grow rice on, thousands came to Baja. It only took a few years for this importation to fail, as the new workers discovered Baja was no place to grow their staple food. But a few residual Chinese and Japanese settled around the Sea of Cortez. Santa Rosalia was a company town in the worst sense and in one two year period between 1901 and 1903, over 1400 miners died from blood and lung diseases due to the pollution emitted from the copper smelter and the dust in the mines where there was no aeration.
Santa Rosalia is curious as a Mexican town because it has a steel church purportedly designed by Gustave Eiffel. From photographs, it appears a rather simple structure, as perhaps it would, since its mere existence is due to pre-fabrication. The church of Santa Barbara, Patron saint of miners, was transported across the ocean from Europe and then reassembled in Santa Rosalia. "Purported", as there is some debate on whether Eiffel was the architect or if the church of Santa Barbara de Santa Rosalia was actually designed by Bibiano Duclos, a Brazilian trained in France.
Either way, the church is one of the many architectural phenomena in this town on the Sea of Cortez. In Santa Rosalia, wooden houses with expansive porches and second floor balconies face onto the streets, much like the structures in New Orleans French Quarter. When the French came into Santa Rosalia in the 19th century, they remade the village with a European flavor and redesigned dirt roads into grid-like streets and avenues.
The Sea of Cortez, where Santa Rosalia is located, is a place I've always longed to see and this is mostly due to John Steinbeck. Steinbeck's The Log from the Sea of Cortez evokes something, I don't know what, maybe a memory of what you think you should know, or a place you've always longed for and never seen. A mind can make false memories like that. Creatures exist there that are found nowhere else in the world. It is a kind of Galapagos, lost now that so much of the ecology of just a few decades ago has apparently been pillaged or destroyed by the commerce of both sport fishing and man's idle wastefulness.
There are still wonders. There is a crab, called the "Sally Lightfoot Crab" and where else could you find a creature with such a name? Steinbeck wrote in his Log:
"They seem to be able to run in all four directions; but more than this, perhaps because of their rapid reaction time they appear to read the mind of their hunter. Man reacts peculiarly but consistently in his relationship with Sally Lightfoot. His tendency eventually is to scream curses, to hurl himself at them, and to come up foaming with rage bruises all over his chest."
It's a bit of a Darwin meets Gilligan read; a lighter Steinbeck for the most part, humorous, adventurous and finally, sad, and all at the same time.
These words with which I describe Steinbeck's Log above are words I'd use to describe my friend Juan. I've known Juan for over ten years now. Initially, Juan worked as a kind of a handyman and also did yard work for my now ex-husband. He worked for us for the brief time my husband and I shared life together, and Juan continues to work for us both separately now. Over the years, he's done painting, clean-up, yard work, debris removal, and in my case, has performed the moving and organizing of the detritus of my life.
It's a curious interaction we have. There is always work to be done. Juan has no phone and no consistent address. He gives a call every week to see if I need this or that job done.
When one is a single woman, it's hard to admit that there are times when a stronger pair of hands or a stronger back is necessary. In my case, it's doubly difficult, given that I used to lift weights and grew up thinking I could do anything. As the years have moved on, so has my pride. Now cancer and chemo defeats my energy. Juan's strong back has become something that I count on to assist me with moving furniture or making runs to the local dump. I don't think Juan understands how much I value his assistance during these chores, but it is truly a gift to me that there is someone in my life who is willing to help out without questioning why I need something moved somewhere or if something has to be done that day at that time, when I want it done. So what if he is paid for it? Payment doesn't always guarantee willingness. Juan shows up ready and willing to work.
Last fall, when I had to adopt out my pug-a-poos, Juan was here for the adoption of two of them. Tears rolled down his weather-hardened face as I led Chico and Pinky to the car of their new owner. When "Little Guy" died last Spring, a dog who always attacked Juan on the ankles whenever Juan attempted to pet him. Of his own accord, Juan moved my bluebells from another part of the yard and replanted them over the freshly covered grave where Guy rests. I found them replanted after he'd left that day.
He is from Santa Rosalia, on the Sea of Cortez, on the Baja Peninsula. Juan's own ethnic origins are as unique as the foundations of Santa Rosalia. Juan is a quarter Chinese, a quarter Indian (Guayacura), along with half Spanish-Mexican ancestry. He has a mahogany complexion, high cheekbones and straight, thick black hair, all echoes of his Indian and Chinese ancestry. Juan and I were born in the same year, but he's traveled so many more places and lived so many more lives, by his own account, than I ever could.
His stories are part of his charm. Juan has casually dropped "big fish" tales of when he used to help charter fishermen on the Sea of Cortez as they fought marlin and swordfish, talked of his time playing futbol for a semi-professional team in Mexico City, related the story of a bar fight in Guatemala where he stood next to a man who was stabbed in the back at a bar and how he wound up with the murderer's knife in his hand and that is why he left Guatemala. Episodes in Nicaragua fighting with rebels. Leaving Ecuador with another man's girlfriend. Witness to a shooting in Juarez. Shortstop on a farm team in Costa Rica.
I've seen Juan walk into my yard on a Saturday morning, with a black eye from the night before, teeth knocked out, the casualty of too much earned money in his pocket the previous day. A bottle of Johnnie Walker Black Label was used as a weapon rather than as the container of whiskey it was meant to be. Whiskey and spicy food are his medicines of choice on days when his sinuses are congested and, in Seattle in the winter, that can be so many days. Seattle is the runny nose capital of the world for those from warmer climates.
