 
Dia Del Nino Tour
Chiapas, April/May 2003
The four on tour: Rudi Gallindo, (veteran CWB, Chiapas performer,
contact extradinare and very funny man), Zuzka Sabata (Abuelita-the
grandmother who spends much time on her knees and bent over),
Michael O'Neill (covered in sunscreen with puppy dog pig tails),
Heather Pearl ("soy princesa"-she was the pretty
one)
Itinerary
| Date |
Location |
Audience Size |
| April 22 |
Acteal |
300 |
| April 23 |
Nuevo Yibeljo |
150 |
| April 24 AM |
El Bosque |
350 |
| April 24 PM |
San Pedro |
450 |
| April 25 AM |
Florencia |
100 |
| April 25 PM |
Los Platanos |
200 |
| April 26 |
Oventik |
200 |
| April 30 AM |
Albarrada organic farm |
300 |
| April 30 PM |
Santa Ignazia |
400 |
| April 30 PM |
El Bario Relicario |
150 |
| May 1 AM |
Bario el Cerio |
250 |
| May 1 PM |
Colonia altejar |
100 |
Log
April 22, Acteal 300 A powerful place to begin the
tour, as the Pillar of Shame statue stands above the community.
The statue was erected after the 1998 massacre where 40 people
were killed by Paramilitary. I noticed that near the statue
of twisted, agonized faces and bodies, there was always a
few men spread along the one road watching. They were not
armed, unless they had their machetes, and most were in the
traditional clothing. They were there, purposefully watching.
This sums up my observations about the situation in Chiapas
at present. The Indigenous people live by subsistence farming
on steep mountain plots, in a lifestyle not unlike they have
for hundreds of years. Yet, they know how fragile their existence
is, and that not only their lives, but their town, their culture,
their language, could be wiped out in a snap. They do not
want to sell out to progress. They are strong, self-determined,
and committed to staying on their land. They are watching-literally,
everyone who comes and goes carefully. They want to be visited
by those who support them.
The Payasos were very welcomed in Acteal, as our bringing
laughter to them is an exchange of resistance and an affirmation
of their staying on their land. The more connection to groups
who care and see them, the more chance of their survival.
And to have a wild group of clowns chasing each other and
spitting water is a very well received joy. And since Payasos
Sin Fronteres have been visiting Acteal for years now, there
is that exchange: we are watching you Acteal for your safety,
and you are watching us to laugh and feel the love.
April 23, Nuevo Yibeljo 150 Having played here before,
Rudi made the choice to not perform on the basketball court
below where the audience sits on the hill above, but in this
small area between the little church and house. The audience
filled the areas around us into the tress and along all sides.
It made for a wonderfully intimate scene, with the chases
into the crowd and trees quite wild. Rudi's volunteer who
puts the hat on blinding himself won the longest to stand
there award. Hysterical! As most places, there were many young
children really curious about our preparation, peeking into
where we were changing. This pueblo was relocated to here
a few years ago and is looking more like home than when Rudi
visited last time.
April 24 AM El Bosque 350 Our first, but far from
last entrance from a church! I enter first on the stilts,
and then the other clowns enter through my legs while the
opera blares. I feel like I'm birthing them, and often notice
the older woman smile at me. The crowd in front of the blue
church is excited, as Don Vicky has been announcing "Los
Payasos" on the loudspeaker all morning. The Payasos
have a reputation here and we had a rocking show with some
fun improv with an old man crossing the playing area.
PM San Pedro 450 A first time for the Payasos here,
which made it very exciting form the moment the car entered
the town area and everyone looked and the children started
to follow, til the same reaction on the way out, but with
bigger smiles. Because we were such unknowns, and because
hardly any outsiders come to this town, everything in the
show seemed heightened! The children swarmed away if you got
too close too quickly, so when we started the chases in the
audience it was wild. I noticed some of the biggest smiles
from the older woman here, sitting on the benches in front
of the church. It was a magical sunset show watched by the
entire town, including the military on the roof of a nearby
building. This was the show Rudi decided Michael should stuff
the entire orange he has just peeled into his mouth-so Rudi
helped him out with that feat. After the show in our playing
with the kids, they would touch you and run a bit. Then braver
ones where standing closer as we played and the kids 2 or
3 kids back would push and then there would be a mini mosh
pit on the ground in front of us. Then the kids would all
laugh and stand back up. Really funny.
April 25 AM Florencia 100 On the "road"
to Florencia we stopped to talk to a number of men cutting
up a large tree we later learned and then saw, were beams
for the reconstruction of the church. One of the men was our
contact, but was surprised to see us. "I thought you
were coming the 25th", "It is the 25th". So
it goes. There were fewer people than there might have been
, but we gathered a good number, including a cow, and did
our show under two large trees next to the basketball court.
The houses are spread out in this area, and the pueblo tiny,
so the joy was in bringing what we had to them. They are not
too small a place to be important enough for the clowns to
come, is how I felt. Lots of big smiles under that beautiful
tree, where the children seemed a bit poorer than other places,
and where I met Victor, a small boy who made the most hysterical,
fabulous faces as we played outside the house where they fed
us a delicious lunch of Mayan tamales.
