A
Visit to Heaven and Hell
Mapping
Planet Earth

art by Emmanuel Senayon
By Eduardo
Galeano
[The
following passages are excerpted from Hunter
of Stories, the last book by
Eduardo Galeano, who died in 2015. Thanks for its use go to his
literary agent, Susan Bergholz, and Nation Books, which is publishing
it next week.]
Free
By day, the sun guides them. By night, the stars.
Paying no fare, they travel without passports and without
forms for customs or immigration.
Birds are the only free beings in this world inhabited by
prisoners. They fly from pole to pole, powered by food alone, on the
route they choose and at the hour they wish, without ever asking
permission of officials who believe they own the heavens.
Shipwrecked
The world is on the move.
On board are more shipwrecked souls than successful
seafarers.
Thousands of desperate people die en route, before they
can complete the crossing to the promised land, where even the poor
are rich and everyone lives in Hollywood.
The illusions of any who manage to arrive do not last
long.
Monster Wanted
Saint Columba was rowing across Loch Ness when an immense
serpent with a gaping mouth attacked his boat. Saint Columba, who had
no desire to be eaten, chased it off by making the sign of the cross.
Fourteen centuries later, the monster was seen again by
someone living nearby, who happened to have a camera around his neck,
and pictures of it and of curious footprints came out in the Glasgow
and London papers.
The creature turned out to be a toy, the footprints made
by baby hippopotamus feet, which are sold as ashtrays.
The revelation did nothing to discourage the tourists.
The market for fear feeds on the steady demand for
monsters.
Foreigner
In a community newspaper in Barcelona’s Raval
neighborhood, an anonymous hand wrote:
Your god is Jewish, your music is
African, your car is Japanese, your pizza is Italian, your gas is
Algerian, your coffee is Brazilian, your democracy is Greek, your
numbers are Arabic, your letters are Latin.
I am your neighbor. And you call
me a foreigner?
The Terrorizer
Back in the years 1975 and 1976, before and after the
coup d’état that imposed the most savage of Argentina’s
many military dictatorships, death threats flew fast and furious and
anyone suspected of the crime of thinking simply disappeared.
Orlando Rojas, a Paraguayan exile, answered his telephone
in Buenos Aires. Every day a voice repeated the same thing: “I’m
calling to tell you you’re going to die.”
“So you aren’t?” Orlando asked.
The terrorizer would hang up.
A Visit to Hell
Some years ago, during one of my deaths, I paid a visit
to hell.
I had heard that in the underworld you can get your
favorite wine and any delicacy you want, lovers for all tastes,
dancing music, endless pleasure...
Once again, I was able to corroborate the fact that
advertising lies. Hell promises a great life, but all I found were
people waiting in line.
In that endless queue, snaking out of sight along narrow
smoky passages, were women and men of all epochs, from cavemen to
astronauts.
All were condemned to wait. To wait for eternity.
That’s what I discovered: hell is waiting.
Prophecies
Who was it that a century ago best described today’s
global power structure?
Not a philosopher, not a sociologist, not a political
scientist either.
It was a child named Little Nemo,
whose adventures were published in the New
York Herald way back in 1905, as drawn
by Winsor McCay.
Little Nemo dreamed about the future.
In one of his most unerring dreams, he traveled to Mars.
That unfortunate planet was in the hands of a businessman
who had crushed his competitors and exercised an absolute monopoly.
The Martians seemed stupid, because they said little and
breathed little.
Little Nemo knew why: the boss of Mars had seized
ownership of words and the air.
They were the keys to life, the sources of power.
Very Brief Synthesis of
Contemporary History
For several centuries subjects have donned the garb of
citizens, and monarchies have preferred to call themselves republics.
Local dictatorships, claiming to be democracies, open
their doors to the steamroller of the global market. In this kingdom
of the free, we are all united as one. But are we one, or are we no
one? Buyers or bought? Sellers or sold? Spies or spied upon?
We live imprisoned behind invisible bars, betrayed by
machines that feign obedience but spread lies with cybernetic
impunity.
