"A
Peasant Ponders on Life and Death"
By Ruth Ross Merrimer
November 2003 Guadalajara-Lakeside Volume 20, Number 3
For the second year in a row it was a time of drought in Mexico. At
the time of year when the life-giving rains should have been falling
each day, they had come and gone, dropping just enough moisture on the
crops to stir up the dust.
A peasant living in the poorest barrio
near the village of Ajijic was having a hard time growing enough stunted
ears of corn and dwindling vegetables on his tiny patch of poor land
to feed his family. As the drought deepened, the peasant ate less and
less, saving everything to feed his wife and large number of children.
One day, so faint from hunger he could
hardly drag himself to his field, the peasant realized if he didnt
eat soon he would die from hunger and his family would be left alone
and starving. In desperation, he decided to steal one of his neighbors
spindly chickens, take it up in the mountains, and cook it and eat it
all by himself.
He waited his chance, and one day noticing
his neighbors were leaving for a walk to the fishing village of Ajijic
in hopes of trading a chicken for fish, the farmer crept into his neighbors
yard, and grabbing a chicken stuffed it in a sack.
Hunching down, he began climbing up the
mountain, slipping on the rocks loosened by the powdery soil. Finding
a spot hidden from view above and below, he cleaned the chicken and
set it to roasting over a fire on a spit he made out of sticks.
As the chicken cooked, he spied a man
coming up the mountain, dressed in a dusty flowing garment and leaning
on a staff. Quickly throwing a sack over the chicken, the fisherman
leaned back against a rock.
Hello, my good man, said
the stranger. What are you doing up here all alone?
I came here to collect firewood
and stopped to rest, said the farmer. What are you doing
here?
Ive been meditating alone
in the mountains for the last couple of days, now Im on my way
to the town of Ajijic, said the stranger. I smelled the
odor of chicken cooking, and Im so weak from hunger I stopped
to ask if you would share a small portion of it with me.
Its been more than three
days since I had a meal myself, stranger, the farmer answered.
I havent eaten for days myself, and not eating makes me
cold, I built this fire to warm myself.
The smell of roasted chicken is
very strong here, my friend. Are you sure you have nothing to eat?
asked the stranger.
Okay, stranger, Ill be truthful
with you, sighed the farmer. I brought a chicken up here
to cook because Im so close to starving, I promised myself I would
eat it without sharing it with anyone.
Youll share your chicken
with me when I tell you who I am, said the stranger with a beatific
smile.
I doubt that, said the peasant.
But tell me anyway, who are you?
Opening his arms in embrace, the stranger replied: I am God. Now,
will you give me a piece of your chicken?
Jumping up with more energy than hed
had for days, the farmer answered in a strong voice. If you are
truly God, I am more certain than ever I will not share my chicken with
you. You do not distribute the bounties of life to everyone. To some
you give large haciendas with land fertile enough to feed entire villages
and sustain large herds of cattle. To others you give horses for riding
and burros for tending crops. You even provide some with cows and goats
that give milk and good fresh meat for feeding their families. But to
peons like me, you give only poverty and hunger. We poor ones cant
even afford to feed our children and send them to school. No, Señor,
with you especially, I will not share my chicken.
I am sorry you feel bitter, my
friend, but I bless you anyway, God replied, and continued on
His way.
As God disappeared down the path, the
peon had just taken his chicken off the fire when he spied another stranger
walking up the mountain. Throwing the sack back over the chicken he
again lay back against his rock.
Good morning, friend, said
the stranger. Will you share that chicken you just took off the
fire with a hungry stranger?
I have no food to share. I built
this fire just for warmth, replied the farmer.
I think you are hiding a cooked
chicken under that sack, said the stranger with an impish grin.
But youll share with me when I tell you who I am.
Im sorry, stranger,
answered the farmer. I do have a roasted chicken, but I will not
share it. Why God, Himself, just passed, and I gave Him the same answer
Im giving you. But tell me anyway. Who are you?
I am Death, the stranger
replied, and taking off the large hat he wore, dropped his head to show
two small red ears sticking up from the sides of his head.
With that, the peon brought out the roasted
chicken hed been hiding under the sack. Sit my friend, and
join me, he said to Death. You take the strong as well as
the weak, the fat as well as the thin, the young as well as the old,
the rich as well as the poor, and the bad as well as the good. Because
you show no favoritism, I will share my chicken with you.