The Newest Boston Massacre
When you’re far away and disaster strikes home, it’s hard.
Which means what exactly? Which means, that when someone bombs your old haunt
and kills 3 people, your grief is like some kind of insanity, because your
emotions are all out of proportion to those of people around you. You’re shell
shocked and fumbling around the rubble—they’re reading a newsarticle.
I don’t have much insightful to say about the Boston
attacks, but I need to say something. All day long I have been zombie-walking
around school and home, tears coming into my eyes whenever I stand still too
long and someone talks to me. Across the ocean, watching from afar, I have been
meditating on reactions to calamity. Particularly my own first reaction.
I first heard last night when an inlaw from Holland and then
my nephew texted me wanting to know ‘If everyone in Boston was okay?’ But it
was midnight and I figured this was another case of my family hearing about an
earthquake in the Middle East and wrongly assuming I had been standing at the
epicenter—something clearly had happened but most likely it was some minor
little mishap in some suburb somewhere.
Then the next morning, I heard the news—the finish line of
the Boston marathon bombed in two different locations. And I know both those
locations well. Every year I took my students down to see the marathon—I and a
stalwart group always made sure to elbow our way through the crowds to find a
good view of the finish line. The
marathon was a pet project of mine—I prepared a lesson on how to rank people
(second fastest, third fastest), on the history of the marathon, on vocabulary
associated with races, on the first marathon in Greece and the role of Greek
myth in English. It went off just up the street from the Boston Public Library
on Boylston, where Delal and I stood last summer eating hotdogs and arepas, and
taking pictures. The second bomb was further up Boylston, near the first school
I worked at in the city.
There was a video of the first explosion—people screaming
and scattering, people tearing apart the barricades to get to those trapped
inside, blood, a woman praying.
And now I have to be honest about something ugly.
As I walked up the road to catch my bus to school, a covered
lady was coming up behind me, a chubby, sour-faced woman who, every morning,
without fail, brushes past me in a rush to her own service bus. I was thinking
about the bombing, wondering if my friends were okay, when she bumped my arm as
she breezed by. I’m ashamed to say my
first reaction was pure hatred. ‘Enough
of you people,’ I muttered at the woman’s back. Our neighborhood is
conservative AKP territory, the moderately Islamic political party that brought
you mass arrests of Kurdish activists, censorship of books on evolution and
physics, and the persecution of numerous writers, journalists, and artists like
pianist Fazıl Say, sentenced yesterday to prison for ‘insulting religion.’ And
now another bombing, I thought. Enough of
these right wing, closed minded, extremist Muslims. Get rid of them! And I
didn’t just mean whoever I thought attacked Boston, or the woman, but everyone
in my line of sight. The old man with the beanie hat hobbling in the other
direction, the dimwitted convenience store owner setting up his newspapers on
the sidewalk.
It was only after I boarded the bus that I calmed myself
down and reasoned it out—even it were an Islamist extremist group, it was
stupid to get angry at all Muslims, or even the meddling conservative ones in
the government here. Every religion has extremista capable of violence. You can’t
blame a group for the actions of an
individual. It might not even have been an Islamicist—hell, domestic terror was
more likely. And a variety of other common sense ideas that any idiot can
rattle off at the drop of a hat, all of which, in a subtle way, are racist in
and of themselvers. Why should anyone need to remind themselves tha t you can’t
blame a group for the actions of one? To say it suggests you already do so.
My instinctive
bigotry caught me off guard. It was frightening
to see years and years of being surrounded by other cultures, merging into
them, learning about them, and a natural empathy for their differences go up in
smoke and to find that all I was left with at that instant of crisis was
tribal, racial rage. I wonder if the searches going on in Boston now of several Saudi students and visitors (read
the Globe) are inspired by anything similar? I hope not. I hope that the thing
that drives my country forward in the next few months and God knows, years, is
not the same primitive emotion that overwhelmed me this morning, that people
will take the time to stop and calm down.
On Facebook, I scanned for messages from friends. One after
the other, ‘I’m okay,’ from Emily. ‘We’re safe,’ from Jessica. ‘I’m okay,’ from Karen and Joe. A variety of
well-meaning posts were up from other friends.
One shared an article pointing out that many people die in American drone
attacks every day in foreign countries while the US grieves over one bombing.
Another pointing out the countless civilians who died in Iraq and Afghanistan—perhaps
violence begets violence? Some students and Turks suggesting its all a
conspiracy to blame an Iranian and justify another invasion. It’s the same predictable mix of reactions.
Some trying to point out how misguided policies may have led to this. Some
showing that others’ grief may be greater and more frequent—and again caused by
us. And, (in this country) some making
the instant jump to conspiracy mentality.
To me it’s like this. Imagine if your mother were suddenly
hospitalized for lung cancer. As you are out in the hallway, waiting on the
results of an emergency surgery to remove the tumors, several friends arrive to
comfort you. One says,
‘Well, you know, some people’s mothers die in a lot more
horrible ways! You should think about that!’
Another says, ‘Well what do you expect? She did smoke alot.’
Another says, ‘I think she’s doing it on purpose to cash in
on her life insurance!’
While I’m online trying to confirm the safety of people I love,
the last thing I want is a lecture about politics and history—no matter how
true it may be. You want someone to grieve a little with you, to help you clear
the rubble, to share the sadness and shock, but that’s just not going to happen
far away. You’re alone.
Right now I am picking through memories of Boston. Baseball
games at Fenway—once trashtalking the Tampa Bay center fielder so effectively
that I am sure he struck out the next inning. Listening to music at Wally’s
jazz bar, small and cozy, a glass of gin in hand. Dinners and green wine with Misty in some
East Cambridge Portuguese restaurant. Long endless walks with Fred across the
city. Street fairs in Somerville. The drunk woman dancing in the snow at the
St. Patrick’s parade as everyone cheered her on. Eating Canolis at the park in
the North End. Proposing to my wife at the new Evoo. Or the spring days at the
marathon with the tulip trees blooming and the apple blossoms scattering on the
sidewalks and those crowds and the feel of the sun on skin after a long winter
and complaining about how its always the Kenyans that win. Or the hawk what
used to sit on the rooftops of the Boylston Street buildings, like some
guardian, our very own gargoyle keeping the evil spirits away.
Enough about me. My prayers, for what they’re worth, go out
to all in Boston, and as William Styron said, ‘to all the world’s butchered and
martyred.’
Here is a picture of the boy who died--with a poster wishing for peace |
2 comments:
Very well said. Definitely a time to grieve, not to lecture.
Thank you Jeff. This is very beautifully written and moving. It still hurts.
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