essaysbysean.blogspot.com
When I posted my piece advising you
to Say Hello to Strangers I said I was
having an off day, and not saying
hello to anyone. This time, visiting
the city of Lethbridge, I had my chance to do it right.
Wearing my citizen-tourist hat, I drove
south to the city after my writing class on Friday. You know, to a European, a
town is “city” if it has a cathedral; to me on the prairies, a “city” is any
town with a public bus service. I drove to an Econo-Lodge. An older couple from
Montana was checking in—the lady’s first time in Canada—on their way up to see
the open pit coal mine in Hinton. And Banff, too. I enthused about the big Japanese
garden just down the road in Henderson Park. No flowers, just Buddhist
landscaping. “After you leave, the real world looks ugly.” We talked a little
about wartime civil internment camps; today, of course, we have only friendship
for Japan. We shook hands, and retired to our rooms.
Next morning I awoke to
possibilities: Maybe in the evening I could take in a discotheque; in the afternoon,
perhaps, a golf course; for lunch, maybe, a gourmet meal at a museum—all the
standard tourist things. But what about my humble morning? And my humble
wallet? It could be cheaper and more rewarding to just go around saying “hello”
to the natives.
I bustled about my room while enjoying
the novelty of having a TV. At my usual “cowboy hotel” in Edmonton, the old Strathcona,
there aren’t any television sets in the rooms. That’s OK by me: It suits my
budget, and besides, I don’t do TV
back at home: no cable, no rabbit ears, no peasant TV…It’s cheaper that way, leaving
more time for writing. And so my idiot box is now a glorified DVD player… for watching
my Japanese anime. (animation)
Just when I was ready to leave my
room, I found the ending of an old Spencer Tracer war movie—maybe you’ve seen
it—where he is a dead pilot, back as a ghost. Cool. I sat on the bed to watch. Next
came another black-and-white war movie, Hell
to Eternity. “Of course,” I thought, “in the US this is Memorial Day.” I
remained sitting.
I just had to smile: Down in the
U.S. the armed forces, and the police, enjoy the affection of the people, having
a friendly distinct competence possible only in a democracy when the people and
their civil servants are competent rather than corrupt. “Every nation gets the
armed forces it deserves.” An immigrant from a country with poor citizenship said
he knew Canada was a good country from his first arrival at the airport,
because two passing RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) smiled and said, “Good
morning.”
I had never heard of Hell to Eternity. I kept watching because
the film starts out in that nostalgic time when my parents were young, the
pre-war years. In the opening scene Hollywood-handsome delinquents use 1940’s slang.
And then, how nice to see schoolboys with Japanese parents using slang so well,
so melted in as “real” Americans. The hero, a feisty orphan, gets adopted into
a Japanese family where the parents are learning English—of course he learns fluent
Japanese. I just had to smile: America is where, with the exception of the
American Indians, everybody can come and assimilate into any family, and meanwhile
get assimilated into the national family, just fine. No one has to stand in
front of a mirror and brainwash himself: it just comes natural. Like how the
hero, after enlisting, naturally adopts the body language, attitudes and reactions
of a US Marine. One year you naturally believe in arranged marriages; another
year you easily believe in marrying for love, and, if you attend a local
mosque, that Islam means peace.
In LA, before air conditioning, the
hero is with a Japanese-looking girl in an open convertible when the fellows in
the next convertible have their radio on: It is “a day that will live forever
in infamy.” War. To paraphrase what the Bible says about the Lord, “Thou shalt
hate the enemy with all thy heart and all thy soul.” Obviously, during
strenuous war-time hatred, it is just not done for Asian-Americans to serve in
the Pacific Theatre of War, so the hero’s brothers go off to fight in Italy; the
hero fights the Japanese on Saipan; their parents are interned far inland.
It’s a queer coincidence how the
hero is of Italian background, for my high school was half Italian, half Asian.
When I left home as a teenager to attend school alone, I naturally found
parental-figure Asians, and I naturally gravitated to finding a home in the
armed forces. So I related to the movie…
I kept watching a little longer, and then a little longer; eventually I dialed
“O” and got the front desk. “I’m watching a Turner Classic Movie. Can I stay
another hour?” And I did, for another $15.00. Hey, it’s the same price as a
movie and extra popcorn downtown. Besides, we tourists like to see movies.
Eventually, out in the bright
sunshine, I found myself on a path in Henderson Park. A fixed wing aircraft was
droning over the park, banking to vertical, again and again. A mature man with
a stroller was watching. I asked, “Friend of yours?” Small world: The stranger
turned out to be a pilot, guessing at the make of the aircraft. He said, “He
sure looks like he’s having fun.” His partner came up and took the stroller,
and a lady using an electric scooter came up and we three talked about the
weather and she knew Calgary politics. I said, “I can’t believe you have full
leaves on the trees! And blossoms too! Up in Calgary the trees are only still
budding!” I told the strangers I was in town to go to a Japanese kitchen/gift store
downtown—they knew the one—to find out how to cook my brown rice better. And
sure enough—small world—the nice man gave me a blow-by-blow explanation of how
to cook brown rice, and told me where in Safeway to find the fluffiest brown
rice of all. (Called something like buzzmat) Good thing I talk to strangers.
