Mexico City
April 8, 2016
April 8, 2016
De donde viene?
Where are you from?
It's not an uncommon
question here in Mexico. I'm clearly not Mexican and if there are any
doubts, my accent gives me away immediately.
In other years
it's not been too much of an issue, but in this year of the rise of
Facist Donald Trump and his anti-Mexican stance, it's downright
dangerous.
Twice I've
been verbally attacked when I say I'm American. The last time was the
last time.
Now I'm
Daniel Ladudavich and I live in Slovakia.
Quick. What
do you know about Slovakia?
Precisely.
A month ago I
was on the beach in Acapulco. The week before Semana Santa. I
was alone. There was really no one on the beach except the guy who
rented me the beach chair, and he was usually sleeping and not
readily close by. Even the normal number of vendors had dwindled.
It was the calm before the storm of the Holy Week/Easter madhouse.
Late
afternoon. A guy is walking down the beach, stops, asks me in broken
English where I'm from. Everyone just assumes I'm American. I tell
him New York.
He smiles.
“I used to live in Philly. I worked in a restaurant. I loved
Philly. Philly cheese steaks.”
The he
changes. Fury wrinkles his face. “My wife is still there. My
kids. I was deported. I hate your country. I hate Trump.”
He begins
screaming at me. He's a big guy—much bigger than the average
Mexican—and he's scaring me. He gets closer to me. I don't say
anything. Spit starts to spray from his mouth.
I get up. No
one is around.
“I'm not my
country,” I tell him. Makes no difference. He's angry and I'm his
target. It's happened before.
Had I been
with someone it wouldn't have been so bad, but he was frightening me.
I get
up, pack my things, start to walk in the direction of the beach chair
guy, who's not there. No one is around.
This diffuses
the situation. He leaves. I wait until he's a safe distance away,
then return to my spot. It's late in the afternoon. I wait 'til the
sun begins to set and make my way back to the hotel.
I tell myself
that's it. From now on I'm from some place else.
Slovakia.
Bratislava. Yeah. That's an idea. And if pushed, I work with the
embassy in Mexico City. No one knows jack about Slovakia.
Which brings
me to yesterday.
I stop into a
mom and pop store to buy something.
“De
donde viene,” the owner asks me.
“Europe,”
I tell him.
“Que
parte?”
“Slovakia.”
He then tells
me how much Mexicans hate Americans.
“Pemex.
Isis. Drugs.”
He's right.
The government's dropping the nationalization of its massive oil
reserves and we all know who the market's going to. The monster that
lives to the north.
He's right.
George W. Bush—the good “Christian”--wages war with Iraq and
look what happens. All hell breaks loose and Isis rises. Imagine
what Ted Cruz, with his Messianic certainty, will do. Another good
“Christian.” How the message of Jesus has been perverted!
He's right.
Americans point their finger at the rise of the drug cartels in
Mexico and blame Mexico without looking honestly at its own face.
The drugs are heading to American markets. What is it about my
country that requires so many people to drug themselves into
oblivion?
I tell him I
understand, that being neighbors to a large super power is difficult.
I tell him it's the same in Slovakia, that Germany eats up
everything around it. I tell him we were part of the Soviet Union,
and that I get it.
We've reached
a solidarity, me, the Slovakian, and him the Mexican, against the
mega-powers within our scope.
We shake
hands. He needed to vent. Who knows what would have happened had I
identified myself as an American.
So from now
on I'm Daniel Ladudavich and I'm from Slovakia. And if push to come
to shove, I'm from Bratislava and I work for the embassy.
But from now
on, as long as I'm here, I will not be Dan Ladue, an American!
What a sad,
sad commentary on the United States of America! How we have slid
since 9/11!
No comments:
Post a Comment