Machines rule in homes, factories, offices, farms, and
mines, and also on city streets, where we pedestrians are but a
nuisance. Machines also rule in wars, where they do as much of the
killing as warriors in uniform, or more.
The Right to Plunder
In the year 2003, a veteran Iraqi journalist named Samir
visited several museums in Europe.
He found marvelous texts in Babylonian, heroes and gods
sculpted in the hills of Nineveh, winged lions that had flown in
Assyria...
Someone approached him, offered to help: “Shall I
call a doctor?”
Squatting, Samir buried his face in his hands and
swallowed his tears.
He
mumbled, “No, please. I’m all right.”
Later on, he explained: “It hurts to see how much
they have stolen and to know how much they will steal.”
Two months later, U.S. troops launched their invasion.
The National Museum in Baghdad was sacked. One hundred seventy
thousand works were reported lost.
Stories Tell the Tale
I wrote Soccer
in Sun and Shadow to convert the
pagans. I wanted to help fans of reading lose their fear of soccer,
and fans of soccer lose their fear of books. I never imagined
anything else.
But according to Víctor Quintana, a congressman in
Mexico, the book saved his life. In the middle of 1997, he was
kidnapped by professional assassins, hired to punish him for exposing
dirty deals.
They had him tied up, face down on the ground, and were
kicking him to death, when there was a pause before the final bullet.
The murderers got caught up in an argument about soccer. That was
when Víctor, more dead than alive, put in his two cents. He
began telling stories from my book, trading minutes of life for every
story from those pages, the way Scheherazade traded a story for every
one of her thousand-and-one nights.
Hours and stories slowly unfolded.
At last the murderers left him, tied up and trampled, but
alive.
They said, “You’re a good guy,” and
they took their bullets elsewhere.
***
Quite a few years ago now, during my time in exile on the
coast of Cataluña, I got an encouraging nudge from a girl
eight or nine years old, who, unless I’m remembering wrong, was
named Soledad.
I was having a few drinks with her parents, also exiles,
when she called me over and asked,
“So, what do you do?”
“Me? I write books.”
“You write books?”
“Well... yes.”
“I don’t like books,” she declared.
And since she had me against the ropes, she hit me again:
“Books sit still. I like songs because songs fly.”
Ever since my encounter with that angel sent by God, I
have attempted to sing. It’s never worked, not even in the
shower. Every time, the neighbors scream, “Get that dog to stop
barking!”
***
My granddaughter Catalina was ten.
We were walking along a street in Buenos Aires when
someone came up and asked me to sign a book. I can’t remember
which one.
We continued on, the two of us, quietly arm in arm, until
Catalina shook her head and offered this encouraging remark: “I
don’t know why they make such a fuss. Not even I read you.”
Eduardo Galeano (1940-2015) was
one of Latin America’s most distinguished writers. He was
the author of many books, including the three-volume Memory
of Fire, Open
Veins of Latin America, Soccer
in Sun and Shadow, and The
Book of Embraces. Born in
Montevideo in 1940, he lived in exile in Argentina and Spain for 12
years before returning to Uruguay in 1985, where he spent the rest of
his life. The passages in this post are excerpted from his
final book, Hunter
of Stories, translated by Mark
Fried and about to be published by Nation Books.
Follow TomDispatch
on Twitter
and join us on Facebook.
Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Alfred McCoy's In
the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S.
Global Power, as well as John
Dower's The
Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II,
John Feffer's dystopian novel Splinterlands,
Nick Turse’s Next
Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead,
and Tom Engelhardt's Shadow
Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global Security State in
a Single-Superpower World.
Excerpted from Hunter
of Stories. Copyright © 2017
by Eduardo Galeano. English translation copyright © 2017 by Mark
Fried. Available
from Nation Books, an imprint of Perseus Books, LLC, a subsidiary of
Hachette Book Group, Inc. By permission of Susan Bergholz Literary
Services, Lamy, N.M., and New York City. All rights reserved.