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Authors: Maria Mazziotti Gillan,Jennifer Gillan

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Growing Up Ethnic in America: Contemporary Fiction About Learning to Be American (11 page)

BOOK: Growing Up Ethnic in America: Contemporary Fiction About Learning to Be American
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Blue reservation mornings

I am recovered by sobbing explosions, whiny country chords of Garth Brooks which Cousin Cookie has detonated in the living room. She keeps the volume at maximum while she pieces together star quilts, or restores rodeo-dud fabric in her yellow sewing room down the hall. An expert seamstress, she handiworks the prom gowns for the female student body at Poplar High. She draws her
own patterns, designs her own rhythms. You could give her any page from the formal section in the Sears Catalogue and she’d sew it by sight. Her mind’s eye is a charmed needle, her slim fingers remnants of stained satin or silk.

Blue reservation nights …

Alice Brought Plenty arrives at the house delivering years of regret. Her shoulders sag from balancing buckets of accumulated tears. Her mother’s tears, her grandmother’s tears, her sister’s tears, her own tears. Her broken heart is a country-and-western ballad ripped, mangled, and torn beyond recognition. She throws the shards at Cookie’s feet. Cookie gathers the fragments patiently, tenderly, as if she’s collecting fragile and valuable pieces of glass. Alice stands waiting at the door while Cookie repairs her damaged heart. With surgical grace, Cookie bastes the brittle splinters using her own regretful years as a guide. She stitches Alice’s heart with strands of her grandmother’s hair. The needles she uses are slivers of her children’s bones. She knots the ends of the threads with mercy, with blood. The vessels are secure, the chambers sealed.

Pain cannot arrive if it hasn’t a place to sleep.

Day 4

Poplar is devoid of grand casinos and gambling parlors. No golden palaces of chance to lay down your stakes and wager an accumulated lifetime of credit. But today, to commemorate the town’s 100 years, the officials have designated a white rancher’s field to compete with the riches and splendor of Las
Vegas and the American Dream. The wide-open throat of this acreage is painted with numbers, sectioned five feet by five feet, until a government handout purchased by a jolly rancher adopts the appearance of a casino’s roulette board. Passenger-filled planes jetting over this crude design mistake eastern Montana as a holy shrine. The television newscasts preempt
Days of Our Lives
to inform the American public that the Fort Peck Indian Reservation is now the center of miracles. TV evangelists and talk-show hosts begin speculating as to the significance of the sacred site. The
National Enquirer
wants to know God’s motivation behind the divine conception. Cranks fill the circuits on syndicated radio waves. Eyewitnesses of the account sell their stories to
The New York Times
and the
National Examiner.
There is a rumor that the Pope is coming. An AP bulletin is issued to the Defense Department. The President assures the public that he is taking the matter under the advisement of the Congress and that in the meantime, there is no need for alarm. Busloads of tourists come to the reservation to snap Polaroids and interview tribal elders. Somebody spotted Elvis eating Indian tacos. The government organized negotiations to trade the Black Hills for this newly discovered sacred shrine. Jane Fonda donates millions to the American Indian Fund. Oliver Stone makes a movie, casts John Trudell in the lead. Mother Teresa abandons the leper colonies and commits her life’s service to the North American Indians. Years later, the truth is finally revealed. The Holy Shrine is demoted to the Big Joke. “Indin” humor rocks and shakes the bellies of every human being on the planet. During an interview with Phil Donahue, the rancher who once owned the plot of land is quoted as saying, “It weren’t no shrine; we was having us a cow-chip lottery.” When asked what’s a cow-chip lottery, the rancher replied, “Everybody bets their lives on one square patch of land, the cattle are unloaded, then everybody waits for nature
to call. From the looks of things, I’d say everybody went home a winner.” The world explodes in laughter.

Day 5

The rodeo got cancelled. None of the Indians want to be cowboys this year. Somebody suggests a buffalo hunt, but then we remember all the buffalo are gone. Cookie invites everyone over to her digs to watch videos, but nobody wants to on account of we already know the end of the movie. Silas Tail Spins says, “We could get drunk.” But Thunderbird has lost its power. Gladys Everybody Talks About advocates the entertainment value in a good round of gossip. But everyone already knows everyone else’s business. Alice Brought Plenty suggests we have a powwow, but everyone says. “Been there, done that.” Victoria Walking Child says, “I could do everyone’s tarot reading.” But everyone can already guess at their futures. Cain Long Bow says, “We could interview the elders and learn about our heritage.” But all the elders have retired to Florida. Ennui covers the most hopeful of days with a blanket of apathy. Nobody knows what to do. So we all go home and sleep for a good long time. Nobody dreams.

