Did we perhaps deserve better?

Stanislaw Barszczak, The long-awaited day,

Day work from Wadowice lies the city of Częstochowa. One day our beloved Professor Mr. Joseph Mikolajtis gave us an assignment. “ Holy Father, the Polish Pope John Paul II, is going to visit Częstochowa this Monday, to pray and speak on the Monastery of Jasna Góra. I want all of you to go hear our holy Father. And I want you to write an essay about the experience and about
what you think of Pope Charles Wojtyla’s speech.” Monday? There was no way I could miss it, Robert thought. However, I had read the literature on seminary’s library of second floor. Still on Saturday of a recent week he met a Mother at Ząbkowice. There was no way he couldn’t tell his mother that he would try to see the Pope Wojtyla. At this time almost every month he got a seeing with mother. And now is the only opportunity the meeting occurs. The pope Pole comes
to his homeland. He went to his country from Rome now. His absence was everywhere, stinging everything, giving the furnishings primary colors, sharp outlines to the corners of rooms and gold light to the dust collecting on table tops. When he was there he pulled everything toward himself. Robert was impressed under his enormous duty. Not only his eyes and all his senses but
also inanimate things seemed to exist because of him, backdrops to his presence. Ever that he had gone, these things, so long subdued by his presence, were glamorized in his wake. And now Mother was the one who told him the truth. But she was wrong. It’s just as well he left. Soon Robert would have torn the flesh from his face just to see if he was right about the gold and nobody would have understood that kind of curiosity. the Poles feared about the Pope. The
people, they would have believed that Robert wanted to hurt him just like the little boy who fell down the steps and broke his leg and the people think he pushed him just because he looked at it. First of all, were the first rumors, in this way an antisemitism, fatatism…But new people want to learn more than the old people did. Robert remembers he had full naturally curly black hairs. There was a long-awaited day off; it’s expected time to arrive. Yet it’s still fresh in his memory.  Robert’s Mother  every now and then she looked around for tangible evidence of his having ever been there. Where were the butterflies? the blueberries? the whistling reed? She could find nothing, for he had left nothing but his stunning absence. An absence so decorative, so ornate, it was difficult for her to understand how she had ever endured, without falling dead or being consumed, his magnificent presence. The mirror by the door was not a mirror by the door, it was an altar where he stood for only a moment to put on his cap before going out. The red rocking chair was a rocking of his own hips as he sat in the kitchen. Still, there was nothing of his- his own- that she could find. It was as if she were afraid she had hallucinated him and needed
proof to the contrary. Then one day, burrowing in a dresser drawer, she found what she had been looking for: proof that he had been there, his identity card. It contained just what she needed for verification — his vital statistics: Robert C.. Born 1961, height 171, weight 83, eyes brown, hair black, color black. Oh yes, skin white. Thought. the winner is alone! Robert awakened up in
advance that day. He never didn’t begin new day in one’s life so well-rested. With every passing day there was a splendor sun. It was one of those days when everything goes well. He had even heard that the people of city Częstochowa would have been afraid they wouldn’t be able to find room for all the guests. There was an epochal and a happy occasion, unique, one of a kind, I could tell I might have watched the Polish Pope without any problem. However today it’s
seems to Robert as if he didn’t go to the faithful people inside there. That Tuesday he took some paper and sat down to write about how he had seen the Pope. His open car, trailing flowing streamers. The fields adjoin seminary’s garden enclosed with wire netting. There is the place, the spot where it happened. “Stand back from a wire netting, please!” The shouts of people who
are taking appropriate care of the Pope resounded in the street near a cathedral. Suddenly a moving point of bright light out of the northwest which, seemed to integrate more and more. “It’s flying from the northwest;” “there would be for a moment.” On June 4, 1979 at 9, 45 hour as the faithful we welcome holy Father warmly with open arms. Robert’s eyes were on the cardinal Wyszyński, primate of Poland, who became the long with the ‘papal’ helicopter. An aircraft vehicle with a distinguished guest landed up here. “He’d stick at sidewalk with Cardinal Wyszyński in the direction of black mercedes;” a seminarist shouted. “There is primate of Poland Stephan Cardinal Wyszyński;” a grandma sitting on the lawn she sighed. “You see, Pope is just being appeared on the open car;” a man with the index finger pointed at him, who was sitting on a roof of house in the corner of a streets of Armia Ludowa and Mielczarski. ”Oh, the people are blocking a view;” a cameraman has rebuked somebody for that. “Pope is now on “Alley of the most holy virgin Mary;” in the centre of city, a crowd had shouted, who went to Sanctuary of Jasna Góra. The crowd scattered in all directions. Robert heart has been filled with joy. It was most interesting. Then he reached