
Caravana de la Risa Tour
Chiapas, March/April 2002
Report by David Lichtenstein
Participants: David Lichtenstein, Rudi Galindo, Rock
Lemur, Izzi Galindo
The Payasos presented 16 shows over 12 days in three different
regions of Chiapas. The tour was well organized by the Alianza
Civica with contacts and crowds ready for our arrival in every
town.
The Clowns are Chiapas veterans David Lichtenstein, Rudi
Gallindo and newcomer Rock Lemur. It's the family trip as
David is traveling with his two children, J ames, 10 and Lela,
9, who clown a little with David on his solo shows. Rudi has
his 15 year old, Izzi, who helps with music and sound effects
and clowns with us quite a bit on some shows. All six of us
and the show gear are all packed in one small rented car on
those beautiful but tortuous mountain roads.
Our audiences are dirt poor Mayan Indians who live on subsistence
farming on tiny plots of steep mountain land in Chiapas, Mexico.
These people have fought to survive and preserve their culture
since the arrival of the Spanish 500 years ago. Tens of thousands
of refugees from violent conflict in the last 8 years exasperate
endemic poverty.
In a few of the larger towns we play a majority of the crowd
speaks Spanish well but at most of our shows the people speak
only their Mayan languages, in the areas we worked mostly
Tzotzil and Tzeltal.
Itinerary
| Date |
Location |
Audience Size |
| March 26 |
Mercado Benito Juarez, San Cristobal. David solo |
100 people |
| March 27 |
San Andreas Larraizar David solo |
200 people |
| March 28 |
Acteal, Chamula David solo |
120 people |
| |
Yashgemel, Chenalho David solo |
300 people |
| March 29 |
Chenalho David solo |
400 people |
| March 30 |
La Laguna, Jitotol all clowns |
150 people |
| |
Jitotol All clowns |
600 people |
| March 31 |
Carmen Zicatel, Jitotol Rudi, David, Rock |
450 people |
| |
Pueblo Nuevo Cathedral All clowns |
400 people |
| April 1 |
clowns 30 nuns Pueblo Nuevo Convent All Tapilula all
clowns |
800 people |
| April 2 |
Simojovel All clowns |
500 people |
| April 3 |
San Cristobal Rudi and David |
350 people |
| April 4 |
Las Margaritas Rudi, Rock and Izzi |
350 people |
| April 6 |
Petalcingo, Tila David solo |
500 people |
| |
Yajalon, David solo |
500 people |
Log
Tues., March 26
Mercado Benito Juarez, San Cristobal David solo 100
people
Warm-up show intended for children in the Indigenous market
Wed, March 27
San Andreas Larraizar David solo 200 people
Show held in the courtyard of the church, intimate and well
received
Thurs., March 28
Acteal, Chamula David solo 120 people
The dirt poor mountainside village where 45 campesinos were
massacred by paramilitaries in 1998. Many people are elsewhere
so the crowd is small. Lorenzo, a community organizer with
the Abejas, (The Christian Indigenous leftist organization
in Chiapas )arranges for us to go to Yashgemel where more
people are gathered.
Yashgemel, Chenalho David solo 300 people
Another abeja village in the Acteal- Polho area, at the end
of 12 km of bad road. This far off the beaten path the audiences
are very shy. They literally sprint away when I move toward
them to try to get a volunteer. James and Lela have a hard
time being watched and followed by the indigenous children
wherever they go but they start to play with the kids a little.
Lela spends her 9th birthday sleeping in a barren shack surrounded
by animals and coffee bushes. We spend a while helping to
sort coffee beans.
Fri., March 29
Chenalho David solo 400 people
Chenalho is a larger Municipio town and a PRI town. I get
to chase some state military police in a jeep with my lasso
at one point.
Thank goodness the other clowns arrive. Doing hour long solo
shows in the tropical sun at 2200 meters (7000 feet) high
in the mounatins is grueling.
Though they come straight from two days of flying after working
hard at home we have them scheduled to start driving at sunrise
to get to two shows the first day.
Sat, March 30
La Laguna, Jitotol all clowns 150 people
Now we are in a pine covered region with Tzeltal speaking
people. The whole population of this tiny lumbering village
turns out to view us on the grass and laughs like hyenas.
There is lots of good improv; the three clowns have never
worked together before.
Jitotol All clowns 600 people
We have a huge, laughing crowd in front of the cathedral
after the evening Mass. The people are laughing very hard
and the clowns are put up and very well fed at the house of
Dr. Severo Hernandez.
Easter, March 31
Carmen Zicatel, Jitotol Rudi, David, Rock 450 people
We cover 12 km of bone jarring road standing up in the back
of a jeep borrowed from the church to get to this tiny village.
Everybody from that village and the neighboring areas is there.
The characteristic high pitched shrieking laughter of these
mountain Indians is ringing loud and often. At one point a
drunk heckler charges into the crowd, screaming and swinging
a machete wildly. He is corralled and put into the village
jail while the show continues.
