On migrations and heartbreaks
My father disliked this country from the moment he landed at JFK in the now distant year of 1974. His, was a golden opportunity, one he never enjoyed and fully took advantage of. He was given a partnership in a business, in a city that was bustling with growth, Washington DC. As he also often said, he could have returned to his country of birth with duffle bags full of money. He did well, but he never did as well as many others with the same opportunities. This was a hospitable country, one of opportunities and coming from a recently freed from
fascism Portugal, a country of small minds and smaller pockets, this was indeed the land of riches. Yet something lacked. His family, his sisters and nieces, his hometown, above all his hometown, a small city up in the Northern part of Portugal. His identity was emmeshed with a town he had left at the age of 18 to go into the army.
He left the town but the memories never left him. He would return almost yearly, joyful, walking to his sister's house, seeing old friends, driving to the farm and to other localities and he felt in his element. He always returned and only then, would he rest and find some tranquility. He did not have pleasant childhood memories, indeed they were of a kind that you mostly read about now. Wanting to study, there was no money for the exams, loving his mother above all, he saw her lead a life of poverty and sadness, one of loss and heartbreak. Seeing his brothers drink, he resolved to never do it.
No, memories of a golden childhood he did not possess. But his compass was turned to that land and it drew him like a homing pigeon whenever he could break away. He left this country as soon as he could and settled for the rest of his life in the town that saw him born. He kept Portuguese time, followed the phases of the moon, his only religion, and always knew what time the sun set, wherever he was, to the minute, to the second. The sky was his reference, the same sky he had in that other place.
America can be good, but I would bet that were it not for the opportunities, many people would do as my father did and return or never set foot here again. When I speak of America, I speak of many wealthy countries people are driven to, out of necessity, and often sheer desperation. Would they could choose, they would stay, stay in their communities, surrounded by family and old habits, by familiar tongues and foods. By the color of the sky and the familiar skyline. Most, would indeed do with a little less but with a sense of home. A little less is not famine, war, rape, torture and natural disasters.
So, again, the world is in a mad flux, as it had not been since the beginning of the 20th century. Displacement is the word of the day, people taking to routes, deserts and seas, subject to merchants of death, attempting to escape a vile destiny. Arrived at the land of milk and honey, they work long hours and do the lowest biddings, they don't understand the languages and they sacrifice lives meant to to borne out in toil.
Those are the refugees, the peasants and the poor, the war ravaged poor, of the poorest countries, or the unlucky ones who serve as proxies for empires. Migration is not limited to those, though. There are restless souls and odd marriages, love and other callings. And to those, the pain of leaving what you know behind, also leaves a hole in the chest and a sadness of longing. We are by nature a peoples on the move, and have been so since the beginning of time. We spread out to all continents, we made our way to the Northernmost Pole and the Southernmost islands. But we did so throughout millennia, time barely moving. Industrialization changed all of that and before then, the great movements of ships during the times of Magellan, Vasco da Gama and of course Columbus. The Mongols transversed Asia and the Macedonians reversed the way. People have been in flux for millennia, it's true, but never has this worldwide movement of migrations to and forth, this restlessness brought out by an unregulated globalization that has uprooted most people, and disconnected us from our ancestors, our familiar birth sky colors, familiar skylines and sights. Never have so many felt so lost and so homesick. COVID brought an added desperation, and a stop to the frenzied tourism, which restlessly awaits its degrading and destructive paths. I love my country, I love my countries, I have one foot in this great America, with deserts and soaring mountains, deep forests and vast plains, this country so vast and so wild and so untamed...I also miss my little corner on the western most part of Europe, a small, old and almost unknown country, that many think is part of the bigger neighbor to the East. It almost is. It's tiny and it's mostly coastal, friendly and as it was to my father, it is in the end, the one I really call home.
I get immigration, I get emigration, I get displacement and I also get what it can represent to many. I get it because I have been a student of it. I have spoken, written and read on what makes someone get up and leave the familiar. It is often the first question out of my mouth, where are you from and why did you leave.
I mostly get it though, because it has made me suffer so...
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