My life 92

Stanislaw Barszczak, Terms of endearment of Christian, part 1
Dear Reader, I am a half-century. And I never thought that I would be fortunate to make a living as a writer. I dreamed of it, but even as I walked away from a priesthood practice to write my first novel, the decision was based on an undeniable need to at least try. That kind of need is very different from the conviction it would actually work. I often think of it as a kind of desperation, an urge to do something different, to make something from nothing: a compelling story, unforgettable characters, a message, maybe. I knew the odds of getting published were even small book, but I never much cared for being an attorney on this way. I guess it had something to do with my faith. My mum never doubted. As boy I needed parental authority and a home. And mother was my inescapable self. When I told her that I wanted to pursue the only dream I’ve ever had, she said, “Of course you should write,”she said once more, and I love her for that. That total trust. We lived lean while I wrote: no more friends out, no travel. We did not have to sell our house, but it was an interesting time. Ten books have now been published (The scar wound, The fenster of God, The corn-flowers of liberty, The friend loves in each time, The way of the cross, Petra and the holy Land, The gazing through my window, The another and he, The wonderful month of May, To fulfill the silence). I’m blessed to be published in my Archdiocese and in over thirty countries, a fact that still seems unreal. I’ve met the wonderful, committed people along the way. They shared an excitement about what I was doing, invested their energies and faith.

With my first books I took even more chances. I wanted to tell the story of me, of a child whose world is shattered so badly that no one can make it right: not his parents, or the cops, not the church or the community. How does the boy cope? Where does he find strength and down what dangerous path will that strength take him? The love of mother and faith in the church, I suppose. Making a writing work with a child as the main character is not an easy task. The risks have to be credible, the action not only compelling but very, very real. And the kid has to be real, too: his perspective, beliefs and actions, everything that he sees and thinks. That challenge so daunted me that when I first began the book I told mum that in a year’s time she would either love me or hate me. Thankfully, the books work. They are my favorite yet, and I couldn’t be happier. If I mentioned about my books I wrote lot of tales. One from them is titled: “A lay of the proud knight”. There is in Karak, now in Jordania. I visited this city three years ago personaly. In the year 1187 in Jerusalem was the king Baldwin IV. The soldiers carried him in a special seat on poles, because he was a lepper. One day he bent down at the place where Christ’s body was laid after he died on the Cross. In that day the Christians won the battle with the Muslims. But the days that followed they had to withdraw from Karak. In the city Karak is a great castle from the Middle Ages. During the battle between Christian soldiers and Muslims soldiers those lasts they threw people whose heads were encased in wooden cages off the castle walls from the height of 300 metres into a gorge. In my tale I wanted to express my admiration for Jesus. I want this tale and its translation as well to reflect Saint Francis’s of Assisi optimism and grace, because Saint Francis leads us to the joyful and polite faith. He always was and it’s a pleasure to go to Jesus with him. His external life, his deeds reflected his internal life. I also wanted to perform the liberty’s duty in my Christian life of today. For that reason I sent some texts to the world’s magazines (The place for an Other), also the tales “A Cousin of the flying Escadron” or “Chine vase” and go on There were many ideas stored in my mind: how inheritance corrupts families; the urge of communities to define themselves by excluding outsiders; what ‘family’ really means and what we might really be prepared to give up for our principles. I tried to set all these ‘big’ ideas firmly in the background and just let people walk about in the village of Jesus Christ. I always tried to follow the action, not dictate a particular story line. I showed it to the other people and their happy response seemed to suggest that I was on to something. It seemed an alarming but wonderful responsibility. I missed my busy advertising job and I wanted some intellectual or creative activity to balance my life. I had always wanted to be a writer, but had been too practical to chase such an impossible dream…I am on to snoop into other characters’ lives. Many people know what to do, but how many can do it? So, I wanted to seize all their day also. I was trying to stay alive and work too hard at it. That’s what’s turning my brains. This working hard defeats its own end. At what point should I start over? Let me go back a ways and try once more. How you can treat someone like this whom you lived with so long. Let me out of my trouble. Let me out of my thoughts, and let me do something better with myself.
When you write a book you try to project onto the main characters not exactly what you think but what they think, then you realize that these characters are part of your soul and that you are very complex. Sometimes I may not agree with me, because I have a life of my own also and I have to respect that as a novelist. Each one is unique and reflects a part of my questioning, of my hopes and doubts. Regarding the influence you speak of: I may have one but I think that the strength of it comes from the freedom contained in each one of us. I enjoy the freedom I have attained – being able to write about virtually anythingwithout political or marketing agendas. Furthermore, I think that it is everyone’s responsibility to be involved in one’s community. What is possible – and the most difficult task – is to first look at oneself and try to identify what’s wrong. Before searching for the other, one has to find oneself. I took forty years to find myself, to accept my dream, to become a writer. Only when I started to walk down the path of my personal legend was I able to honestly turn myself towards others; before that there were too many walls inside my soul. I looked around me and said, “I can’t change the world, I can’t change my country, I can’t change my city, I can’t even change my neighborhood. What I can change is my street.” Street of city full of fear yet. That’s when I went to a market in Częstochowa, in the center of the city and met a group of people that were taking care of children. I think my spirituality came from curiosity and, later, by understanding there is a silent presence around myself. I don’t try to explain it, but I try to live my faith according to the things I believe. For me, literature and spirituality are the same. In my books I wrote about my real journey, my true story. You see, during my pilgrimage it became increasingly apparent that I wasn’t happy and I had to do something about it – stop making excuses. As Paulo Coelho said, ‘Life itself is a pilgrimage.’ Every day is different, every day can have a magic moment, We are all on a pilgrimage whether we like it or not, and the target, or goal, the real scope, if you like, is death. You must get as much as you can from the journey, because, in the end, the journey is all you have. It doesn’t matter what you accumulate in terms of material wealth, because you are going to die anyway, so why not live? When you realize that, you can be brave, and that is the first tenant of any spiritual quest: To take risks. Who were the heroes in your life, There are many people I deeply admire, such as Giovanni XXIII, Gandhi. They certainly have made a difference for the better in our world. But I find that too often we overlook the greatness that is contained in people that lead less “extraordinary” lives. I’m talking about the everyday heroes that go about their lives and try, daily, to improve their surroundings. It may be a taxi driver, a person that you meet by chance in the bus: if you are attentive to the signs – this person, even if you never see him/her again, will give you the right input to take the decisions that you are postponing. Therefore, all we need is to be attentive to signs, open to people and willing to share our souls.

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