“This isn’t as big of a deal as I thought It’d be” I told
Gina standing outside our apartment, looking at the crowd of people forming to
see the Pope. “I thought there’d be really dense crowds and lines wrapping
halfway around the city.” My point of comparison had led me astray. The last
time I’d had any kind of papal involvement had been in Italy when John Paul II
died. In hours, Rome had doubled in size, people slept on the streets, forming tent
cities and the lines to see his body were interminable. For weeks, huge crowds
gathered at St. Peter’s to watch the smoke from the papal chimney. We waited
for the white smoke to announce that a new Pope had been chosen.
When the crowds finally cleared the streets and returned
home, it was as if the city had undergone some profound change. Even a city as
timeless as Rome, that has witnessed the changing face of civilization nearly
since civilization began was affected by the events in the Vatican. I assumed
that a city like Asuncion would be absolutely shocked by Francisco’s visit.
Teams of construction workers had been working overtime to repave certain
crumbling streets. Volunteers were cleaning up the small piles of trash that
accumulate here and there. The newspaper vendors were giving away free Pope
flags (the kind you attach to your car) with the purchase of a Sunday paper and
the supermarkets were selling t-shirts and souvenir coffee mugs featuring the
Pope standing alongside the Paraguayan flag. The city, usually troubled only by
the occasional roar of an unmuffled motorcycle or a late night karaoke party,
seemed on the verge of exploding into sensationalism.
In many places, Asuncion looks fairly modern. There are
collapsed buildings and shattered sidewalks here and there and abandoned cars
rot in sidestreets, but in most places, the city looks fairly progressive. Most
people, when thinking of the Paraguayan capital would probably expect much
worse. But Asuncion’s progressive face belies the reality. When it rains here,
everything floods. Minutes after the beginning of a heavy rain, the sewer
grates are belching forth geysers of fetid-smelling grey water. In order to
make the sewers more efficient, the grates are removed and cars frequently fall
into them. Along the riverbank, the hovels are abandoned to the rising water
and the poor move further into the city, setting up plywood shacks to sleep in,
bringing their livestock with them. On the edges of parks and soccer fields, shanties
hang at crazy angles, barefoot kids run around and horses tear at the grass.
When it rains, most people stay in. The streets quickly turn to rivers, even
expensive houses flood and, often, the power goes out. The city is not well
equipped to handle the rains, even though they come every year. Based on this
observation and what I remembered of my time in Rome, I wondered how it would
fare with a flood of people. After all, Francisco is the first Pope from Latin
America, born in neighboring Argentina, and this is his first visit to the
continent.
As he wasn’t planning on visiting Argentina or Brazil, I figured these people would be coming to him in the 1,000s or even 100s of 1,000s as it had been in Rome. Under this sudden deluge of people, I imagined Asuncion struggling like it does against the water but with a much more chaotic result.
A national holiday was declared for the Friday and Saturday
that the Pope would be in town. The institute I work for was closed as was the café
where Gina works, to give you an idea of the scope of the event. Living near
the Embassy of the Hold See, I expected the pilgrims and media to begin
arriving by Thursday or even Wednesday, but by Thursday night, hardly anything
had changed. There were a few more police out and some yellow and white flags
had been strung up, but the streets were quiet. Friday, the people came out,
but there didn’t seem to be too many. I’ve seen bigger crowds making their way
to sports events. When the SF Giants were in the playoffs a few years ago, I
saw bigger crowds walking around SOMA than I saw here on Friday.
It was easy to enjoy the day off. Even living at the epicenter
of the action, we were able to go about our lives as if nothing exception was
happening. But perhaps because we had been anticipating such massive crowds, or
maybe just through sheer force of laziness, we spent most of the day inside,
reading.
Saturday, Francisco was scheduled to be going out of town to
visit the holiest cathedral in Paraguay in the town of Caacupe about 60
kilometers away.
