Wednesday, November 24, 2010

What I Miss Most About Trinidad

Living in the U.S., for the last sixteen years, I have come to miss many things about Trinidad—most of all, a mango. People might proffer others, like Carnival, Sunday lunch, a good beach lime, ole talk, roti, but for me it’s a mango.

In the U.S., I can find them in any Wal-Mart. When I am in there, I’ll pick up one from a pile. I’ll bounce it in my hand, checking the weight. I’ll turn it over to get a good look at it, like the thing is a diamond. It’s a mango. Feels like one. Smells like one. But it doesn’t speak to me like one. I ask: Where this mango came from? Who tree does this belong to? How long was this mango picked? Who picked it? Why the skin of this thing is so wrinkled up, like it just had a sea bath? Why it has so much bruise on it, like it fought with another mango? I rest it down, saying, “Nah!” Worst of all, it was a rose mango, the most common mango I know; even when it’s sweet, it still isn’t sweet. I think a mango without a story isn’t really a mango.

I remember taking O’levels years ago. Mango season was in full swing. There was a Spice mango tree next door, and nobody was living in the house, so you know what going on. As soon as I would wake up, I would throw on some clothes and out the door I was, heading for that tree. Rain fell the night before, so I am enjoying the mud squishing between my toes. Yes, no shoes, for what? If you are picking mango in sneakers or slippers, you’re soft. If you saw how that tree was laden with mangos and ripe to boot. I steupsed with delight. I scaled the tree faster than a zandolee. Now, this is how a mango gets a story. I have to watch out for the Jack Spaniard buzzing around; it had a couple of nest up there, and the last time I nearly got stung. They are looking at me and I am looking at them. I don’t shake those branches, but by the time I finish, my haul is about fifty, lemon yellow, egg sized mangoes, fruits of the Trini Gods. I sit on my front porch, legs swinging, facing the road, (so everybody could see today’s harvest,) eating mangoes for breakfast, juice running down my hands. Now, you see, I knew where those mangoes came from; I picked them myself. They were not frozen anywhere. About those Spice mangoes, the flesh has perfect firmness and not too stringy and it is sweet, sweet, sweet. Today, someone is living in the house next door, steups!

It is not just the adventure of picking mangos I miss. The first time I ever ate mango chow was by my aunt in S’ando; I had to be about six or seven. Cousin Linda was eating strips of mango from a cloudy juice with black flecks and floating pieces of pepper. Let me tell you, meh eye long. I ask, “What is that?”

She said, “Dis is mango chow. Come try it.”

Well, I fall in love right then.

My aunt had a huge Long mango tree in her yard, and with so many cousins close by, picking mangos was a family event. A bigger cousin was up in the tree, and the rest of us, children and aunts, stood around, grinning and giggling, waiting to catch mangos for chow. I miss that.

I remember the first chow I made with my brother. We must have put everything in that chow: ketchup, mustard, soy sauce, garlic—what we did not put in it is what we forgot—and also too much pepper. It was a witch’s brew, but my brother and I laughed and ate, tears running out eyes—pepper burnin’ we tail.

All mangos are not good though. I had just started San Fernando Boy’s R.C. in Standard II. At break time, the others boys would run to buy anchar. I had never touched that yet, but witnessing such impatience, I swore it was the greatest thing ever. I dared myself, plus it only cost a bob in those days . . . 1985. It did not taste that great to me—a strange, burnt, juicy kind of spice—and my stomach thought so too. Two hours later, I had the best gripe ever. I had the runs after I eat the anchar. I cannot even explain to Americans what a good gripe feels like, but I was in the toilet, holding my belly, giving back the twenty-five cents in liquid form. I would never eat anchar again.

Also, every day in primary school, as part of the government address, before receiving the small carton of chocolate or vanilla milk, the song ‘Mango, Mango, Mango,’ by Oliver Walk, played. It was one of the first folk songs I ever came to like and love. I cannot say when last I heard it.

I got the chance a few years ago, during a family reunion in Tobago, to give to others what was a birthright to me. I had a set of cousins that had never set foot in Trinidad, much less Tobago. There we were with this huge Doo-Deuce mango tree at the hotel, with a long bamboo pole resting against the tree. Being an old pro, I chooked down, (and that is a fabulous word right there,) as much mangoes as I could and shared them with my first cousins, who thought I was being generous, when I was just being family.

I can get a Carnival in Miami, Atlanta, Washington, D.C, New York, Boston, Toronto, Houston, and if I dare, Nothing Hill. I have had roti skins and parata delivered to me by mail. They invented Skype so I could ole talk for hours with friends and family. And Trinidad is not the only place with beaches. But when I heft that mango in Wal-Mart, there is no story, no memory, no event, just a spiritless fruit. I turn it over and the sticker reads, “Hecho en Mexico.” Mangoes are not made; they are grown.

Monday, March 22, 2010

To the critics of Obama's heath care victory

How deliberately fascinating that since passage of the health care bill all conservatives commentators are saying that Obama's end is near. This bill has somehow sowed the seeds of his destruction. If it is is anything it brings a resurgence to his presidency, and not the slogan, "Yes We Can!" but that He Can!

And yes he did. There was not one Republican ready to forgo their caucus and vote yes, not one. They all herded together to say no, and it is not a no for health reform. It is really a no against Obama. They say they are standing by their principle, but it is only one principle they are acting on and that is opposition. To say no all the time makes them a bore and a waste of time. Their fierce and angry rhetoric is only at the disbelief of their defeat, like this should not be happening to them, but happening it is.

Obama promised this and he delivered, his ascension is etched in the history books. The bill has the momentum to carry him and Democrats to midterms and his re-election campaign. Those who have said it has been a lackluster presidency they need to look out. The man is quiet and resolute, and not bombastic and overbearing like these Republicans have become. And the Tea Party? Their anger is rife and they hurl racial and homophobic epithets, for what? Is the goal to intimidate the Democrats? Is it to bring fear of death to politics? To threaten the President and Congressman with a rebellion over what? Healthcare! Sometimes their ministrations are so absurd. You would think Obama was deleting rights from the Constitution line by line.

Insurance for children up until twenty-seven. That was the first act of tyranny.
Health tax credits for small businesses. They should have not done that, too many people have insurance already.
Increased taxes on the health insurance industry. Their coffers are dwindling since they been refusing people coverage and jacking up rates.

In the end, it does not seem like they hate the bill. It just seems like they hate the man. Maybe it is his name, his color, his height, his intelligence, his diligence, his authority, his fearlessness, his austerity, his patience, or just his destiny.

This health care bill was good, and I cannot wait to see what is next.