Produced
& edited by Daniel Supervielle
Montevideo, Uruguay.
cocolino.neptuno@gmail
Alberto Caló was the father of a good friend of my golden days. We went to college together. Caló was older than my father. In those
years of the second half of the eighties, when I was discovering myself,
love and what to do with my life he told me that he used to know my grandfather Perico who died in 1972, when I was two years old.
Alberto Caló was always reading big books while sitting
in a big sofa. That is the picture I have in my mind of the man. I had very few
conversations with him. He once told me that my grandfather helped him to
arrange a very strange trip to Papua New Guinea at the early sixties. He
disclosed that he was connected to a missionary at Papua New Guinea in the
south Pacific very far away from my country; Uruguay using his short wave radio equipment.
Once they got in touch they started a very strong and strange friendship that
ended up with a visit of Alberto Caló to that remote island in Oceania. My grandfather,
Perico, was then working as a diplomat for the Uruguayan government in Australia. The crazy sixties where roaring with rocknroll, free love and LSD.
--
My friend Pablo, left Uruguay, now lives in London with his
family and is a very successful businessman.
Shortly after his father died he gifted me a big white book written by his
father. In that book I realized the kind of life and wisdom Alberto Caló had. I
felt very stupid for not having more hours with him those days of my youth
time. In the book, there are many chapters of his visit to Papua New Guinea
with incredible pictures of people living in the jungle, in the mountains, far
away from the civilization in which I grew.
--
When I received the confirmation that I had been
selected by the SUSI program 2016 and saw the names and countries of my
colleagues my eyes blinked for a second when I realized that I would be sharing
six weeks with Patrick Matbob. Nothing more far away from Uruguay, in the south
of South America, than Papua New Guinea, a country of 7 million people with
more than 800 hundred languages, on the other side of the world.
After I have
arrived in Athens it resulted that Patrick and I would be together, sharing the department. After some
beers and conversation, we became friends. We spoke about our countries, our
lives and students, and finally at the end I told him the story of my friend's
father Alberto Caló. Immediately I connected him in London using WhatsApp and he sent me immediatly the
digitalized pictures of that amazing trip in the early sixties. Together we
laid eyes on them and I received lots of information, stories and meanings of
those amazing pictures taken by Alberto and his wife Vera at Papua New
Guinea more than 50 years ago.
--
After we finished viewing the photos, I realized I had cancelled my personal debt with Alberto and with my past. Also, encouraged by Patrick`s kindness and friendship. I realized that as long as we are open to let destiny play it`s role, life will always have a new corner with better and mysterious things to come ahead.
3 comments:
Thanks for sharing this nice story! It's amazing things happen despite years and distances! But life always gives a new opportunity when you least expect it! Thanks for all! See you soon! Paula
Qué linda historia! Qué suerte que esas cosas le pasan a gente que tiene la sensibilidad para notarlo y luego poder escribirlo.
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