In the early morning, when we went out to have our coffee,
we saw the crowds assembled to see the Pope as he passed by. It wasn’t
difficult for us to move through these crowds and soon we were in the park,
drinking coffee and listening to the birds sing like we always do when we have
a day off. The only difference was the occasional rumble of a helicopter passing
overhead. The park even seemed more empty than usual. For the hour we sat
there, no more than two or three cars drove past. Even the scratchy calls of
the parrots seemed to have drifted off somewhere else.
After spending the previous day in and drinking too much
coffee, we decided to take a long walk, down the length of the coastanera,
through downtown and into the neighborhood of Sajonia. It was an ambitious
plan, but with a mild and sunny Saturday stretching out before it, there seemed
no better possible use of our time.
When we started out, there was still a light breeze drifting
out from the shadows of empty houses and the dense, leafy canopies of the mango
and jackfruit trees. I put on a long-sleeved shirt and was comfortable until we
walked out onto the sun-exposed porch of Asuncion, the costanera.
I think ‘costanera’ might be a southern cone (Argentina, Chile,
Uruguay and Paraguay) term. They used it in Argentina as well, but no one
outside this area seems to be familiar with it. A costanera is what we would
call a boardwalk in the States. It’s a promenade that runs along a body of
water, but while in the States we would usually associate such a thing with a
beach, here there is usually only the walk itself. Many of them run along
rivers and for, whatever reason, there is seldom anyone swimming. Part of
Asuncion’s costanera runs along a wetland area that would be uncomfortable to
swim in unless you liked brackish, methane-rich water and being poked by big
clumps of reeds.
Further down, they’ve constructed a man-made beach that looks
like it would make for decent swimming, but there are signs posted forbidding
it. The signs give no reason, but everyone tells me it’s due to pollution.
Little kids are frequently seen ignoring the signs on hot days and although I
would like to join them, I am not brave enough to face whatever might be in
that water.
It was hot along the costanera and extremely empty. After
walking for a while, I unbuttoned my long-sleeve shirt that had been
comfortable back into town where all the empty homes and dead cars seem to
seethe with cold, dusty air in the winter, despite the sun. Eventually, in the
bright, unmitigated sun of the costanera, I just took my shirt off. I’m still
adapting to wearing shorts and walking around with no shirt on, but living in
Paraguay, where temperatures frequently reach above 100 degrees and humidity is
high, I have had to make certain concessions. There comes a point where one
just looks ridiculous wearing jeans.
There are usually guards posted along the costanera. Much of
the area used to be a slum, and even now, much of the shanty housing as only
been pushed back behind the sidewalks and cotton candy vendors to a thin strip
of trees and stagnant water between the city and the river. On clear, windy
days, kites made from garbage bags and other refuse items fly over this area
and barefoot kids occasionally run into view with their arms raised and their
faces turned up to the sky.
To keep the kids from bothering anyone who’s come to walk
along the costanera, the guards stand there tirelessly with zoned out looks on
their faces. I say ‘hi’ to them but they never return my greeting. Either they
are not allowed to, or they’re just jerks. As we walked along, watching the
ragged kites rise and fall before the city’s skyline we began to joke about the
bored-looking guards. “Oh my God,” Gina suddenly said, “what if one of them
told you to put your shirt back on?!” and the moment she said it, I knew it was
going to happen. The next cluster of guards we passed (two sitting on a bench) one
raised himself up a little and asked me, somewhat politely, if I would put my
shirt back on. I complied without argument despite the fact that we were spitting
distance from the beach.
There is more hypocrisy in authority here because the rules are much more vague. Yeah, in the States you might get pulled over for nothing, but here, cops will ask you to do anything they can think of. I really wouldn’t be surprised if one were to ask me to spit out my chewing gum. They function on whims and ideas of morality and personal interpretations of the law. I really doubt that there’s anything that says that I have to wear a shirt on the beach, but something about the situation seemed inappropriate to the guard and he had been sitting out in the sun for hours and probably no one had walked by (the costanera had been surprisingly deserted). He wanted to justify his presence.