In Mexico school is only compulsory through sixth grade.
A village leader tells me that his son is attending high school
in the regional Municipio town of Jitotol and only comes home
once every month or two. It's only 12 km (7 miles) away but
that is a hot four hour walk or an expensive truck ride.
Pueblo Nuevo Cathedral All clowns 400 people
Clowning on the altar, with the priests, on Easter, no less.
First of two nights staying at the Pueblo Nuevo convent perched
at the lip of a canyon.
Mon., April 1
clowns 30 nuns Pueblo Nuevo Convent All
Since the convent is cloistered and las hermanas are not
allowed to go out to see us (Even in the town cathedral where
we played last night) we did a shortened show for the sisters.
All the church people in this area hosted us very generously
and our eager for us to return for more shows in more communities.
Tapilula all clowns 800 people
That evening we drove down through the clouds to Tapilula
where Father Israel Bernal awaited us. There was a huge crowd
outside the church which sits on a hump in the town. Partings
in the constant cloud cover revealed large mountains towering
all around. Izzi does opening Vivaldi clown improv with us.
After the showI try to take the kids to buy chocolate eggs
for their reward for such hard traveling and working, but
masses of kids follow us wherever we go so we can't buy fancy
candies. As we dine and talk in the church kitchen a boy starts
practicing balance and comedy tricks and all the clowns give
him ideas that he tries out with a broom and a chair and a
hat.
Tuesday April 2
Simojovel All clowns 500 people
A long grueling ride to a show in the high noon sun followed
by another grueling ride to pull in exhausted to "home",
Alexandra's beautiful house where the vibes ar always relaxing.
Wed, April 3
San Cristobal Rudi and David 350 people
A quiet hour in the city center. Many street seller kids
are there. These kids are not shy like the village kids. Several
rowdily make trouble across the stage while a few others accurately
pea shoot me in the neck from behind throughout the show.
It's still a very fun show. Our Alianza civica sponsors are
in the crowd along with other relief workers and a few tourists.
Rock stays home sick and watches the kids.
Thurs., April 4
Las Margaritas Rudi, Rock and Izzi 350 people
A two hour drive towards the Guatemala border. Alianza Civica
would like us to make a tour in the future to the wild hinterlands
beyond Las Margaritas. Contacts are hard to make in the isolated
indigenous villages.
The boys fly home after an exhausting 8 day whirlwind.
Friday, April 5
All of us are exhausted and Lela is sick. I turn back
in the middle of a long terrible road and miss a scheduled
show in San Jose La Nueva. We head for luxury lodgings at
the Rancho Esmeralda in Ocosingo and rest up and let the kids
play before a long drive for the last two shows tomorrow.
Sat, April 6
Petalcingo, Tila David solo 500 people
We can't find the contact or anyone who speaks Spanish. The
kids and I follow an old man up and down tangled foot paths,
across ravines, going house to house looking for our hosts.
We finally find them and they feed us. My kids complain that
there is never anything except black beans and tortillas.
I try to explain that one of the reasons I brought them here
was to experience that.
It's a great show and afterwards we are mobbed and followed
to our car in greater numbers than ever. In these villages
the show is never over until you drive away. The kids say
now they now how it feels to be the Beatles.
Yajalon David solo 500 people
Our wonderful contact, Juanita Lopez brings us to a swimming
pool before the evening show. This valley has a river, unusual
in Mexico. The crowd is large but too far away in the large
square and it is pretty dark. This time we play only two of
the "larger" towns but Juanita is eager for us to
come back and play the smaller refugee communities. This beautiful
valley has a larger population of displaced people than any
other in Chiapas or Mexico.
Sunday, April 7
We start the drive home. Lela finally actually throws
up from car sickness. We have two days to do the 12 hour drive
back to the Cancun airport. Along the way we have a two brief
Mayan ruin visits, a swimming stop at our favorite Palenque
lodging and a fantastic sunset beach swim. After I get home
I will have two days of mad packing and business catch up
before heading out on nationwide tour with Brooks and Dunn.
I will not recover from my tiredness for weeks but, yes, for
the unique experiences of me and my children it was all worth
it. No child without a smile!
The Chiapas Political Situation, 2002
There has been a slight improvement on the ground in the
two years since I was last here. There has been very little
violence in those two years and a small portion of of refugees
have successfully returned to their original villages.
In the last two years the federal government of Vicente Fox
made a few cosmetic concessions of good will to the Zapatistas,
taking down most of the military road blocks (which makes
travel easier for us clowns) and removing two conspicuous
military camps. The Zapatistas came out of hiding, put down
their guns and staged a well publicized caravan to Mexico
City to pass an Indigenous Bill of Rights and to ask the government
to abide by the St. Andreas accords. Despite massive rallies
of support, the bill of rights was gutted by old line PRI
politics in the Mexican congress and the Zaptistas came home
empty handed.
The Chiapas government is still hard line PRI and the military
presence in Chiapas is still very heavy.
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