Fatima and youth

Stanislaw Barszczak, Seventy thousand Berliners

Seventy thousand Berliners gathered in the Olympic stadium in the capital of Germany to see the pope Benedict XVI on the threshold of this fall. And now I see those thousands of people everywhere, even saw them in the distant Fatima. What the hell are they all looking for? A way out. A way to the right way out. A way to leave. A way to go. A way to have had it, to have had enough of it, to be done with it. A decent way to give it all over to the giver of it all. As I understand, the whole world and every human being in it is everybody’s business. One day in the afternoon of the world, glum death will come and sit in you, and when you get up to walk, you will be as glum as death, but if you’re lucky, this will only make the fun better and the love greater. I am out here in the far West, in Fatima, in a small room on the house of Our Lady, Sorrowful Mother of God, close to Sanctuary, writing to common people, telling them in simple language what they already know. Apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima I have already described in a separate letter. Fatima today is a special place. There is no America and there is no England, and no France, and no Italy. There is only the earth…Standing at the edge of a city, a man could feel that we had made this place of streets and dwellings in the stillness of the desert, and that we had done a brave thing… Or a man could feel that we had made this city in the desert and that it was a fake thing and that our lives were empty lives, and that we were the contemporaries of the jack rabbits. So, here I want to give you only some general reflections which occurred to me after stay of mine in Fatima. I don’t think my writing is sentimental, although it is a very sentimental thing to be a human being. I began to write in the first place because I expected everything to change, and I wanted to have things in writing the way they had been. Just a little things, of course. A little of my little. I took to writing at an early age to escape from meaninglessness, uselessness, unimportance, insignificance, poverty, enslavement, ill health, despair, madness, and all manner of other unattractive, natural and inevitable things. In my youth I couldn’t understand the language, I couldn’t understand a word in the whole book, but it was somehow too eloquent to use for a fire. What I intended to do was to burn a half dozen of my books and keep warm, so that I could write my story, but when I looked around for titles to burn, I couldn’t find any. There is much for a young writer to learn from our poorest writers. It is very destructive to burn bad books, almost more destructive than to burn good ones. This was such bad writing that it was good. It seemed to me that I had no right to burn a book I hadn’t even read. This is what drives a young writer out of his head, this feeling that nothing is being said. The only thing I can talk about, Saroyan says, is the cold because it is the only thing going on today. I believe there are ways whose ends are life instead of death. I love Poland and I love Portugal and I belong to both, but I am only this: an inhabitant of the earth, and so are you, whoever you are… Fatima is a part of us. When I was eleven years old, one Sunday, I remember, the priest Raymond Frydrych, today my great friend, came to our Parish Rector and in the church with the help of technology we could then watch a movie about the far Portugal children. I saw that tears were in his eyes and his mouth was twisting with agony like the mouth of a small boy who is in great pain but will not let himself cry. But, above all, joy and peace in hearts of Jacinta, Francesco and Lucia. I will never forget loud music accompanying the presentation of new casualties during the Marian apparitions. It really happened. This really occurred. Now I am a living witness to that era. Third and most important person of the children, talking with his Mother of God, lived after this event even more than 23 years.We didn’t say anything so far because there was such an awful lot to say, and no language to say it in… Over the years and days I found many men to whom I felt deeply grateful … but the first creature to whom I felt definitely related was a Holy Mary, mother of Jesus. I believed from the beginning of remembered experience that I was somebody with an incalculable potential for enlargement … I felt at the same time, and pretty much constantly, that I was nothing in relation to Enormity, the Unknown, and the Unknowable. I get in trouble for tackling an issue of the human nature. A man cannot write a poem or a story that will transform the whole nature of man, his reality and his truth, making them greater and nobler…We are still men in the world, but not alone as Jesus yet. For this reason William Saroyan gave the question Jesus never said anything about absurdity… he didn’t even try to make the theory understandable in terms of the reality and experience of the rest of us. For if everybody else is also not what Jesus said he was, what good is what he said? On the other side every man in the world is better than someone else and not as good as someone else. If I have any desire at all, it is to show the brotherhood of man. So, you just change your attitude now please, young man. I don’t like to see kids throw away their truth just because it isn’t worth a dime in the open market. Now, if I want to do anything, I want to speak a more universal language. One day, back there in the good old days when I was nine and the world was full of every kind of magnificence, and life was still a delightful and mysterious dream, my buddy Lonia, who was considered crazy by everybody who knew him except me, came to my house at four in the morning and woke me up by tapping on the window of my room. “Stasiu,” he said. I jumped out of bed and looked out the window. I couldn’t believe what I saw. It wasn’t morning yet, but it was summer and with daybreak not many minutes around the corner of the world it was light enough for me to know I wasn’t dreaming. My buddy Lonia was sitting on a beautiful white horse. I was a little afraid of him; not the boy himself, but of what he seemed to be: the victim of the world… One of us is obviously mistaken…He was just a young man who’d come to town on a horse from the east, bored to death or something, who’d taken advantage of the chance to be entertained by a small-town kid who was bored to death, too. That’s the only way I could figure it out without accepting the general theory that he was crazy…Then I imagined that from the horse