Best of all, when I told the man I
was in a good mood from seeing Hell to
Eternity, he knew the movie and
said it was well known. That was nice to hear. For most of my childhood we had
no TV, so maybe I had missed seeing it on seeing the Late Show.
Soon I was striding down a long
arrow straight path to the Japanese garden wall: The approach is part of the
experience. At the gateway I met two Japanese young men. One was just finished
high school in Japan, only a little older than I had been, when I was in a
strange and urban land. The older man, cheerful and expressive, with dyed brown
hair, was here for the local university. I’m glad I conversed, because, after I
photographed them, the quiet younger guy offered to take my picture posing with
his friend: how thoughtful, how wonderful, as I never take pictures of myself.
In Japan, I know, they always take group pictures twice so the person with the
camera is included too.
The garden meditation path includes
passing through a Japanese house constructed of beautifully fitted wood. No
nails. Two Lethbridge young ladies in Kimonos talked to me. Along the walls
were a few dolls behind glass, of porcelain faces and exquisite fabric. Know
what? When I was the age of those girls, I told them, I had bought one of the
dolls being displayed, as a teenager, in the tourist area, “gas town” in
Vancouver. It had belonged to one of the sales staff. I remember I couldn’t buy
the velvet display stand, only the doll. Who knew it would be worth so much? (Later
it cracked, later I lost it during one of my moves)
Later, back down the straight long
path, back at the gift shop, I conversed with a young lady from Japan. She exclaimed
and pointed to my Totoro ball cap! We conversed about anime, and she darted to a
book with lots of color pictures and flipped the pages, to find good anime to
show me. The book is Japanese Schoolgirl Confidential
subtitled How Teenage Girls Made a Nation
Cool. Yes, I bought the book, feeling very avuncular.
Regrets? Two: Next time I’ll have memorized
the titles of anime I like, as I really blanked out when I was asked. And I
regret I didn’t ask the university student whether he was between semesters or
yet to start, so I could warn him: Universities here are hard compared to
Japan. (Where high school is very hard) As a graduate myself, I could share a
few tricks.
You probably don’t want to hear
whether I golfed or had a gourmet meal. (No and no) The important thing, in my
eyes, is that I got back to practicing what I preach: talking to strangers.
Now to put on my citizen-philosopher
hat, considering Hell to Eternity: I
thought, for 1950’s Hollywood, there was good acknowledgement of sexuality,
with ladies dancing burlesque in their apartment; splendid scene cutting; and more
American bodies (except for maybe the opposed beach landing) than in Saving Private Ryan—why? Are citizens of
today unable to face war? In the horribly restful silence after battle, the
hero walks in a field among American and Japanese bodies… The sergeant is
played by David Janzen, who went on to make a lot of people happy playing The Fugitive in the TV series. (Later a
movie starring Harrison Ford) I am relieved to realize U.S. civilians, at least
as late as 1960, are aware that Japanese women and children would leap to their
deaths rather than be captured. Someone tells the hero to lower his rifle, advising
you can’t stop suicide with violence. But you can talk.
I am relieved because I was feeling
a little guilty, some essays back, when I revealed the Saipan suicides, and, in
the Japanese comic Barefoot Gen, an
Okinawa class of students and their teacher killing themselves with a hand
grenade. I don’t feel I can judge what my generation is able to face. This
spring most people initially couldn’t bear to guess that “masked troops without
insignia” would, if unopposed, invade, occupy and annex the Crimea; others couldn’t
believe that some American Muslims, “deniers,” would never talk to overseas Muslims, to convert them away from believing Islam
means violence.
As a happy humble traveler I enjoy
our friendly continent, good for citizens and tourists. I hope you, with or
without much money, can manage to travel too.
Sean Crawford
Calgary
May
(Hurray, now the trees have full
leaves, as spring becomes summer!)
2014
Footnotes
~When the teen hero of Robert
Heinlein’s young adult novel finds himself a displaced person, Between Planets, (Book title) then, as
the narrator knows, but as the young man himself is unconscious of, he seeks out
a father figure from another race: …a talking dragon.
~For being newly amongst urban
Asians, back when I thought in terms of “belonging,” not “assimilation,” see my
essay Young Bombers Longing to Belong,
archived November 2013.
~When my parents were young the
saying was, “Scratch a Russian, find a Tartar.” (under the scratch) Perhaps the
21st century version will be, “Scratch a Russian, find a communist.”
~A slogan I “quoted” above is
actually a paraphrase of a wartime observation. Yes the fascists bombed both London
and Pearl Harbor before we bombed Berlin and Tokyo; still, bombing them back
was not easy. It could help to say, “Every country gets the government it
deserves.” (is fit for)
~Speaking of not having a TV, I thought I would paste in a
quote you read last week, from Stevey’s blog:
I can't promise you any
satisfaction from the upward curve. You'll get better at a lot of things, and
you'll have plenty of interesting insights. You may even get a better job, or
build some software that makes you famous, or just have more fun at what you
do. But you won't have much time for television. Something will have to give.
We all have to choose how to play our time, and it's a zero-sum game.(Stevey
Yegge, see footnote)
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