Day 6

We drive out to South Dakota to view a national monument, a symbol of America’s pride. I think of baseball, hot dogs, apple pie, and Chevrolets, and a conquered people’s dream that perished so violently to accommodate this uncertain present. A once magnificent past is reduced to Hallmark cards post-marked galaxies away. When we finally arrive, a band of Hell’s Angels are attempting to make a monetary treaty with the motel desk clerk. But the desk clerk won’t take their money. They offer him booze, firearms, women, gold. At first glance you can tell the desk clerk is no stranger to bribery; you can tell he’s a subscriber to Pat Robertson and
Jimmy Swaggart; you can tell that he is a man shrouded in a heavy coat of fear. Fear of spiders, fear of dust, fear of public restrooms, fear of his mother, fear of his children, fear of his own mortality. But especially fear of bikers, gypsies, Indians. Fear of anything that defies confinement. We turn around just in time to hear the echo of breaking glass. We know it isn’t Armageddon, but centuries of accumulated fear. We drive to the “shrine.” Gutzon Borglum is captured in the rock immediately below Lincoln’s heavy brows, as if to say
Justice is just, but revenge is sweet.
Winnebago and Apache land cruisers are positioned randomly throughout the parking area as if to say
One man’s shrine is another man’s cemetery.
A bright ribbon of red paint is smeared across Washington’s classic nose, as if to say
Goddamn, this elevation has given me a nosebleed.
Trapped within another mountain, several miles away, a warrior’s arm is pointed toward the men’s room, as if to say
America is going to the toilet.
On our way out of Keystone, we stop at a souvenir shop. I can’t resist buying the Indian bow, arrow, and knife set, wrapped up in a slick package of artificial African leopard skin.

Day 7

We arrive at Bullhead just in time to watch Evel Knievel make his infamous jump over the Snake River Canyon. I don’t have the heart to tell my cousins that he failed this leap years ago and that the TV broadcast has only just now reached their antennas. Cousin Alfred bets everyone that Evel Knievel is really Elvis Presley staking out the territory of a new career. I hold back from informing him that Elvis is dead. There’s nothing to eat in the house except inedible commodity food, so Alfred, Penny, Trudi, Johnny, Liza, and her friend all pile into my half-sister’s Dodge Dakota four-by-four and we drive to the Mercantile. Halfway out of the yard, Johnny screams savagely, “
You’re
dragging a dog, you’re dragging a dog!
” My sister slams on her brakes; everybody is thrust forward. Johnny is laughing. “
Just fooling … aaay!
” At the Mercantile, we pile up our purchases on the counter: two loaves of Wonder Bread, a case of Vienna Sausages, catsup, mustard, sweet rolls, milk, Kool-Aid, bacon, two dozen eggs, six cartons of cigarettes, and an apple. When we arrive back at the house, we’re surrounded by Indians. Auntie Mugs has spread the word that we are in town and will pay cash for commodity cheese. When we finally leave, she pulls my mother aside and asks if she could please mail her any extra VCRs.

Day 8

Returning to Poplar in time for the Oil Celebration Powwow, we meet up with my mother’s childhood friend Patsy who is visiting from Vegas. Pulling up to the powwow grounds, we’re stopped by a young tribal officer. He searches the inside of our car with his flashlight. “
Are you carrying any alcohol?”
Patsy grins, leans out the window, and shoots back, “
No … you got any?
” Everybody cracks up. Patsy reloads. “
Officer, I’m clean but I don’t know about my friend here; you should give her a strip-search, aaay!
” At the arena we buy Cokes and fry bread and claim a length of bleachers. The men’s traditionals are wearing Ray • Bans. The grass dancers are adorned in acres of yarn. The fancy dancers are kicking up their Adidas sneakers. The jingle dancers are chiming and clanging years of accumulated Copenhagen-chew top lids. The shawl dancers are dancing circles around the hoop dancers. Somebody drops an eagle feather. All the whirling, buzzing, singing, swirling, bustling, drumming, and frenzy abruptly stops to a dead calm. A solemn ceremony is presented. A tall Indian man with elk teeth dangling around his neck and deer antlers crowning his head slowly marches to the center of the arena. Everyone watches, waits, listens to
him offer a prayer to the spirits that preside. He shakes a tortoise rattle over his head to each of the four directions. He sings a holy song in a barely audible whisper. He leans down toward his moccasinned feet and tentatively, slow, slow, slowly plucks the fallen feather from the sawdust as if he’s recovering sharp glass amid water and graciously turns to return it to its owner. The dancing resumes.

