By Juan Montoya
Have you had your cup of coffee yet?
The first mention of the plant was made by Turkish caravans traveling across Ethiopia in the 6th Century.
The story is lost in the mists of history, but it involves a goat-herd, Kaldi, who, noticing the energizing effects when his flock nibbled on the bright red berries of a certain bush, chewed on the seeds himself. His exhilaration prompted him to bring the berries to a monk in a nearby monastery. But the monk disapproved of their use and threw them into the fire, from which an enticing aroma billowed and the other monks came out to investigate.
The Turkish caravans seized on the plants and and spread it to Europe. It soon made its way across the world.
Coffee's use as a cultural bridge was made apparent to me when I went to Chiapas for the Brownsville Herald to trace the origins of the Central American refugees who flooded into South Texas during the early 1980s. Literally thousands of them overflowed the Casa Romero on Minnesota Road and in spilled over into adjoining empty lots.
At that time, the Herald considered itself a real newspaper and didn't blink twice when I made the proposal before the editors and the publisher. Soon I found myself on a Mexican jetliner that departed from the Matamoros airport en route to Mexico City, and then on to Chiapas.
I didn't really know what part of Chiapas – on the border with Guatemala – was where the refugees were encamped. But at the time former Herald writer Bob Rivard was the Newsweek editor covering the strife in Cenrtal America and he and his wife were gracious enough to let me stay with them overnight in the Hotel Cortez in Mexico City and make my inquiries with the U.S. embassy to get my bearings.
The embassy, trying not to antagonize the host country, sent me on a snipe hunt to Tapachula, a city on the Pacific Ocean side and far removed from the mass exodus of villagers from the Guatemalan countryside who were being driven across into Mexico by their government's policy of establishing a 40-mile free-fire zone to fight the rebels.
At Tapachula, colegas (and they take this term very seriously down there) working an ancient press in a shop the size of a small garage set me straight and directed me to the area south of Comitan where the refugees had taxed the local government's ability to sustain the sudden onrush of entire Guatemalan villages full of poor campesinos and their families fleeing the indiscriminate massacres going on in the killing rain forest in the northern Guatemala cordillera.
I flew on to Tuxtla-Gutierrez, was given the run around for three days by state government officials there, and finally set out by popular bus through San Cristobal de las Casas, and on to Comitan. I learned that campamentos of refugees were located at the Parque Natural Montes Azules where the world-famous Lagos de Montebello are located.
An area inside the national park in the municipio La Trinitaria named Colonia Cuahutemoc was where I learned that hundreds of refugees were being housed awaiting for conditions to improve in their country in hopes of returning to their villages. Many never would.
The place was incredibly beautiful. I had also learned that the Chiapanecos were very proud of their state and its heritage, including their locally-grown coffee.
I had elicited gasps of horror from patrons at a restaurant in Tuxtla-Gutierez when I had asked a waitress for milk or cream to put in my coffee. Any Chiapaneco knows that apart from the unrefined brown sugar, one does not spoil the taste of the homegrown coffee by desecrating it with milk. Milk! What a barbarian, they must have thought.
With the only taxi in Comitan at my disposal, I arrived in La Trinitaria to get a pass from the mayor so I could go to the colonia where the refugees were located.
However, Sunday morning was the time of the week that the mayor hosted teachers at his home who were working in the villages of the outlying settlements to gather information of the progress of their charges and of local politics and events.
When I go to his home, I had to wait my turn as he spoke with a teacher. Being in a hurry, as most reporters are by nature, I chafed at being detained from going on to the refugee site. Then I detected the smell of freshly roasted coffee being prepared for the men in the kitchen next door to his study.
"Es local el cafe?," I asked. (Is that locally-grown coffee?) "Huele muy rico. (It smells very good.)"
You could see the man visibly swell with pride as he answered pointing to some coffee trees outside his window.
"Lo crecemos alli afuera. Gusta una tasa?(We grow it right outside. Would you like a cup?")
To make the long story short, over a cup (and it was good), I told him the nature of my visit and he sent for his secretary to give me a letter of introduction that was critical for me to enter the campamento.
And that's how a cup of fragrant coffee helped me open the doors to do a five-part series on the Guatemalan refugee exodus into southern Mexico and further north to the U.S. -Mexico border. Or – as the mayor gently corrected me over his steaming cup – "nuestros desafortunados hermanos Centroamericanos."
7 comments:
You on a Mexican jetliner is what I would have expected, Montoya. LMAO
a 5-part series in the herald? Oh, impress me!!!!
Juan: Pay no attention to your detractors. They are a bunch of losers. Nothing you write will ever satisfy their small, intelligence quotient deficient minds. Pay no heed to them, amigo. They are, obviously, lacking in their ability to find anything positive in what you say. No doubt, because you bust their balls on a regular basis in most of your stories, and they can respond in no other fashion than to resort to low IQ Trumpian Tactics.
It's like going to the zoo the first thing you see is the monkeys same here the first thing we read are from monkeys most of the time, example here...
Tirales un platano and they'll be happy
Why diss the monkeys, pocho? smh
Your brothers estupido sma
How can you impress a chango (hillbilly) and did the coco mayor gave you the pass.
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