Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Merry Christmas

And to my mother, Happy Birthday.

They roar past like ghosts on their tired, choking motorcycles. Harmattan sands cake their skin and clothes. Many peer past clouded goggles protecting their eyes from the intrusive grit. These gray specters fly down terre rouge on their way from Nigeria near the end of every December. It's the rural exodus.

Nigeria's farming and lumber industries pay more, drawing economic migration from all over the country. At Christmastime, however, the migrants come home. The small dirt paths leading to villages all over Benin are crowded with moto-caravans, racing by in groups of eight or nine. Big, eighteen-wheel trucks, carry loads men in their beds. Men who cheer as you wave to them. Men on their way home. They're always blanketed in gray, a mix of ash from the fields being burned and the choking dust clouds of Harmattan.

In Manigri, you can tell when someone has finally come home. In my house I can hear cheers erupting from all over Ikanyi, as entire concessions pour out of their homes to greet their returned brothers. It's difficult to describe. For these men, their entire lives were spent in these concessions, surrounded by multiple inter-married and related families. And then they had to leave. Leave their mothers, fathers, wives, children, to seek work and better wages in a different country with a new language. They bring back gifts, the back of their motos are weighed down with cement sacks; pockets heavy with money. But the real gift, of course, is themselves. And it's not just the concession that celebrates- the surrounding concessions come out. Old mamas, babies, papas, brothers, cousins, sisters rush out of their homes to see the stranger who has returned. It's pandemonium and joy and possibly the most beautiful thing I've ever seen.

They don't really come home for Christmas, however, as you may think. Christmas is largely seen as a holiday for children. Papa Noel is just some cartoon character that gives presents to little kids. Of course, most kids don't get Christmas presents as families save their kabri for the New Year celebration, a feast that lasts up to three days. That is the real fĂȘte. While I never felt as though we celebrated a religious Christmas in my family, there remains a nostalgia for snow, lighted trees, and the general spirit of love, generosity and kindness encouraged through the season. This is the kind of nostalgia that makes me choke up when teaching my students, "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" in class. (I'll chalk this emotionalism up to not having had to endure christmas music, obnoxious advertising or shopping mall santas.)

The new pastor and his wife (of the church directly behind my house) are possibly the sweetest couple I've ever met. Their speech is soft and they shake hands earnestly. I like visiting them to ask them about their chickens, the service, the choir, etc. Last time I was sitting in their house, I glanced into one of their side rooms to see a stack of boxes. The side facing me read, "Samaritan's Purse". Where have I seen that before? I got up from my vastly uncomfortable seat to examine the cardboard boxes. "Operation Christmas Child." No. No way.

I was just talking about them last year in a scattered blog post. My sisters and I would get a slip of paper with the information: boy, age 13. or girl, age 3 typed out on it. We'd fill a shoebox with hard candy, small toys and picture books. It was, looking back, one of the better parts of Christmas. And as I wrote last time, as a kid I knew someone would put in a little book about Jesus and Christianity in attempts to proselytize, but that didn't bother me. The generosity and uncommon kindness to strangers was more appealing to me than any religious basis for the organization.

And then, there they were. Shoeboxes little girls and boys filled with hope for a merry christmas to kids they could never hope to meet. Shoeboxes filled with toys that will undoubtedly bring so much joy, excitement (and confusion) to the homes of children who have only tin cans and matchbooks to play with. I remember vividly helping my mom stuff socks and a toothbrush into a shoebox and wrapping it, wondering about the lives of those children abroad in the Philippines or yes, Africa. And now , staring there I was, staring at the same boxes that I had once wrapped. And I know these kids now. And those kids. It was like straddling the continental divide. It was miraculous to me that in all of the churches in Benin, this small mud-brick congregation was a recipient of Samaritan's Purse, and that I had the opportunity to be on the receiving end of someone else's generosity and charity. Someone else's christmas wish, if you will.

I know there are a lot of people out there who don't celebrate or even particularly like Christmas. I used to be one of them. In the United States it's really easy to see the seedy underbelly of this vastly commercial holiday. However, once removed from the status quo of gift-wrapping, terrible television commercials and nerve-wracking economic analysis, I find myself discovering what the holiday means to me. It's a shoebox, wrapped by small hands in the United States and opened in the bush of Africa.

With that I'd just like to say, Happy Holidays. I miss you all.

6 comments:

  1. Merry Christmas, Pumpkin. I couldn't get a call through this week ("busy--please cawl agen latah") and if I don't talk to you before Christmas I hope you have a nice holiday with a good meal. I put those Nat King Cole Christmas
    carols on my FB page. Strange how they sound so good the first time through, then they kind of wear a person down after too many listenings.

    We have the tree up, your mom did most of the trimming, although I added a few sentimental decorations near the top where people couldn't reach: tree decorations picked out by our exchange students when they spent their year here in Pine Bush.

    I love the traditions of Christmas, but the meaning of it around here is much the same as in Benin: it's a holiday for the children. My
    Christmas is really more about remembering my
    parents and siblings and wishing I could have them all around me again. There are so many empty chairs at my old Christmas table.

    But our family is still intact, although rather scattered for the holidays. The Bush Brothers are playing at HFC on New Year's Eve and that should be fun. I hope next Christmas you're back in the States... and that would be wonderful.

    Love,
    Dad

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  2. I can't believe they got Operation Christmas Child shoeboxes!!! That's awesome, I had totally forgot about those. The videos they used to show us before handing out the information and boxes to everyone in Sunday School would always make me cry, or at least a little teary, but I'd always feel better seeing them jumping for joy and smiling over little boxes of the most trivial gifts who, we here in America, mostly see as essentials (socks, toothbrushes, soap, hair ties, a doll).
    I'm very jealous you get to experience that in person.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Beautiful story.
    Amazing story.
    There are tears in my eyes.
    Thank you so much.
    Merry Christmas in Manigri.
    Our thoughts are with you,
    Mark Loehrke (Carly's dad) and the whole Loehrke family

    ReplyDelete
  4. I echo Mark's sentiments. Your blog was so comforting to read and brought tears to my eyes as well. It's Christmas Eve, Carly is home as well as her brother and their respective significant others and I am feeling so lucky. Carly and Alex have both made phone calls to Benin so you are on our minds - hoping you have a merry little Christmas.
    Judy (Carly's mom)

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