Home to Betaza
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Betaza means wind in Zapotec. The village was named for the wind that sweeps the sierra, hissing through the pines and coffee plants. I hear the wind in the voices of the people, in the gentle sibilated tones of their language. We went to San Sebastian de Betaza (the Christian prefix the mark of the Conquest) for the annual fiesta of its patron saint. As in other rural Mexican towns, the saint’s days are a time of homecoming. Economic necessity has spread Betaza’s inhabitants far and wide, to Oaxaca city, separated by six hours of hairpin curves, to Mexico City, and to California, where Betaza immigrants are concentrated in one barrio of Los Angeles. Sra. Guille, (my Mexican fairy Godmother of sorts) left Betaza when she was five years old. Her mother sent her to live with an aunt in Oaxaca so that she could go to school and be spared from her stepfather’s beatings. But like most city residents she’s retained strong ties with her ancestral home. When she goes to fiesta in Oaxaca she proudly dons the traditional dress of Betaza, alongside ladies sporting costumes from the state’s six other regions, part of the cultural medley that makes the capital city unique. On special occasions, like weddings, funerals and fiestas, she returns, bearing gifts and gossips for her numerous relatives. For years I’ve begged her to take me with her; Betaza achieved mythic status in my imagination, a land where the fiestas go on for days and clear water of the mountain streams produces miracle cures. But until now I never managed to make the trip. Something always interfered, teaching commitments, weather, or fate. Once we cancelled our plans at the last minute because Guille had to attend a meeting. The day we would have returned, a bus overturned in the region, killing six people. I thought we were good to go this time when a chance confusion almost ended our journey before we even left the parking lot of the second-class bus station in Oaxaca. We were among the first to board the bus, a typical third world rattletrap with bales of flowers, bread and other random merchandise strapped to roof (but surprisingly no chickens) and a sequined image of the Virgin of Guadalupe plastered to the ceiling above the gearshift. It amused me that Guille and her sister Juana adhered strictly to the seat assignments printed on the tickets. We had not been long installed in seats 14, 15 and 16 when three other passengers appeared with the same seat numbers printed on their tickets. They went back inside the terminal to check on the situation; upon they returned they suggested we do likewise. I started to rise from my seat but Guille snapped: The bus’s rocking suspension put me to sleep and when I woke up we were in a storybook forest of tall pines dripping with moss and mistletoe. I drifted off again and opened my eyes to a gentle, pleasant sense of de ja vu. I recognized the landscape of vertical mountains and horizontal clouds, but in a disassociated way, as if from a dream, photograph or the upside-down view from the airplane coming in to Oaxaca. When we arrived at Guille's cousin's house in Betaza, she informed us that we'd missed the calenda, the ceremonial procession that opens all fiestas, which had taken place the night before. "You see," Guille said. "God does do things for a reason. We were meant to arrive yesterday, like it said on our tickets." For more blogs and photos of Oaxaca see http://www.developingwords.org/mexico/anna |

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