I went along with the request, it was hot and I was tired. I
didn’t want to argue with the guy, but the whole thing soured my mood a little.
Nobody likes being told what to do, but being told to put your clothes back on
by someone who’s barely old enough to shave is beyond irritating. We walked the
rest of the costanera saying little. Everything started to annoy me: the
military boat made from what looked like scrap metal bobbing in the polluted
river, the cheap boots that swallowed the cuffs of the solders’ fatigues, the
captain with his swagger and big belly, the unprofessional way the military
guards stared at us. It all looked like a ridiculous farce and I wanted to say
so. This is what I think tourists from developed countries will always be
guilty of. No matter how hard they try to join the developing world while
traveling, riding local buses, eating local food, etc., if the country they are
visiting tries to flex its muscle over them, no matter if the country is
Columbia, Morocco or Nepal, they will always reveal their lack of respect for
the country’s laws. Developing countries are allowed to have their revered
customs and traditions superior even to those in the developed world, but their
soldiers and police will always be ridiculous and lamentable for their
impotence.
We walked through downtown and into Sajonia. The sky had
begun to darken and it looked as if it might rain. My resentment was waning,
but I didn’t feel as good as I had when we had set out. The grey sky and the obstreperous
freight of passing buses left me feeling bored and vaguely irritated with Asuncion.
Gina and I started talking about San Francisco taquerias, tamarindo aguas
frescas (sweetened, Mexican fruit juice drinks) and salsa verde. The familiar
California day dream began, but I banished it before it could become anything
worth entertaining.
We passed Carlos Antonio Lopez Park and the sun started to
edge out around the clouds. Some little boys were crouched down by the fence, hiding
from someone, presumable two teenaged girls who stood a ways off looking around
confused. The boys gestured to us as we went past. They seemed to be saying “don’t
tell them we’re here!” which was great. We went into the park and walked around
the spiny palo borracho and the
mottled guava trees. Little kids were playing soccer on a field with little
goals, just above them, some teenagers were playing in the sand of a slightly
larger field. The whole park seemed to rise to a point, amongst the trees. We
climbed to the top, naturally to see what was there. As we came out of a grove
of trees, we noticed a police officer in his authoritarian black, faux-Kevlar
vest sitting at the pinnacle of the park. I wondered if perhaps he would tell
us we weren’t allowed to enter, but we continued walking, thinking it best to
wait and see what he said rather than give up before trying.
We got to the top, about 10 yards from where the cop was
sitting. I said ‘hello’ to him and he returned the greeting. I noticed he was
smoking, but as it’s common here, I didn’t think much of it and then, after we’d
taken a few steps away, it hit me, the unmistakable scent of weed smoke. The
poor bored bastard probably had to hang out in this quiet park all afternoon
and with no shirtless people to bother, he’d fired up the joint he’d brought
along to ease the boredom, right then, two meddlesome foreigners had to come
traipsing over the hill. No wonder he’d been the first cop that day to return
my greeting, we’d caught him and his guilt brought him down to our level. He couldn’t
afford not to return my greeting. He wasn’t any better than me.
I guess that’s what I’ve always found so annoying about
authority, in countries both ‘developing’ and ‘developed,’ everyone commits faults,
everyone has weaknesses and no one is morally superior. Yet, humans seem to
crave hierarchies and if they can’t use something natural (like strength) they’ll
impose something artificial (like rank). In one’s own society, you obey
authority because it seems natural, but try to go somewhere else and buy into
someone else’s power structure and you quickly realize how ridiculous and artificial
it is.
The cop seemed embarrassed to have been caught, but we didn’t
make it too obvious that we’d noticed. We climbed down from the hill, rambled
around the park a little more and then turned back toward home, where the crowds
were already amassing to try to catch another look at the Pope.
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