“When the baby looks around him
It's such a sight to see
He shares a simple secret
With the wise man
He's a stranger in a strange land” -Leon Russell
Sometimes the best experiences happen
for me when I am lost.
The other day I set out walking in a new direction from my apartment in Cuenca, Ecuador. Usually I
head toward the city center with its bustling streets, shops, cafes,
grand cathedrals, and corner parks. This time I went in another
direction. I went exploring—like Columbus when he set out to
navigate the Atlantic Ocean without a map. He charted a course as he
sailed.
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Cemetery, San Miguel De Allende, Mexico |
The streets were mostly residential and rather unremarkable. Traffic whizzed by in each direction. I came
to a corner and spotted a high wall that seemed to go an entire
block. In the middle stood a tall gate. On either side were stalls
selling flowers. I guessed it was cemetery. I like visiting graveyards in
foreign lands. A few weeks ago I ambled about for more than hour in
Nuestra Señora del Cementerio de Guadalupe in San Miguel De Allende,
Mexico. It was divided between a large part for Mexican interments and a
smaller closed area for mostly American ex-patriots. Now I had found
a vast, much larger burial ground with three times as many graves. It
is called, Cementerio Patrimonial De Cuenca.
|
Tombs, Cuenca, Ecuador |
As in Mexico, most of the
crypts are stacked in cells of concrete, in blocks perhaps fifteen
feet high and hundreds of feet long. Sometimes there are two levels and stairs to reach the top. Each burial site is marked and
decorated in front, often with a glass pane protecting the contents.
It is by far neater and more orderly than the Mexican graveyard.
I am fascinated by what remains after a
person dies, and how they are remembered with fondness. I lost my
daughter when she was nineteen and had to find a spot to bury her.
She lays at rest in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. A simple grave marker
of marble is decorated with roses and bears her name, dates of birth and death, and the inscription Blessed
By The Glory Of God.
As I
walked slowly and thoughtfully, sometimes I would stop to take a
picture. Turning a corner, to my surprise often a vista of
tombs would spread before me. And almost nobody was there but me and
some attendants working the grounds. The air was perfect on my skin
and blue sky with occasionally fluffy clouds overhead. I could almost
hear myself think.
To my
surprise, at one point I found a block of grave cells slightly
smaller and noticed they were for the pequeños niños, little
children. Stuffed toys were seen in many with endearing notes.
Some didn't have date of birth, only death.
|
An old horse drawn hearse. Cuenca Cemetery. |
In the
afternoon, I set off in the familiar direction of downtown but angled
onto a street I had not been. A long wall two stories high without windows had a small single
entrance. A couple were coming out the door. They looked like
tourists. I stopped and peeked past the threshold. It seemed the museum
was full of religious objects. I was not sure I wanted to pay
for entry. It was cloudy and about to rain. Perhaps because I was
exploring and not in a rush, I entered.
|
Staging of a nun, at work with textiles. |
Immediately
I began relishing the place—formerly called Convent of the Immaculate Conception, begun in the year 1599. There are two stories surrounding an inner courtyard open to the sky above. The second floor has
an open hall with railing that goes completely around the courtyard
and you can look down upon it, with the trees, shrubs and flowers and
tidy order of it all. The wood floors and stairs are smooth and polished from wear, as well as the stone floors on the ground level. I
imagined all the feet that tread there, and the footsteps of the nuns
and sisters. So much devotion had occurred in the spot that I felt
blessed being there, as if absorbing spiritual vibrations where the closely knit devotees of Christ for hundreds of years dwelled their hours, years and sometimes,
lives. I imagined their tight bound community and the rituals they
obeyed in sisterhood.
|
San Rafael and Tobias sculptures |
The collections are made up of 64 paintings of religious themes and about 250 religious and costumed sculptures, as well as toys, furniture and handicrafts. What particularly struck me were incredible
sculptures depicting saints. Made by mostly anonymous artisans, they
all had great feeling and conveyed a master touch to bring out
devotion in the viewer. A few were playful. Some figures were wood,
others fired clay and painted to be lifelike. They might even have
human hair and glass eyes.
By the
time I left, I had gone slowly throughout the former convent, and
taken many pictures. Fully satisfied, I made it home before the
rain.