martes, 16 de junio de 2020

In Memoriam: Melitón García Lara (1928-2020)


When Melitón García Lara was born on March 17, 1928, the world was in turmoil. Mexico was fighting its last civil war; Sonora had gone through a few military uprisings and from the horizon appeared the shadow of a great economic depression that would shake the entire planet for many years to come.

Although this was the world he was born into, it is not the one he saw firsthand. His early life was spent in a rural world, in the Altar Desert, his homeland and that of his ancestors, the ancient Sonorans, before there was even a Sonora, since time immemorial. He learned how to work at his father’s ranch from a young age, assuming the role of an adult man, helping his parents and his many brothers and sisters, of whom he was the eldest and whom they affectionately called "Noñi". His only contact with the outside world was a radio from which voices and distant news came forth. That technology never ceased to amaze him, even in the year 2020, when he shared stories of those days with his grandchildren sitting at the table in the house where three generations were born and raised, generations of which he was the beloved patriarch.

After working in the ranch, he also worked raising ranch fences, as mounted police, in farm fields and selling cheese and, eventually, scrap iron from the flatbed of his beloved trucks.
All who knew him never forgot his mettle and character. Everyone in his family saw with appreciation the incredible number of people who would greet him, shake hands, speak to him with respect and affection, as well as all the people from all over the state who, upon learning of our relationship to him, always asked how Don Melitón was doing.

He was a man of his word and spoke frankly and in a very straightforward manner. His dusky skin, green eyes and tall height made him a memorable physical presence. The way he would look at his surroundings and the overall appearance of his face gave him a serious countenance, but in daily conversation one realized how much and how easily he laughed. He smiled with his lips, but also with his eyes and his laugh was like a gentle hiss of joy that stayed etched in your mind, echoing for hours. Watching him and hearing him laugh was one of life's great pleasures, second only to his great ability to make others laugh with his witty statements and famous quotes of which there are many. As an impersonator, he was out of this world, because he imitated other people’s gestures and voices of people with uncanny accuracy.

He was a humble man from the country, but with a great understanding of life and people. His children and family are proof of his teachings and great capacity for affection. As a grandfather, he is second to none. He did not like to scold or speak harshly, and he did not like to see us scolded by our parents, nor did he like it when we roughhoused with each other. He had a childhood and a life that was more "uncomfortable" than his descendants are accustomed to now, but even so he had a soft heart and an attitude of respect for everyone.

With babies, he was tender in his displays of affection. His greeting to his young grandchildren was a very sincere and merry "What are you doing?" and a laugh at any response we gave him. As adults, it was customary to hug him from the side, around the shoulders, or to give him a strong handshake, squeezing his hand for a moment. He shared with us lots of advice and slices of his personal philosophy, not as a person who likes to give speeches, but naturally, as true wise men do, in the middle of a casual conversation where one stopped to listen to the authentic voice of experience. His voice, his tone, his accent ... everything contributed so what he said to you would remain engraved in your heart and in your mind forever.

Melitón García Lara had to live in a changing world. He was a man that embodied history, with a perspective and a lifetime of experience that is becoming more and more rare. I will never be able to fully grasp or understand everything that he must have thought during his lifetime, seeing so many changes, especially those that occurred at a frenzied pace these past fifteen years. But he still lived as he always had, heating water and coffee between five and six in the morning, walking through his backyard, watching television and sporadically drinking a few drinks of bacanora that he and many (including some doctors) believed to have contributed to his impressive health, strength and longevity. Even a stroke at the beginning of this century did not stop him. He regained most of his old motor skills and if it were not for the cane that he used for walking, nobody would’ve known that he had gone through a stroke nor that he was as old as he really was. Reading the newspaper, eating sweet bread, and listening to the music of Lorenzo de Monteclaro were among his lifelong pleasures.

This past March 14th we celebrated his birthday earlier. We celebrated it, without knowing it, for the last time. Like every year, we argued how many years he was celebrating, we enjoyed laughing at jokes and silly things we do as family and, as a new activity this year, he was the judge of a dance-off between one of his daughter and a granddaughter. He wanted to give his daughter victory despite the rest of his panel favoring his granddaughter. He was a very fair man.

At that time, the world had not yet begun to go through all the events that have marked these last troubled months. Melitón García Lara was born in times of conflict and left out world during similar times.

I will always remember my Tata Meli every day of my life. He lived almost 100 years and if it would have been possible, I would have liked to see him live for another hundred years. But now that he is gone, it is clear to me how much he meant in our lives. Sometimes, in the face of losses like this, people talk about the big voids that can be felt within families. But here there can be no great void. Although his physical presence is no longer with us, all his children, his grandchildren, his family, friends, and everyone who knew him have been marked by him. Personally, there will not be a major action or work that I do in which I will not ask myself what my Tata would have thought about it or how he would have felt.

Yes, I will miss my Tata forever. But what I will never miss is the love I felt for him and that I felt from him since I was born. That love will always be present with me, and with all of us, every day of our lives, even if we live as long as he did.

Rest in peace, Tata. Hug your people and enjoy your new state, free of all the ailments that bothered you. Someday we will hold you in our arms again.




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