Americanism

KATHRYN NOCERINO

Say whatever you like about the 1950s; from where I stood, smack in the center of our living room in Flushing, they stank! Five times a week, I’d drag myself home from a hard day slaving over my desk at PS 214. All I wanted to do at the close of such a day was to collapse in an unsightly heap on our genuine imitation Oriental rug and watch my favorite TV program. My favorite program went under a lot of different names but always contained the following non-negotiable elements: guys in cowboy hats, on horses. The guys fell into two basic categories: good guys and bad guys. The good guys were boring and wore white hats; the bad guys wore black and had interesting character defects, but you had to watch out for them. When you were really lucky an American Indian would show up—bold, doomed, and romantic, and then everyone on your TV screen would participate in a ruckus. One of my favorite programs was this same show with a Mexican accent. Two guys would begin and end each episode: the tall, handsome one, who was a good guy even though he dressed totally in black like Roy Orbison, would say, “Hey, Pancho!” His pal, this short, ridiculous fat guy, would yell, “Hey,
Ceesco!!!
” I’d suffer through the entire half-hour no matter how tedious, just to hear this; it was like that number on the
Andy Devine Show
with the talking cat. Andy would lean over this cat and squeal, “Hey, Midnight, say ‘nice.’” And Midnight would say “nice” in the most insincere falsetto voice in show biz.

But more and more often, by the time I got home, at around three in the afternoon, my mother, her hair in curlers, would already be in the front-row seat on our Castro Convertible, absolutely hypnotized. I didn’t have to ask; I already knew what she was watching: there was this big huge table which went on for miles, lots of microphones on it, and all these people, guys mostly, facing each other on either side. None of these people were in costume. There was no music at all. Nobody fired off any revolvers. There was an audience in the room, but hardly any of them ever laughed, and, in fact, looked distinctly embarrassed for even doing so. For some reason, my parents insisted on watching this stuff; in point of fact, it fascinated them.

“Is it almost over?” I’d ask my mother (the same question I always asked my father during the baseball games). She told me to go into the kitchen and make myself some chocolate milk. Chocolate milk, I thought; if I drink much more of that I’m going to become a perfect sphere, like that buffoon in the sombrero …

When I got back to the living room, she was still watching. Some fellow in the middle of the table, on the side facing the audience, balding, with exceptionally heavy eyebrows, Caveman eyebrows, was holding up a piece of paper and yelling, “I have here in my hand a list with the names of 205 Communists in the State Department!”

“What’s a Communist?” I said.

My mother didn’t even look up; what was going on was much too interesting. She said, still fixated on the shouting man, “Did you find the oatmeal cookies? They’re in the bread box.”

“Communist.” That word was all over the place. Related terms, equally mysterious to me, also came up a lot in conversation. Instead of “communist,” someone could be, say, a “Russia Firster,” a “pinko,” a “fellow traveler,” a “Red
Pepper.” The man who was currently the Vice President had originally run against a woman who, he claimed, was “pink right down to her underwear.” You’d open up a newspaper or a magazine, and they’d be in there too: “Your Child Could Become a Communist” by Herbert Hoover. Hoover ran the FBI, which was always on TV in a baggy suit, firing off revolvers.

The man on the TV screen in our living room went on, seeming to get more and more excited: “Fifth Amendment Communists … pinkos everywhere you look …”

If the weather was bad, I’d just go into my room and do the homework. On good days, I’d go outside and look for adventures. Parts of Flushing still existed that had not been covered over for the Invaders (ourselves) with bricks, mortar, concrete, and/or those squares of manufactured turf which always went brown at the tips in late July. That week, I remember, the word was out in school that a bunch of guys were building a raft and were going to sail it into the center of the swamp across from PS 214. The Loch Ness monster supposedly lived there, in the deepest portion, and would come up if you fed it something out of your lunch box, preferably a bologna sandwich. It would not eat tuna fish; that would be Cannibalism. Now, I didn’t really believe this; maybe some of the younger kids did, the kindergarten weenies, but not me. Then again, I hadn’t believed the story about the snapping turtles either, and Janet Kozlowski, one of the kids who lived in the 1920s row houses south of the basketball field, pointed one out to me; it was a full fourteen inches in diameter.

BOOK: Growing Up Ethnic in America: Contemporary Fiction About Learning to Be American
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