he went on the trapeze ropes.Through the air on the flying trapeze, his mind hummed. Amusing it was, astoundingly funny. A trapeze to God, or to nothing, a flying trapeze to some sort of eternity; he prayed objectively for strength to make the flight with grace. Then swiftly, neatly, with the grace of the young man on the trapeze, he was gone from his body. For an eternal moment he was still all things at once: the bird, the fish, the rodent, the reptile, and man… An ocean of print undulated endlessly and darkly before him. The city burned. The herded crowd rioted. The earth circled away, and knowing that he did so, he turned his lost face to the empty sky and became dreamless, unalive, perfect. I am interested in madness. I believe it is the biggest thing in the human race, and the most constant. How do you take away from a man his madness without also taking away his identity? Are we sure it is desirable for a man’s spirit not to be at war with itself. When I was fifteen and had quit place of my youth forever, I went to learn in a school vineyard at Częstochowa with a number of colleagues, one of whom was only a year or two older than myself, an earnest boy named Jack. One hot day in June, while we were on holidays, I said to this boy, simply in order to be talking, “If you had your wish, Jack, what would you want to be? A doctor, a farmer, a singer, a painter, a matador, or what?” Jack thought a minute, and then he said, “Passenger.” This was exciting to hear, and definitely something to talk about at some length, which we did. He wanted to be a passenger on anything that was going anywhere, but most of all on a ship. Everybody has to die, but I always believed an exception would be made in my case. Then I said to myself, babies who have not yet been taught to speak any language are the only race of the earth, the race of man: all the rest is pretence, what we call civilization, hatred, fear, desire for strength. I see life as one life at one time, so many millions simultaneously, all over the earth…I began to visit Fatima as soon as I had earned the necessary money. But now is my the first visit to Portugal. I love Portuguese people, all of them. I love them because they are a part of the enormous human race, which of course I find simultaneously beautiful and vulnerable. It is simply in the nature of the Portuguese to question, to speculate, to discover, to invent, to revise, to restore, to preserve, to make, and to give. And now in these first days of the month October 2011 I approached quietly, not only with the Portuguese, but with people-pilgrims from a distant corner of the world now Korea, fraternal Africa, and still close to England, Croatia, Ukraine, France, Germany, to honor the Mother of God Fatima, in her chapel, and pray for her intercession in the various needs of the modern world. I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy world. See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Portugal. Their singing wasn’t particularly good, but the feeling with which they sang was not bad at all. I believe there are ways whose ends are life instead of death. I have been to the place, Portugal. There is no nation there, but that is all the better. And I’m no Portuguese. I’m a Pole. Well, the truth is I am both and neither. I care so much about everything that I care about nothing. The business of polishing my shoes satisfies my soul. The purpose of my life is to put off dying as long as possible. I have managed to conceal my madness fairly effectively, and as far as I know it hasn’t hurt anybody badly, for which I am grateful.  My work has always been the product of my time. I am deeply opposed to violence in all its forms, and yet I myself am violent in spirit, in my quarrel with the unbeatable: myself, my daemon, God, the human race, the world, time, pain, disorder, disgrace and death. I believe that time, with its infinite understanding, will one day forgive me. I believe in my work and am eager for others to know about it. It is better to be a good human being than to be a bad one. It is just naturally better. Wars, for us, are either inevitable, or created. Whatever they are, they should not wholly vitiate art. What art needs is greater men, and what politics needs is better men… One trouble day my colleague Janusz then said to me swiftly, “Lonia is dead.” Maybe it’s a mistake. Maybe it wasn’t our colleague. Maybe it was somebody else. The telegram says it was Lonia. But maybe the telegram is wrong. Everything is changed- for you. But it is still the same, too. The loneliness you feel has come to you because you are no longer a child. But the whole world has always been full of that loneliness. The loneliness does not come from the War. The War did not make it. It was the loneliness that made the War. You must remember always to give, of everything you have. You must give foolishly even. You must be extravagant. You must give to all who come into your life. Then nothing and no one shall have power to cheat you of anything, for if you give to a thief, he cannot steal from you, and he himself is then no longer a thief. And the more you give, the more you will have to give. Everything alive is part of each of us, and many things which do not move as we move are part of us. The sun is part of us, the earth, the sky, the stars, the rivers, and the oceans. All things are part of us, and we have come here to enjoy them and to thank God for them. Death is not an easy thing for anyone to understand, least of all a child, but every life shall one day end. But as long as we are alive, as long as we are together, as long as two of us are left, and remember him, nothing in the world can take him from us. His body can be taken, but not him. You shall know your father better as you grow and know yourself better. He is not dead, because you are alive. Time and accident, illness and weariness took his body, but already you have given it back to him, younger and more eager than ever. I don’t expect you to understand anything I’m telling you. But I know you will remember this- that nothing good ever ends. If it did, there would be no people in the world- no life at all, anywhere. And the world is full of people and full of wonderful life. Dear Reader, I am presenting here only places where I’ve done time. I did my best, and let me urge you to do your best, too. Isn’t it the least we can do for one another? My work is writing for you of the places of mine, of a prayer on the chapel of Our Lady of Fatima also, but my real work is being. Pray for us Mother of God constantly.

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