the square in front of convent. The Pope’s car had entered the arena of the thick walls of the Monastery up. One car full of secret service agents went ahead and two cars followed close behind. The agents were brave men with guns to protect the Pope. There had never been anything like it before. It was the Pope. It was him. The pope in the white gown welcomed all the believers, the confessors hands of the top with. We cheered. A band played. Seagulls circled overhead as if they too knew it was the Pope. It’s seemed there were skywriting airplanes too. They wrote words in the sky like “Prosperity is just around the corner.” The Pope stood up in his car, and just as he did the clouds parted and the light from the sun fell across his face. Then the cars stopped and our great Pope, surrounded by secret service agents, walked to the speaker’s platform close to altar. As he stood behind the microphone a bird flew down from the sky and landed on the speaker’s platform near him. The Pope waved to the bird and laughed and we all laughed with him. Then he began to speak and the people listened. Robert’s mother only heard the pope’s words, and the pronouncement sent her flying up from the monastery-altar on the walls of the high. In bewilderment, she stood at the tree, aware of a sting in her eye. Robert’s call floated up and into the gallery, pulling her away from dark thoughts back into the bright, hot daylight.  He couldn’t quite hear the speech because was sitting too near a group of faithful who had made a lot of noise, but he thought he would have heard him told the problems in Poland about were not serious, it also at home everything would going to be all right, we shouldn’t
worry, all we had to do was to believe on Christian Poland in the future and an intercession of the holy Mary from Jasna Góra. There would be enough jobs for everybody. Before considering humanity, I have to be a neighbor…There would be enough dentists with enough teeth to pull, enough fires and enough firemen to put them out. Mills and factories would open again. Our friends in America would pay their debts. Soon we would all sleep peacefully, our stomachs and our hearts full. God and our great country would surround us with love and protect us from evil, from the socialists, awaken us from our national nightmare, forever…The Pope listened to the applause, waved, then went back to his car, got in, and was driven off followed by carloads of secret service agents as the sun began to sink, the afternoon turning into evening, red and gold and wonderful. Here we come to the heart of the matter: he has never left Poland – never left the houses, streets and neighbourhoods of his childhood. Although the Pope has lived in other districts of the world from time to time, sixty years on he find himself back in Poland where his mother first held him in her arms to show him the world, and we always would have seen and heard John Paul II since. During the Polish Pope’s speeches Robert has been shivering with the
purpose of Polish People’s Republic. Though, he realized it was as if he has been sailing under the Polish flag in luminous future. They’d met each other with mother until Wednesday, till June 6, 1979 after lunch. There was a red-letter day. He wrote down in the pocketbook, mother rose to greet him; she wanted that her wishes were granted. “I long for a waiting you would have stand shoulder to shoulder in the presence of a pope or bishop,” his mother said. Robert felt a
heart – rending crying. He seemed to be telling the truth to himself; that he would be firmly convinced of being in a future such the most holy Father. Until the tenth business day of the month following the month in which the Polish Pope had visited his country he went with mother to Przemyśl. He bought Slowacki’s “Mindowe” and Lessing’s “Soldier’s lot”. On July 15, 1979 they’ve been in Sanctuary of Jodłówka. Those were the days. Now it’s all over. I turned in my essay on the next Monday. On Tuesday Professor Mikolajtis faced the class. “I’ve read all your essays about our distinguished Pope’s visit to Częstochowa. I was there. Some of you, I noticed, could not attend for one reason or another. For those of you who could not attend, I would like to read this essay written by one of you.” I’ve heard one’s maiden name of me. The class was terribly silent. I was the most unpopular member of the class by far. It was like a knife slicing through all their hearts. “This is very creative,” said Mr. Professor Mikolajtis, and he began to read Robert’s essay. The words sounded good to me. Everybody was listening. My words filled
the room, from blackboard to blackboard, they hit the ceiling and bounced off, they covered Professor Mikolajtis’s shoes and piled up on the floor. Some of the prettiest buddies in the class began to sneak glances at me. All the tough colleagues were pissed. Their essays hadn’t been worth shit. Robert drank in my words like a thirsty man, and even began to believe them. Robert saw Johnny sitting there he’d punched him in the arm. Robert stretched out his legs and
leaned back. All too soon it was over. “Upon this grand note,” Professor Mikolajtis said, “I hereby dismiss the class…” They got up and began packing out. “Not you, Robert,” Professor Mikolajtis said. I sat in my chair and Professor stood there looking at me. Then he said, “Robert, were you there?” He sat there trying to think of an answer. I couldn’t. I said, “But I was there.” He smiled.
