Sunny 87°F/31°C in Cedar Park, Texas
[This story
first appeared on the day following Halloween in 2014. It is re-posted every
November 1st.]
Buenas
Dias,
Today is the first day of November…the day
after Halloween…All Saints Day. It is also El Día
de los Botula Family Gravestone |
September 27, 2013 - Roanoke
Avenue Cemetery, Riverhead, New York
I had been gone from my home town most of my adult
life. While I had been born in New York City, I had grown up in Riverhead and
went all the way through high school here. I had come here one sunny day in
April of 1961 with my brother Packy, and our father Charles to bury our mother,
Mary. On another sad day in November of 1965 my brother and I returned to bury our
father, Charles. Following their funerals, my brother Packy and I set to the
task of closing up theCharles and Mary Botula 1937 |
Saturday April 29,
1995-Calvary Cemetery Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
I had come to this gravesite for the first time in 1947 with my father when
I was six years old. It was the first time that death had touched our family,
and I was overwhelmed by my grief. My dad’s brother, my Uncle Adolf had died
suddenly at the family homestead on Ward Street. He was still in Johana and Karel Botula |
The Botula Cousins |
Maybe it’s because of my own love of history, but I love to visit old cemeteries. There are so many stories there. The catacombs, church crypts and necropoli of Rome, colonial era cemeteries along the eastern seaboard of the United States, Gold Rush and Frontier cemeteries in California, Nevada and Arizona. Our own Arlington National Cemetery. There is the small family gravesite behind an old Victorian home in Mariposa, California. The people that own the house acquired the small family burial ground when they acquired the property and now care for it with the same loving care as if it sheltered members of their own family. I think as I walk along that the history of any society lives in its cemeteries.
After all my adventures in life, I now understand that this is where I must return some day, even as a symbolic gram or two of ash. Robert Louis Stevenson’s poem comes to my mind.
''This
be the verse you grave for me:
Here he lies where he longed to be;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
And the hunter home from the hill.''
Here he lies where he longed to be;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
And the hunter home from the hill.''
October 31, 1992 Halloween
Now, let’s go back to a sunny
Saturday afternoon on Halloween weekend 21 years before. My wife, Donna and I
are on a guided walk through the old, historic cemetery in Santa Ana,
California. Our walk takes us past the graves of many notable local historical
figures. There are mayors, prominent members of the clergy; a famous Sheriff,
Theo Lacy, is buried here, too. The headstones read like a “Who’s Who” of our
county. As we walk along, we notice something else. Here and there, people have
gathered for what appears to be a picnic. They’ve spread blankets at the
gravesites and set down their picnic baskets. Most of them have placed bouquets
of flowers at the headstones with lighted candles. I see them praying, saying
grace and then lifting glasses in their toasts. Curious, I approach a family
gathered around one of the graves. “Good afternoon,” I greet them. Nice day
for a picnic, isn’t it? They smile and nod. But, why have a picnic in a
cemetery? I ask. El Dia de los Muertos,” the woman said in a soft,
accented voice. It is El Día de los
Muertos, or The Day of the Dead. Today, we come to the cemetery to honor
members of our families who have passed on and to pray for them. She continued. We want to let them know that even though
they have left this life, they are still part of our family. I had never
heard of such a custom. The woman went on to explain to me that it is a holiday
in Mexico and more important to Mexican culture than Halloween itself. I was
quite moved.In our society, visits to loved one’s graves can be infrequent and generally very brief. Flowers can be placed at the headstone and a prayer said. But, long spans of time can pass before a return visit is made, if ever. Gone forever and easily forgotten. At that moment, I realized that I had not visited my parents resting place in more than 30 years. Our cemetery walk this day took place on Halloween. The next day would be the first day of November, All Saints Day and El Dia de los Muertos. I could feel the connection here. I could almost hear the grandmother talking to her family as they picnicked six feet above her. I could feel the love and respect these family members were showing their loved ones. Later, as we continued along our walk, I thought of my own parents who were buried far away from where I lived now and made a promise to myself to honor them one day in the tradition of El Dia de los Muertos.
Eleven years later I kept that promise during a reunion of my high school graduating class. I had taken my new fiancée and my son back to my home town to join me in reconnecting with old friends and classmates that I hadn’t seen in 45 years. For my son, the trip gave him a chance to connect with a family that he had only heard about, or seen snapshots of, or read about. My wife-to-be said it gave her a chance to know me a little better. It took about forty five minutes to find the gravesite and then, we placed a bouquet of roses between the headstones. I put my arm around my son’s shoulder as my lady hung back a few paces and together we bowed our heads. “Mom. Dad.” I said, “I’d like you to meet your grandson. I’d also like to introduce your new daughter.” We stood in silence for a few moments and then I said, “We’ll be back.”
In that
moment, I truly understood what the Mexican woman had told me in the Santa Ana
Cemetery years earlier. Five years later when I returned for our next reunion,
I went to the cemetery with a blanket, a bottle of wine, three glasses and two
rose bouquets. I brought some family
pictures and spent an hour trying to tell them everything important in my life
since they had left me. I poured each of us a glass of California Zinfandel,
set a glass at each of their headstones next to the rose bouquets and splashed
a bit of my wine on each of their graves, toasting them as I did. This has now
become part of my own family’s tradition, although my trips back to my home
town usually don’t coincide with El Dia de los Muertos on the first of
November. But, it has more meaning
for me than the “Trick or Treating” of Halloween.
Hasta la vista,MikeBo
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