During the years of my previous marriage, my husband and I had a small old pan abode cabin out on Tiger Mountain and there was a very plain and ugly, but clean, 1960's ranch-style house on the property. In the summer, Juan would come out there and live during the week and do land-clearing for my husband. There were nights that I could smell the best stews and grilled food emanating from that house. There was a kind of Mexican seafood cioppini, with red and green peppers, chilies and tomatoes, carrots, onions, garlic, shrimp, scallops, chili powder, cumin and oregano. My nose could separate each lovely aroma wafting out of that house and into the country air of Tiger Mountain. Growing up on the sea coast of Baja gave Juan the skills of a master chef. Other nights after payday, he'd often buy a steak or two and grill them up, and I suspect, if there were two steaks, he'd eat both of them... Juan is around 6 feet tall and if he weighs 150 lbs, I'd be surprised; but, boy, can he eat.
Juan's power to weight ratio is amazing. He's often mentioned working in the copper mines from the time he was 14, and I know his father worked all his life in the mines, and died from lung cancer just a couple of years ago. Most histories on the web of the copper mines from the El Boleo company indicate that the mine closed down for good in 1985, so it's possible that Juan worked there, even as a teenager. There's little other economy in that area of Baja, unless you work the tourist industry or fish. I suspect that the closing of the mine and the subsequent downturn in employment is what sent Juan out of Santa Rosalia. I once saw Juan lift a slab of concrete four inches thick and four feet by four feet wide using only the leverage of a crowbar and his back. To me, an astounding feat, given that he has the build of a lanky marathon runner. It makes sense that such strength has come from swinging a pick-axe inside a dark hole in a mountain.
He's told me about Mexico City, where his ex-wife lives and where there are so many people and so much corruption. He's talked about parts of Colombia which he said he's hitchhiked to and I never know completely what to believe, as each time he tells a story, there's a wonderful embellishment that grows the story beyond its original recitation. That can be the beauty of storytelling, right?
He has two sons who are in their twenties now. One is somewhere in East L.A. and living with Juan's uncle. The other apparently works in computers in Mexico City. These two are sons that Juan has not seen since a couple of years before he came to the States in 1990. He never saw his sons grow up and he's never known them as adults. Juan has a wandering spirit and I can imagine that life tied to one spot and the physical weight of responsibility from a family was simply too much for him. He stays in touch somehow, though. I know that a good portion of the money he earns, he sends to one of his sisters and her children, now living in his parent's house in Santa Rosalia. Juan's mother died around seven years ago, and he has only a brother and a sister left out of six siblings.
In the summer months, Juan sleeps outside in the "Jungle", and when that gets too crowded or dangerous or overly policed, he moves to Interlaken Park on North Capitol Hill. It's a crazy and transient life, but I know he's tried several times to share apartments or houses with other workers, but inevitably, the tensions run too high among so many single, Latino men, and fights break out over women or liquor or money, and things get too hot and Juan moves back to the outdoors, where he doesn't have to compromise on his peace and quiet. This is what he tells me. The only belongings he maintains are an old battery operated TV, a sleeping bag, a change of clothes (which are always clean), a few toiletries, and some Spanish language dime novels. When living in the "jungle" or the park, he carefully buries these few belongings in a plastic tarp, well hidden from prying eyes and park police. Long, long ago he lost his identity cards, but somehow he makes due.
I trust Juan with my home and around my kids and have never had reason to doubt that trust, even when my trust in others has failed for lesser reasons. He can never remember the kids' names and they are all "chica" or "girl" or "honey". In all the years I've known him, my door has been unlocked to Juan, and he knows that if he needs money he can call me for work. I've been down to my last ten dollars and I've given him half. When I've had no money, I share the contents of my cupboards and freezer with him.
At least three times in this past year, he’s been robbed of his sleeping bag as he sleeps in the "Jungle". The conditions are getting worse, he tells me. More drugs, more homeless, more knives. Immigration agents post themselves around Pike Place Market and watch for suspicious activity and patterns of activity among those who circulate the market each day. Casa Latina has become too dangerous to be around in the last year.
My Spanish is limited (to about twenty words) and his English is poor. It can be comical sometimes, because I'll ask him to do something a certain way, and he'll nod his head with authority. I'll think he understands and then I return a couple of hours later and find that the tree I wanted lightly trimmed has been cut to within 6 inches of the ground. My English, even for native English speakers, is often too fast and I forget this sometimes when I speak with him. He speaks to me rapidly in Spanish sometimes and forgets that I don't speak it well enough to understand at all. Most of the time, however, our common communication and results are more successful.
Juan has not been back to Santa Rosalia. The effort and danger in getting back across the border and then his potential for returning here to Seattle is too risky to contemplate. He's lonely for the blueness of the sea, and the heat, and he thinks of Santa Rosalia, at least the Santa Rosalia he remembers. He wants to see his sister, to see where his mother and father are now buried. He wants to go home. I think someday soon I'll never see him again.
He’s lately developed a pattern of arriving on my doorstep every Thursday or Friday. He knows when my garbage is picked up weekly and he’s there to either drag the cans back up from the street or take them down in anticipation of the pickup. He knows that if he doesn’t do this each week now, I tend to let them sit on the street for days before I can make the effort to drag them up, which only irritates my neighbors. He also knows there are weeks when I just don’t get them down to the street in time – I keep forgetting what day it is in my chemo-numbed sense of time.
I have not found many people in my life who always work hard, have honest eyes, and can always tell a good story.
"Home is the place where, when you have to go there,
They have to take you in."
Robert Frost