Tree Girl by Ben Mikaelsen Chapter 15
1. Highlight 5 vocabulary words that you do
not know and write the definition in the margin.
Label each with a (V).
2.
Ask 5
questions in the margins. Label each with a (?)
3.
React to 5 events in the text.
Label each reaction with a (*).
4.
Make 5 connections to the text,
text-to-self á text-to-text á text-to-world.
Label each with a ©
Mario's words struck me like a fist, and he saw the
shock in my eyes. ''I'm returning
to
Guatemala
to fight with the guerrillas and the resistance,'' he said.
"I don't understand," I stuttered,
struggling to comprehend his words. "What about the children?"
"You can teach them," he said.
"Fighting with the guerrillas against the soldiers is the best way I can
help my country. The soldiers have become an evil force, more evil than anybody
ever imagined."
"When did you decide this?" I asked.
"When does a cup become full?'' Mario said.
"This cup has been filling for a long time. More and more Indios have
joined the resistance, and I now believe that is our only hope."
"And when are you leaving?" I asked.
"Now," he said quietly.
I broke down in tears and hugged Mario. "Can I go
with you?" I pleaded.
He took my face in his hands and kissed my forehead
gently. "Your place is here with the children. Be the best teacher you can.
You're a very special person. Maybe
someday I will see you again."
And then, as suddenly as he had appeared, Mario turned
and walked away, throwing my world into complete confusion. Mario had no right
to leave. Teaching the children was a dream that he and I had shared. It wasn't
my dream alone. I didn't want the school to be, my responsibility. And what if
Mario was hurt or killed?
Without thinking, I called Alicia to my side.
"We're leaving also," I said, not knowing where we would go. I hadn't
admitted it, but Mario had been my only reason for staying in the San Miguel
refugee camp. Now that he was leaving, I suddenly wanted to leave also. Without
Mario, I didn't want to teach the children. Somewhere I would find a different
home. I felt a sudden emptiness inside of me. I craved to live again as I once
had as a child in the canton. I missed my old life, and I missed my family. I
wanted to return to happier times before the soldiers and before the massacres.
Alicia watched me with big, curious eyes as I rushed
around taking down our tarp and folding up my old blanket. As I worked, I
justified leaving in my mind. This camp had nearly destroyed my pride and
dignity. Our canton had been clean, not dirty with human waste and apathy. Our
homes in Guatemala had lush green forests and mountain streams and colorful
birds, with roosters crowing before daybreak. I dearly missed the planting
season, when everyone, even the children, helped to carefully place seeds into the
womb of our mother earth. Those were the memories of my heart.
But even as I wrapped tortillas into my shawl, I knew
my memories were only simple and familiar things that I craved to relive. They
were like stories that old men tell to help recall their youth. They were no
longer real.
I was glad that Maria, Carmen, and Milagros weren't in
camp. They would have made it much harder to leave. I did write them a note
that said simply, "I've got to find a home."
Thoughts kept boiling in my mind as I finished
preparing. Only one thing was real in my life: this moment I was a refugee in
another country, with no rights, no future, and little respect. But I didn't
plan on going to the United States of America.
My world back in the canton had been the earth and sky
and those things that nature provided. The sun was my father. My mother was the
moon and the earth. All that I needed, the sky and the earth provided.
The gringos didnÕt know this same mother or
father. They knew only a world of
cars and computers and, televisions, the things that they had created. The land
they lived on didn't hold the sacred ashes of their ancestors or the sacred
fluids of their children. I knew that I would never understand the path I followed
into the future if I failed to understand the path of the ancients. It seemed
very sad to me to think that some would so quickly trade the rich traditions of
our Mayan past for the modern conveniences of a future in America.
With everything I owned wrapped inside a shawl on my
back, I took Alicia's hand and walked quickly from the camp. My restlessness
was that of a lost person who searches for a home that no longer exists. I was
confused and tom between memories and dreams, between hope and fear. Anger and
dissatisfaction demanded that I leave the camp, but I didn't know where leaving
would take me.
Leaving frightened me greatly, but not as much as
staying. I had no money, and Alicia and I would have to travel however we
could, walking or begging rides in the backs of trucks. Still, I was determined to do anything I
had to.
The tortillas I'd made would last me for a few days,
and after that, life promised little. Mexico was a very large country, and all
that I owned I carried with me. My only connection to the past was a mute
six year-old sister who depended on me for everything. It frightened me
that once again everything familiar was being torn away and separated from my
life. Maria, Carmen, little Milagro, all the children I'd helped, and yes,
those who had helped me, all would soon fade to memories in my mind.
I knew Maria and Carmen would be hurt by my sudden leaving,
but I wasn't their daughter. What about their dreams? Their futures? Did they want
a refugee camp to be their home forever? In any case, they would survive
without me. As for the school children, they weren't mine. Nor was Milagro,
even though I had helped to care for her; I would miss little Milagro, but Maria
would care for her. Alicia was my only real family, and I was willing to
sacrifice everything to find a place we could truly call home.
