by Craig Santos Perez
~
the
achiote plant is indigenous to central and south america and the caribbean. it
was transported across the pacific to southeast asia by the spanish
colonialists
the
achiote has been traced back to the mayans, who used it as a food spice and
dye, as body paint for war and rituals, and as pigments for arts, crafts, and
murals. the leaves, roots, and bark have been utilized for their medicinal
qualities
you
can find achiote powder in the ethnic foods aisle of most grocery stores
~
my grandmother leans over the achiote plant and picks its ripe “shells” our hands
among
the red
veined
leaves
“an
attractive pink flower made it a popular hedge plant in colonial gardens”
“ahi” she says when i touch the flowers
“don’t
touch your eyes”
—the
frail blind body of father sanvitores [1672]
is led
around by a rope tied to his waist
he
refused glasses because “if the poor were too poor for glasses” etc
a small satchel: a breviary, a new testament, lumps of
sugar for children who could
recite their prayers and catechism lessons
flagellation
physics disciplina a
cilice
he is always
“i fi’on-mu” : a sunday school warning: if you don’t say your prayers you wake
with
bruises [no : ahi]
[achiote
can be used to treat skin problems, burns, venereal disease, and hypertension]
we carry
the shells to her porch and deseed their red hearts
place them in
aluminum trays shining beneath the territorial sun—
annatto,
in english
“a poor man’s saffron”
“lipstick tree”
our
hands stain red—
our nails—
he
baptized children in “agua bendita” and
other waters become no longer
holy—
“teach them the way to
heaven”
he built a church in hagatna
where i was baptized
my
grandfather buried renee surrounded by plumeria
he
named us—
—hale’ta —haga’ta
and when I rubbed my stained
hands on my face and threw stones at the sky my
grandmother called me
“mata’pang”
[achiote can be used to treat heartburn, fever, and sore throat]
the
shrine of father sanvitores shows him baptizing chief mata’pang’s newborn
daughter, despite the fact that mata’pang did not give him permission. the baby
is held by her mother and mata’pang is shown from behind wielding his machete.
[*after
the death of sanvitores, the native population dropped from 200,000 to 5,000 in
two generations as a result of spanish military conquest]
[near
you : i fi’on-mu]
~
they
dragged his body into a proa and sailed to tumon bay tied stones
to his feet and threw him beyond the reef they say he
rose three times before finally drowned
tumon from tomhom, from “ti apmam
homom” [our roots : hale’ta]
[our
blood : haga’ta]
~
spanish
soldiers erected a small chapel of coral masonry and a cross where san vitores
was
killed
not
far from where magellan landfallen
every
april, a red tide of unialgal blooms covers tumon bay they say it
is the miraculous appearance of the blood of san vitores! apuya pale’!
i gima as pale’ [at father’s house] it’s [getting dark : ti apmam homom]
[achiote
can be used to treat liver and blood disease, eye and ear infections, and
digestive problems]
my
grandmother helped wash my face in her outdoor sink that she used to clean
chickens
she told
me her father held her hand and took her to the cliff’s edge overlooking tumon
bay
to see his blood that looked to her like hair
in
tumon, you can stay at the Hilton, Westin, Grand Plaza, Marriot, Hyatt, Holiday
Inn—the
hotels are located off “Pale’ San Vitores Road” which runs parallel to
“Marine Drive” now
renamed “Marine Corps Drive”
the
shrine of father san vitores nestled between Guam Reef Hotel and Sails
Restaurant—
“motives for not delaying further the conquest and
instruction of the island of the
thieves”*
my grandmother used the achiote to make chalikiles and hineksa agaga so young when the japanese invaded and renamed hagatna “akashi”
—the “red city” “bright red
stone”
later
“reports” claimed that mata’pang sold the ivory crucifix for thirty bags of
rice
“mata’pang”
used to mean “proud and brave” used to mean “alert eyes” —he
led the
rebellion against the spanish before he was captured and killed—
now it means “silly” or “rude” or “misbehaved” or “uncivil”
[achiote was used to stop bleeding. was used as an antivenom for snake bites. was used to heal wounds]
Craig Santos Perez's poem "achiote" first appeared in from unincorporated territory [hacha] (Tinfish Press, 2008).