"And the walls came down all the way to hell, never saw them when they're standing, never saw them when they fell…" And it’s a pity that I can’t sing along with “Tweeter and the Monkey Man” when I think of two of El Paso’s main landmarks: Asarco smokestacks and City Hall. Because, although I didn’t see them when they fell, I did see them when they were standing. And just to think that they’re not going to be there to greet me when I make my comeback.
I still remember
getting up on a big hill, on Juarez’ West side (almost right across from the
Franklin Mountains), with my binoculars, to pick out buildings, streets, and
places of what used to be El Paso’s downtown. And City Hall was one of the
buildings that used to stand out big time. It was quite a pastime for a kid in
his early teens; I mean, when alcohol wasn’t yet in the picture.
For the Asarco
smokestacks we didn’t need binoculars, because they were right on the
borderline, pointing to the Mexican side like two gigantic phalluses, blowing their
polluting fumes. I still can taste the smoke in the morning when I wake up, and
it makes me cough like a chronic smoker. That’s not what I miss of it, but
--like a friend suggested--, at least they should’ve made the old smelter a sort of
museum for posterity, so the future generations could visit the place and reclaim
part of their DNA on the cylindrical walls of the smokestacks.
Cities and towns
are changing their facades around the world, and old, historic buildings that once
have been distinctive landmarks are being demolished left and right, to be
replaced by shopping centers, parking lots, Wal-Marts, or just plain new
buildings, characterized by the flimsiness of modern architecture. And El Paso
is no exception.
The sad thing is
that not only the aforementioned places have suffered destruction in El Paso,
but in old downtown the streets look all abandoned and vandalized, like nobody
cares anymore. To the point that walking on the streets of Segundo Barrio,
like Paisano, Oregon, Stanton, and Kansas can be a very sad experience because,
although they’ve never been known for their beauty and orderliness,
now
they look
more like streets in a border town… on the Mexican side. Which makes me want to
close my note singing: “Back in El Paso my life would be worthless/Everything's gone in life; nothing is left…"
Hola Rodolfo. Espero que y te vaya muy bien en tu aventura literaria y poder leer esos cuentos en uno u otro formato.
ReplyDeletePor otro lado, conozco a una gente que lleva una revista y que preparan un número especial sobre Ciudad Juárez. Les enseñé tu blog y les interesaría contactar contigo por tu cercanía con el tema.
Eres lo que se llama the man in the right place. You know.
Si lo consideras adecuado, mándame un correo para que se lo pase y puedan contactar contigo y te expliquen lo que necesitan.
Es gente seria y trabajadora y la revista es una joya.
Naturalmente el correo que mandes será confidencial y no aparecería en este blog.
Ya sabes que tengo cerrados los comentarios hasta que los autorizo.
Y, por supuesto, no lo utilizaría para ningún otro fin.
Espero que no te parezca mal la idea, a mi me parece interesante. Tú dirás.
Un saludo.