To reach the highway, I needed to walk through the
middle of camp. I walked rapidly among the tarps, the slatted wood lean-tos,
and the plastic tents that now made up the San Miguel refugee camp. Much had
changed from that day when I first arrived nearly two years earlier Life was still
hard, but children now laughed and shouted. People waited patiently in lines for
supplies that were brought to their section of camp. The dead-body trucks no
longer drove through camp each morning. They even had a small clinic set up in
a trailer. The line to see the nurse sometimes stretched far across the camp.
"Hello, Gabriela," people called as we
walked from the camp.
"Gabriela, come play with us," the children called.
"Maybe tomorrow," I called back.
Today,
it seemed that everybody recognized me. They waved and called out as walked
faster to escape. "Come here, Gabriela," one woman called to me. "Look
at this."
Because I had passed very near to the woman, Vera, I reluctantly
stopped to watch her son writing with a pencil on a piece of paper. In big
block letters he had spelled out T H 0 M A S. He looked up at me and smiled through
missing front teeth. "Thomas," he said to me. "I can write my
own name."
"Very good," I said. "You've worked so
hard!Ó
"No,'' said his mother. "It's you who has
worked hard. It's you who started the school and brought the teacher and the
children together. Because of you we have a school. That's why Thomas can write
his name. Thank you."
"Tomorrow I want to learn my last name,"
Thomas said. "Will you teach me?"
I fought back the emotions churning up inside of
me. This was a refugee camp full of
dreamers who lived on false hope. I was leaving this place and following real
hope. There was nothing wrong with wanting to find someplace that could be a
real home for Alicia and me. But even as I struggled with my emotions, I still
didn't know where or what home was.
I nodded to Thomas, but I lied. I was leaving.
When I reached the edge of camp; it was almost dark
and I didn't know where to spend the night. It would be dangerous to travel the
road at this time. Without giving my decision much thought, I walked with Alicia
out away from camp toward a large machichi tree on a nearby hill. After dark,
we would sleep under that tree, then rise early before dawn and begin our
journey to another place.
When Alicia and I arrived at the machichi tree, I opened
my shawl and spread the worn blanket on the ground beneath the broad-reaching
branches. Angry thoughts smoldered inside of me. Leaving the camp had been so
much harder than I imagined, but I kept telling myself that leaving was the
right thing to do, especially since Mario had left.
I lowered myself onto the blanket. "Come lie down
beside me," I told Alicia, my voice demanding.
Alicia disobeyed my words. She walked to the tree and
sat on the hard ground apart from me, looking up through the branches of the machichi
tree into the gathering darkness. Already a few stars tried to peek down at us.
"Come
sleep with me," I told Alicia once again speaking more sharply. "Tomorrow
we begin a long and dangerous journey.
We need to get sleep."
Still Alicia ignored me, sitting alone and staring up.
I stood angrily to bring Alicia to my side, but then
stopped myself. Tonight Alicia had isolated herself from the world with more
than silence, and her distance left me feeling even more alone myself. I didn't
want to admit that I needed companionship. Back in camp I would have been
surrounded by those I knew, but l wanted more than a refugee camp for a home. I
wanted more for my future than sleeping under a tarp, searching and scrounging
each day for handouts. Alicia feared life, but I was not afraid to try and find
us a better one. I removed the brush from under my huipil and sat quietly
behind Alicia. Gently I began stroking her long black hair. "Let's have a
talk," I said quietly.
Alicia's silence left plenty of space for my words.
"I know you're scared," I said. "But
you can't run from what's happened by not speaking. If you don't speak, you'll
trap all of those bad memories inside of you forever."
Alicia looked down at her lap and started picking at_
her fingernails.
"You can't hide from what IÕm saying by pretending
not to listen," I added, finding it difficult to speak, as if I, too, were
hiding from something. I kept brushing her long hair. "CanÕt you see?"
I pleaded. "If you don't speak, you'll never heal. Some people run with
their feet when they're seated, but if you don't speak, your silence will keep
you running forever." My voice trembled as I spoke. Suddenly, my own words
made me feel awkward and uncomfortable.
Alicia looked back up at the branches. Slowly she
stood, pulling her hair away from my stroking brush. She reached out
deliberately and touched the tree. Without looking back, she stepped up on an
exposed root and- reached her little arms toward a branch above her head.
"Don't climb the tree,'' I said, my voice
sounding sharply again. "It's dangerous." But even as I spoke, I was
ashamed of my words. I sounded like a worried grandmother.
Alicia turned to me in the dim light of dusk, her
accusing eyes asking me why she shouldn't climb the machichi tree.
My mind struggled with unexplainable emotions as I
studied her. I looked away toward the last shade of light on the horizon. I didn't
want Alicia to see the tears filling my eyes. I, too, was afraid, more afraid
then
I had
yet admitted. I had asked Alicia not to run from her fear, but this very
evening I also ran from myself.
We were both trying to escape the past.