“That makes it all the more remarkable.” “Yes, dear Mr. Professor,” Robert mentioned. “You can leave, Robert.” He got up and walked out. He began his long walk home. So, that’s what they wanted to: lies. Beautiful lies. That’s what they needed. Dear Reader, you imagine, the people were fools. It was going to be easy for him. He looked around. Johnny and his buddy this day were not following him. So, things were looking up. Then there were the holiday. During his seminary duty he only met one student at seminary that he liked, the Rector. He wanted
to be a writer. ” He is going to learn everything there is to learn about writing.” “Sounds like work,” I said. “I’m going to do it.” Johnny was powerfully built, with big shoulders and arms. “I had a childhood disease,” he told me. “I had to lay in bed one time for a year squeezing two tennis balls, one in each hand. Just from doing that, I got to be like this.” He had a job as a messenger boy at night and was putting himself through our seminary. “How’d you get your job?” “I’m only interested in writing.” We were sitting in an alcove overlooking the lawn. Two colleagues were staring at us. Then one of them spoke. -“Hey,” he asked us, -“do you mind if I ask you something?” -“Go ahead.” -“Well, you used to be a sissy in grammar school, I remember
you. And now you’re a tough colleague. What happened?” We hopped down from the alcove. Classes were over. Johnny wanted to put his books in his locker. He handed me five or six sheets of paper. “Here read this. It’s a short story.” We walked down to my locker. “These are different
people,” he said suddenly. He began writing on a piece of paper. -“Listen, Robert, what do these people do?” -“Drink,” Robert said. Robert put the slip into his pocket…That night after dinner I read Johnny’s short story. It was good and he was jealous. It was about riding his bike at night
and then delivering a telegram to a beautiful woman. The writing was objective and clear, there was a gentle decency about it. After that mother had gotten him at a typewriter and he had tried some short stories. Not that that was so bad but the stories seemed to beg, they didn’t have their own vitality. His stories were darker than Johnny’s, stranger, but they didn’t work. Well, one or two of them had worked, it seemed to him, but it was more or less as if they had fallen into place instead of being guided there. Johnny was clearly better, Robert told this later. Maybe I’d try painting, he said. Why were we born in this particular corner of the world, on this particular date, once day Robert asked himself. Mostly he is disinclined to complain: I’ve accepted the city into
which I was born in the same way I’ve accepted my body and my gender, even though I still ask myself, naively, whether I might have been better off had I been born once day a pope. But this is Robert’s fate, fate of yours. Thefamilies into which we were born, these countries and cities to which the lottery of life has assigned us, they expect love from us, so, we do love them, from the
bottom of our hearts, but did we perhaps deserve better? Robert mother’s sorrowful voice comes back to him, ‘Why don’t you go outside for a while, why don’t you try a change of scene, do some travelling …?’ The whole day Robert had waited until his mother was asleep. Time is up this story. Lucy was the only woman at that time in his life. There was his girl. He had just passed a maturity’s exam. Once when his colleagues and Robert were introduced his girl, she had looked right at us and smiled. The colleagues were all young, and puffed at rolled cigarettes. Though, in hers room it’s fallen into conversation. -“Robert told us about you,” said Johnny. “You’re a writer.” -“I’ve got a typewriter,” Robert answered to that. -“You gonna write about us?” asked John. -Yes, I said solemny. Robert always mentions the year of his eighteenth birth henceforth, still sees those days as the dream. In that mercury mood in July this year, Robert and his Mother wandered about the bottom barefoot looking for the last road in the vicinity of the shrine of Our Lady of Consolation, which is located in Jodłówka – Region Podkarpackie, in the South Eastern part of Poland,. There was written a story that also appears on the table in that Sanctuary. So, they decided to go down by Gateway church. Mother waited on the porch while Robert ran into the rectory to go to the toilet. Then they had given the honor of mother of God, came to the altar between two rose windows in presbyterium, had made the vows and just came out. On the way up the stairs, Robert passed the cemetery of a juicy grass, where Mother sat with two friends. The two women were fanning themselves and watching Mother put down some dough, all
talking casually about one thing and another, and had gotten around, when Robert passed by, to the problems of child rearing.- “They a pain.” “Yeh. Wish they’d listened to mamma.” Mother smiled and said, -“Can’t help loving your own child. No matter what they do.” -“Well, Kate
grown now and I can’t say love is exactly what I feel.” -“Sure you do. You love her, like I love Robert. I just don’t like her. That’s the difference.” -“Guess so. Likin’ them is another thing.” -“Sure. We do love the people. But the different people they are, you know …” 

(there is the first tale of my own that I has been written in June, 1979 titled “I do not like of
Monday”; in the operative content coincides with that of the prior years, the heroes of my story
were colleagues from Seminary. However, you should not combine the facts and names of persons still living, author)

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