PM Los Platanos 200 The audience was loving it, we
were having a blast, but the conservative Hermanos of the
church were uncomfortable with the show
We skipped to
the end after our contact Gloria asked us. This is the mixed
bag of going to towns through the church I suppose, but it
is their town, and if the dancing and slapstick are not what
the church men want in front of their church, than we respect
that. They still asked us to stay for food. It was a quiet
dinner and a wild ride home in the back of the truck. We were
all moved greatly by Gloria, the Hermana from El Bosque who
set up the shows in San Pedro, Florencia and Los Platanos,
as she smiled and moved so gracefully through what might have
been an even more awkward situation. She said a prayer after
dinner which made most of us cry, and feel so thankful to
be doing the work we are doing.
April 26 Oventik, 200 I was grateful to go to Oventik,
not so much because there was an audience there dying to see
us. There weren't that many people around, and some were too
busy to come see the show. But what we saw there in the Zapatista
stronghold, was a 5 on 5 full court woman's basketball game.
Barefoot, dresses, almost all in the same traditional shirt,
sprinting up and down the court, playing a really good game
of hoops! And at the same time, I saw some men over at the
water washing clothes. The people who fought for liberation,
were living some forms of it.
The audience was largely teenage boys and then some of the
basketball woman arrived. We started the show for 2 people
and so really were playing to have fun ourselves and we sure
did. The audience was on a hill which I was up and down ten
times, and loads of other wacky things happened which left
us laughing perhaps even longer than them. Was that the show
Rudi hit the woman in the head with the banana piece?
April 30 AM Albarrada organic farm 300 This farm is
a trade school for young adults from all over Chiapas. Alianza
Civica brought Michael, Zuzka and I there to stay in their
guest cabana. The place was so amazing and we were thrilled
to get to do a show for them. A group of 50 school kids were
visiting the farm at the time too, so they joined the young
adults and we had a beautiful audience. The farm not only
teaches young people trades which they then take back to their
communities, but they raise some animals and grow medicinal
herbs and have a radio program in Spanish and two of the Indigenous
languages.
PM Santa Ignazia 400 This wasn't a scheduled show
for us, but Alianza Civica was doing a puppet show there,
and asked us to come do a short show while they set up, and
then we were going to watch their show. There was a big crowd
there celebrating Dia del Nino so Rudi and Zuzka did their
newspaper routine and then Michael and I did our dance acro
routine
and then before the health lady finished talking
and the puppet show began, and after the small boys had pulled
my skirt off, it started to RAIN! We helped move the puppet
stage and sound equipment into the church, and Rudi starts
a hat routine in this crowded church where now they have to
reset the puppet stage. The lights couldn't be turned on because
no one had the key to that room so the back could barely see
the front, so I started doing some acro and then magic in
the middle of the church. At one point I noticed Michael on
the side playing to those 50 people. A beautiful impromptu
moment. Then we were off to our last show of the day.
PM El Bario Relicario 150 We played on the basketball
court to the neighborhood, who weren't sitting there waiting
for our arrival, but knew we were coming, and came out when
we arrived. It was like a magic trick in itself. The kids
and adults seemed thrilled to have this oddity of weirdness
and joy arrive on their doorsteps.
May 1 Bario el Cerio 250 This audience was an interesting
mix people in the square, street kids and workers with the
street kids organization Melel. Our audience was in the round
under these huge beautiful trees. There wasn't the timidness
of the rural kids here, and they let the laughter at the slapstick
and crazy schtick rip! This show Heather finally sprinted
in the chase after a week of being caught, and even jumped
in a taxi in her attempt to escape the long-legged Rudi.
PM Colonia altejar 100 Thunder, lighting, and incredible
rains blessed San Cristobol that afternoon and we thought
the show would be off. Then
the sun came out and we rallied
to weave through the streets and find the neighborhood. Only
there was no one there at the church. Our spirits were high
and energy strong, so Zuzka and I hit the streets to drum
up the audience, and Michael started to play with the couple
who was having a romantic moment before we drove up. Rudi
hit the bench and played director for the show, which we recast
as we went along, and had a hilarious time doing each others
parts. Life doesn't get much better than that. Many wide eyes
watched that show, as that anything can happen energy was
high and we were funny! The surprise of a clown happening
was certainly very appreciated in a tucked away neighborhood
of a small city in the mountains. "Get in" were
Rudi's last directions of the show as he opened the trunk.
Michael and Zuzka got in the trunk and we drove away with
the opera music blaring.
Final thoughts
This expedition was a great mix of nurturing relationships
by returning to communities CWB has been to, and taking the
laughter to communities further off the main road, where CWB
has not been before. When are you returning? is the question
we heard from young and old, organizer and grandmother. The
beautiful thing was that because of Rudi and others dedication,
we could often answer, next December, or next April. The ongoing
nature of CWB in Chiapas is very powerful and important.
Afterward from Moshe Cohen
All the shows were very well received. The shows on april
24 and 25 around El Bosque were in communities that are only
accessible by walking, well off the road. We have been trying
to go to these communities and they proved to be the highlight
of the tour. The community of Acteal has expressed a strong
desire to create workshops in the future. Cancellation of
workshops by San Andreas and Oventik was due to more pressing
needs of the community.
Although the performers were glad to say that tensions in
the regions they visited seem to have calmed, that the military
has refused to participate in forced expulsions of certain
communities from their lands, there are also reports in the
news that there is pressure from paramilitary and others still
pressuring numerous communities. Also the Plan Pueblo Panama
to create a free trade zone in the whole Chiapas area threatens
the existence of many communities.
CWB-usa remains committed to bringing joy and laughter to
the communities and towns of Chiapas.
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