Slowly I stood and looked back at the camp. Darkness
was settling fast, and already dim flames flickered in the distance. Yes, I,
too, had been running, not by refusing to speak but by occupying every waking
moment and never letting my mind be still.
I also ran by trying to avoid getting too close to others and by always
blaming myself for what happened. But I ran the most by refusing to ever again
be a Tree Girl. That was my greatest betrayal.
Hesitantly I stepped to where Alicia stood looking up
at the branch. My fear almost stopped me. What I thought of doing tested my
courage more than facing any soldier's gun. I kneeled beside Alicia and pulled her
to my chest and hugged her. "Do you want to be a Tree Girl,Ó I asked.
Alicia pushed away from me, her eyes showing her
puzzlement.
"Here," I said, lifting her in my arms.
"Do you want to sit in the tree?"
She nodded.
Carefully lifted Alicia s that she could sit on the lowest
branch. "My little Tree Girl," I said, holding her with my arms as I
remained firmly on the ground. I spoke quietly to my little sister. "When you climb a tree, it takes you
closer to. . . ." I stopped myself from finishing the sentence.
Alicia's small hand pulled up on mine; and my breath
caught in my throat. My heart beat faster. If I resisted, how could I ever again
face Alicia or forgive myself? No one but I would appreciate the consequence of
my simply not moving. No one else would know my betrayal.
Again Alicia pulled up on my hand. I think that simple
act made all the difference. Imperceptibly at first, I reached up, my heart
pounding, my body trembling as if from fever. Then I gripped the branch.
Deliberately I lifted my feet off the ground and pulled myself up beside Alicia.
Emotions flooded through me, and I saw with tearful clearness Mami and Papi and
everyone I had ever loved and lost. I wept for my past, the past of the
ancients and that of my ancestors, and for one brief moment I glimpsed the future,
a future that held hope depending on what path I chose for myself that night.
Alicia looked over at my tears with haunting, innocent
eyes.
"Tree Girls," I whispered to Alicia,
"are very special. They're not cowards. They don't blame themselves for
things they can't control. Tree Girls know that when they climb they might
fall. But they know also that climbing lets them visit the birds. They're
strong enough to face the bad in life in order to know the good. They're strong
enough to face pain so that they can also know hope. They're willing t risk the
ugliness of life in return for the beauty they find. Tree Girls find beauty
when nobody else dares."
Alicia sat quietly on the branch, listening to me.
"Yes," I continued. "A Tree Girl is very special. But you can't
be a Tree Girl if you run from what scares you. You're a Tree Girl only if you
face the things that frighten you, and you must start by letting yourself
speak."
Alicia stared at me, as if asking with her eyes, if I
was also a Tree Girl. I ignored her gaze and kept speaking. I spoke words I had
never spoken before. And even as I spoke, I knew I would be returning to the
San Miguel refugee camp that night. I had survived the massacre not because I
was a coward, but because I was strong, and so that I could help others
survive.
I once promised my parents that the education they had
worked so hard to provide for me would be shared. I promised them that someday I
would return and share my knowledge with other Quiche.
I needed to return to camp in order to keep that
promise. Yes, before we slept that night I would return to the camp, and
someday I would return to Guatemala to find the beauty that a young girl had
left behind.
The beauty I found would be a reflection of the beauty
that already existed inside of me. Someday I would return to Guatemala and
search for a special teacher named Mario. I would return to tell of the massacre
and I would return to find the songs of my people, songs left by the ancients,
songs heard late at night when my soul was quiet and dared listen to the wind.
"A Tree Girl is someone who's willing to go
home," I whispered to Alicia. "Not to someplace far away with running
water and machines that keep food cold, but home to where we're needed and
loved. You And I can be Tree Girls," I whispered to Alicia. "There
are still ways for us to help others back in camp. Always there will be ways to help our
people.
"Please help me, Alicia," I pleaded." Antonio
didn't sacrifice his life so that you could remain silent all of yours. Manuel
didn't die so that I could leave my people and go to someplace where life is
easy."
Alicia began pulling and twisting at her long hair,
the way she often did when her thoughts grew troubled. But still her silence
filled the night. I knew she didn't understand all of my words, but l think she
understood when I said, "Alicia, we need to go back to Maria, Carmen, and
Milagro, and to all the children. They're our family now. Wherever they are,
that's where our home is. Here is where we belong."
I sat a long time on the branch, letting my mind and
my heart accept this decision. Then I drew in a deep breath. "Yes, this is
where we belong," I said, speaking to myself, to Alicia, and to the night
sky that now bathed us in a warm darkness.
My little sister nodded, and then she also drew in a
deep breath and looked up into the branches. "Can we climb higher?"
she asked, her scratchy voice barely loud enough to be heard.
I gasped, and all of the world stopped at the sound of
my sister's voice. Turning on the branch, I hugged Alicia hard and in the peaceful
silence that followed her words, I whispered in her ear, "Yes, we'll climb
higher. Climbing a tree takes you closer to heaven."