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Published: May 01, 2008 12:32 pm
A Gift of Tongues ...
Jim Atwell is taking a
week off from writing his column
for the Crier. Therefore,
we are running one of his
personal favorites.
We’re just back from the
City — parked at Albany,
rode Amtrak down along the
Hudson to Penn Station.
We’d gone down to see “The
Lion King,” a birthday gift
for Anne. Her birthday was
in early July, but this was
the earliest I could get tickets.
They were good ones —
orchestra, halfway back, and
on the aisle. During the
opening’s spectacular parade
of animals, Anne, delighted,
pointed across me. I turned
toward the aisle just as a gigantic
trunk swung in front
of my face and back again.
Swaying in time to Elton
John’s score, a great, raggedy
gray elephant was just
passing me. He had all the
clumsy charm of “Sesame
Street’s” dear old Snuffulufagus.
All the pretend animals
were terrific — soaring birds,
galloping roebucks, creeping
cheetahs, prancing zebras.
After that raggedy elephant,
my favorites were the statuesque
giraffes and the really
hideous hyenas.
The show was a great experience:
a whole theater
packed with children — little
ones, of course, but also
grown-ups who’d been drawn
back into childlike wonder.
Elton John and Tim Rice had
tapped the universal language
of childhood.
The other highpoint of the
trip was supper at Via Brasil
on West 46th St. Brazilian
cuisine, like the Brazilians
themselves, is a splendid
meld of native, Portuguese,
and African strains. Anne’s
entree was a rich shrimp
stew made with onions,
herbs, tomato puree and coconut
milk, served with rice
and yucca flower puree.
I pigged out on the Brazilian
national dish, feijoada: a
stew of black beans, fresh
and dried beef, salt and fresh
pork, bacon, linguica sausage,
and ribs, sprinkled
with ground manioc and
served with rice, chopped
collards and orange slices.
We’d each primed ourselves
for this feast with a
glass of caipirinha; that’s a
lime drink based on cachaca,
a fermented sugar cane liquor.
One sip swept me back
15 years to (of all things) a
Rotary Club meeting.
The club was a small one
about 20 miles from Rio de
Janeiro. I arrived for the luncheon
meeting and found
myself the only English
speaker. One smiling man
pumped my hand and exhausted
his whole English
vocabulary. “Eisenhower!”
he said warmly. “Eisenhower!”
“Sim, o Presidente Eisenhower!”
I said back, pretty
much exhausting my own
Portuguese. It promised to
be a meeting of smiling and
nodding for me.
Until, that is, waiters
passed among the men, distributing
small glasses of a
clear fluid. It was cachaca,
straight up, about a double
shot in each glass. The club
president then raised his
glass and shouted, “Viva
America!” We tossed down
the burning liquid; and while
I was still gasping, a fresh
glass was pressed into my
hand.
I raised it, shouted, “Viva
Brazil!” and seared my gullet
again. Now I was being embraced,
clapped on the back
— and suddenly, the miracle
occurred. A Gift of Tongues
came upon us. I kept talking
English, they replied in Portuguese
— but we understood
each other completely,
every word.
The meal that followed
was a bit blurry, but I remember
good food and more
cachaca, more toasts. At the
end, the club president stood
and said, I’m sure, very kind
things about the U.S. And
then I was invited to speak.
Well, I was great! Holding
tight to the lectern, I delivered
a paean of praise to international
brotherhood. I
gestured dramatically (still
holding on with one hand.) I
told jokes, and everyone
laughed. I told a tender story
and saw tears run down
cheeks. And at the end I sat
down to thunderous applause.
The whole membership
accompanied me out to the
car where (mercifully) a driver
waited to take me back to
Rio. I was hugged some more,
kissed repeatedly on both
cheeks. The final farewell
was from the man who’d first
greeted me. Face wet with
tears, he pressed his face
into my collar and sobbed,
“Eisenhower! Eisenhower!“
“Eisenhower!” I blubbered
back, patting his shoulder.
And then I was loaded into
the car and driven away.
Potent stuff, that cachaca.
Maybe they should serve it
at the U.N. ...
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