Church: Part 2

Story

Old St. Pat’s also reminds me of another church I got to visit more recently than Minara Miwili. Last year, I went to Dublin and saw possibly the oldest St. Pat’s that there is. I landed in Dublin in the early morning on March 17th, and I started by looking up the parade route. Gotta start somewhere, and flights tire me out, so standing still sounded great. St. Patrick’s Cathedral was toward the end of the route. I wasn’t sure if I wanted to commit to mass right before the parade began. I might miss it. When I walked up to enter, I noticed most other tourists weren’t going past the gate even though it was open. Two ushers stood by the door, and one stopped me. He told me that the church was not open, I could go in, but if I went in I should stay for mass. So he made my decision for me, and I committed to staying. The timing ended up being perfect, and mass ended not long before the parade got to the intersection by Christchurch where I had found short people to stand behind.

Just like Old St. Pat’s here in Chicago, it was the words of the priest that stuck with me most at (Oldest) St. Pat’s in Dublin. The elderly man, whose name was also Patrick, told the parishioners that his saintly namesake stood for piety and humility. He also stood for a life of overcoming huge challenges, like slavery, hunger, and isolation. The priest opposed what St. Patrick’s Day had become today. He urged us all to go out and serve the community, to overcome physical and spiritual challenges, to unite communities, and to humbly abstain from the drunkenness we were sure to find out on the street.

Then, we all filed out solemnly, and joined the drunkenness on the street.

17_Dublin

The Blue Line

Story

84_Ashland

I get to and from work by CTA each day. That means the train, or the ‘EL’ here in Chicago. It’s called the ‘EL’ as an abbreviation for ‘elevated,’ even though it seems like most of my time on it is spent underground. In those subterranean moments, weird things happen. One time a man got on board with a city-owned trash bin and announced that everyone else should mind their own business. Another time, a guy sang the Battle Hymn of the Republic followed by Iggy Azalea’s ‘Fancy.’ Very few people ever strike up conversation with me, but sometimes it happens.

Church: Part 1

Story

Lately, I have been going to mass at Old St. Pat’s, just west of the Loop in Chicago. The priest tonight talked about “reclaiming humanity,” and it reminded me of another place much warmer than here. One of the most human moments I have ever witnessed happened at a historic church in Zanzibar called Minara Miwili or St. Joseph’s Cathedral. It happened because of a tragedy.

Two years ago in February, when I was living in Zanzibar a priest was shot and killed. His name was Father Evaristo Mushi. The international news media shared the story of his death under headlines about “religious tension,” “brave Catholics,” and “extremists,” without any knowledge of who the shooters were. A small handful of American newspapers shared the story of his life, since he had lived in places like Pittsburgh and St. Petersburg. I attended his funeral mass with a close friend, and I admit that I was nervous. When we arrived, there was a crowd lined up the whole way down the narrow, ancient street. My nerves disappeared when we saw what everyone was wearing. I regret not having a camera at the time, but no one cared about cameras that day. The only people who did bring cameras were journalists who snapped away when the politicians arrived, quickly shook hands next to the casket, and shuffled away from the place immediately. It is incredible to me that no one bothered to photograph the much more meaningful attendees, who were the hundreds of women in matching kanga.

Smiling

Story

Mr. B. (the same from my first post) doesn’t say things; he exclaims them. This man was born with a politician’s voice, and he often interrupts class to give brief presidential speeches. I think he could have been a congressman except that he was busy getting married at 15, and supporting a family before most Americans finish high school. Once he told me that Hyderabad, India, reaches 50 degrees Celsius and I believed him until I went home and did a quick Google search. When I asked him to describe his house, he took the chalk from my hand and drew a blueprint on the board–down to the location of each doorway. There is charisma behind his words.

Therefore, when the class ganged up and set off on a disparaging complaint about one of the other teachers, Mr. B.’s silence was noticeable.

One student explained that “All teachers very good, but she is–she is…eh.”

The others nodded, and another said, “She’s voice very loud.”

Salma said, “She is not smiling. Never smiling…”

Then finally, Mr. B. spoke up and exclaimed, “Smiling is very healthy!”

That settled the matter. We all agreed, and smoothly transitioned to non-count nouns.

“We are staying home”

Story

One of my students is an Iraqi woman who has been in Chicago for a while. Her quirks include shushing the others when they talk too much in languages that aren’t English and bringing candy corn for everyone to share. She is also always the last to leave and she always apologizes for it. Let’s call her Salma.

At the beginning of class, I asked Salma what she did this past weekend, and she told me the usual “going to shopping,” and “walking to the Devon market.” I asked her to use the past tense, and got some impressive went’s and did’s. She also told me that she “watched the T.V. news,” and that there was bad news. She passed me a note:

55_Ilham's Notebook

She added, “We are scared. We are going home, just, we are staying home.”