As the Humanitarian
Aid Battle revved its engines on Saturday
morning on the Venezuela/Colombia border, our group of young conuqueros (farmers)was gathering
for our weekly work day.
The morocha arrived
with a kilo of rice to share, generating some excitement. Her mom is in the
militia, so her family receives two boxes of food a month versus the
one box every four months the rest of us are allowed to buy.
On conuco
days we eat what we grow. Our greens and fruit are delicious, but
these young growing bodies yearn for calories. In this thin mountain
soil the main calorie crop we can coax in abundance is plantains. The
kids try multiple ways of preparing them - as soup
and arepas, in caraotas and quinchonchos, but
sometimes we yearn for a change.
Juan Carlos had also brought a pumpkin. It was so ripe that it had split open, its fragrant orange flesh distracting.
Chairs gathered into a circle to begin our work day - as always, with a song and reflection. The chorus of the day’s song seemed fitting for the moment. Venezuela, por haberme dado tanto, estoy contigo en la risa y en el llanto (Venezuela , for having given me so much, I am with you, in laughter and tears.)
In the reflection
that followed, each person was asked to think of a word that
expressed what Venezuela had given them, then write the word on an
a heart-shaped piece of banana leaf (one of our many substitutes for un-affordable paper).
When planning the reflection, Ledys and I had wondered what these kids, ages 11-14, would be have to say in their brief, isolated, difficult lives. A lot, as it turned out.
When planning the reflection, Ledys and I had wondered what these kids, ages 11-14, would be have to say in their brief, isolated, difficult lives. A lot, as it turned out.
As each spoke their word, I had to squeeze my eyes to keep the
tears from falling. Conuco. Family. Tradition.
Solidarity. Humility. Strength. Community. Beauty.
We ended the
reflection in an embrace. It lasted a long time. Venezuelans have no
problem expressing their affection. I knew however, that this hug was
for Venezuela.
I couldn't help but
wonder if that same passion for Venezuela was in the hearts of those
who were pushing this aid into Venezuela like bullets. Or those who
were defending Venezuela from this aid with real bullets. Or those
who threatened to make sure this was aid accepted. OR ELSE! Or those
who stood on the world’s stage with false smiles, defending
Venezuela’s sovereignty, while stuffing their pockets with its oil
and gold.
As Team Humanitarian
Aid (the Opposition) and Team Defend the Homeland (the Maduro
government) and Team Invade (The US) and Team Rape the Nation (China
and Russia) lined up on their respective sides, our conuqueros
divided into the day’s teams. One team to gather firewood and cook.
One team to turn the compost piles. One team to weed and fertilize
the banana plants.
By mid-morning one
compost pile had been turned, the rice and pumpkin were boiling on a
hearty fire, half the banana plants had their weeds cleared, stomachs
that had no breakfast in them were rumbling. I went into my house and
found the one piece of birthday cake sent to me two nights ago from
Chichila and divided it into 16. one-square-inch pieces for each. I took the grounds of the mornings coffee, added water and reboiled, with a few teaspoons of precious sugar. Then I
brought the meager fare to the shade of the siempre verde tree and called the kids to the log benches. By the look on their faces, Julia Child could not have laid a finer table.
As the kids feasted,
laughed, teased, laughed, drank, laughed, collected cups and laughed,
I felt their joy lift me up. Every single time we gather these kids
of skin and bones, of strength and spirit, Ledys and I receive what
we call our vaccination of joy. Against all logic and reason,
the laughter never ceases.
As we were about to
return to our posts my phone buzzed. Cell coverage had been coming in and
out for days, lasting often only seconds at a time. I read a message saying that one truck of aid had crossed the border. As I
read the message to Ledys the kids overheard and cheered. When will
it reach Palo Verde? (our town) asked Alexibel excitedly.
By the time the few
trucks of aid that managed to pass the border had been set ablaze in a massive plume of black smoke,
the kids had returned home, stomachs filled with rice, pumpkin, a
tiny piece of cake and a sip of coffee.
I needed their
ever-present laughter to slop the flow of my tears as I looked at the
image of those trucks loaded with food, burning black at the border. As much as I knew the motives of those
trying to ram the aid through, I couldn't help myself. This hunger
has lasted too long. I have worked too hard to grow just enough food.
All I could feel was a visceral sense of rage upon seeing so much
food go up in flames. The opposition blamed the government. The
government blamed the opposition. No matter who lit the match, the
result was the same.
Four days later, I
remain haunted by that image of that burning food. And all I can
feel is this: Basta! Enough food as bullets. From all sides.
Enough food as
bullets from the government. Food has been withheld, stolen, resold,
converted to massive wealth for a few, doled out as favor and
taken away as punishment for too long,
Enough food as
bullets from the opposition. The hunger of Venezuelans has been
abused for their political gain. And it has been used to obtain US
sanctions causing more hunger. And now as justification for the
unspeakable threat of military action.
Enough food as
bullets from the US. While what lies in those boxes at the border is
likely some version of food, its real contents are the desire to
overthrow Venezuela’s government and install one favorable to them.
To regain a foothold in this land of oil and gold.
Enough food as
bullets from Russia and China. While from one side of their mouths
they speak out against US aggression, on the other side they are
plundering Venezuela’s wealth.
Enough food as
bullets. They rain down on us from all sides. Enough.
I am well aware that food bullets may soon turn to steel bullets. The drums of war are real. I have traveled up and down Latin American listening to horror stories of the legacy left by US intervention.
So many people have written to ask me: Lisa, what can I do. As US citizens, our greatest gesture of support for the people of Venezuela is to tell our country to back off. Even for those who long to see Maduro go, the threat of US intervention has given only him the gift of oxygen. The rivers of blood carved by U.S. throughout Latin America still run red.
I"m not sure what next week will look like. Or even tomorrow. But today I'll join Ledys in planting one more banana tree.