Jaquira Díaz | Longreads | excerpt from Ordinary Girls: A Memoir | October 2019 | 11 minutes (3,065 words)
Puerto Rico, 1985
Papi and I waited in the town square of Ciales, across from Nuestra Señora del Rosario, the Catholic church. He was quiet, stern-faced, his picked-out Afro shining in the sun, his white polo shirt drenched in sweat. Papi was tall and lean-muscled, with a broad back. He'd grown up boxing and playing basketball, had a thick mustache he groomed every morning in front of the bathroom mirror. Squinting in the sun, one hand tightened around his ring finger, I pulled off Papi's ring, slipped it onto my thumb. I was six years old and restless: I'd never seen a dead body.
My father's hero, Puerto Rican poet and activist Juan Antonio Corretjer, had just died. People had come from all over the island and gathered outside the parish to hear his poetry while his remains were transported from San Juan. Mami and Anthony, my older brother, were lost somewhere in the crowd.
During the drive from Humacao to Ciales, I'd listened from the backseat while Papi told the story: how Corretjer had been raised in a family of independentistas, how he'd spent his entire life fighting for el pueblo, for the working class, for Puerto Rico's freedom. How he'd been a friend of Pedro Albizu Campos, "El Maestro," who my father adored, the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party leader who'd spent more than twenty-six years in prison for attempting to overthrow the US government. How he had spent a year in "La Princesa," the prison where Albizu Campos was tortured with radiation. After his release, Corretjer became one of Puerto Rico's most prominent activist writers.
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