Herbert Heineman

男孩,天氣真熱!

As you can infer from the title (you do remember your Chinese, don’t you?), July is not the ideal time of year to visit China. But traveling with school-age children limits your choice. Our guided tour included as much as could possibly be squeezed into eleven days, and that meant a lot of walking and climbing. I won’t describe all we saw; it’s been done before, and Barbara and Allen Lewis did it masterfully in the May 2005 issue of Lumberton Leas News. Below you’ll find a gallery of photographs, which I think will be easier on the eye than a tiresome narrative. Nonetheless a few observations are worth sharing.

  • Beijing has no monopoly on smog; Shanghai is close behind.
  • Modernization has produced depressingly similar skyscapes in one city after another that we saw—palisades of high-rise apartment buildings of identical architecture. The best that can be said of them is that they’re less depressing than their box-like counterparts in East Germany.
  • Even in midweek the best attractions were teeming with sightseers, about 95% of them Asian, many with colorful parasols.
  • My hearing aid short-circuited several times from sweating, brought on by long walks in smoggy sunshine at temperatures in the upper 90s.
  • The Yangtze River gorges are truly gorgeous. Just keep your eyes on the mountains and try not to look down at the water, which is filthy and strewn with trash. (I think the refuse I saw came from a cruise ship ahead of us, and I suspect ours passed along similar favors to those that followed.) If ever there was a need for government regulation . . .


None of the above is meant to discourage potential tourists. But remember this too: The flight to China is long, long, long—both going and coming.

On the Yangtze

. . . and elsewhere in China

MEMORY, LONG TERM AND SHORT

Whatever happened to that brash 13-year-old
     who shamelessly threw her arms around my neck
     and locked the gaze of her hazel eyes on mine?

Whatever happened to that 14-year-old in the Juliet cap,
     whom I sought so eagerly when the curtain parted
     at the end of the worship service?

Whatever happened to the girl whose cheek I kissed,
     leaning out the window in that precious last second
     before the train began to move
    — a kiss that would sustain me for months to come?

We were children, uprooted from parental home
     by persecution and war,
     deposited in a strange country where people spoke
     a strange language,
     and after five loveless years we had found each other.

But postwar reunion with parents, who had been denied
     bearing witness to their child’s flowering,
     was just as disruptive as the original parting.

Preoccupied with memories of suffering
     they had barely survived,
     they had little patience with my romantic awakening,
     did not rejoice with me, did not allow my adolescence
     to run its natural, happy course.

Fearful and suspicious, they maligned, blocked, warned,
     and thereby sullied our parent-child relationship.
     What a shame they didn’t simply let youth’s fancy
     bloom and wither of its own accord.

Seventy years later — years of maturity,
     settled with life partner, children, grandchildren —
     she vividly remembers that lush oasis
     in the desolate landscape of our childhood.

But the present eludes her.
     She forgets my answer
     to the question she asked just minutes ago,
     even forgets that she asked.

So she asks again,
     and asks again,
     and forgets both answer and question each time.

That’s what happened to her.
     She did not choose what to remember
     and what to forget;
     her illness mercifully chose for her.

Mercifully, because forgotten questions can be repeated,
     over and over until remembered,
     but forgotten memories of youth are lost forever.

    

WORDS FOR A SACRED PLACE

I look, I listen.
I feel an indefinable presence.
In the majestic woods, in whose embrace this sacred place is nestled,
I feel it,
though my eyes see only trees and the sky above.
In the ground on which we stand, so full of life and the remains of life deceased,
I feel it,
though my ears hear only the occasional birdcall and the random rustle of leaves.
I sense a hand beckoning and a voice softly saying,
“If you are moved by what you’ve felt here,
then, in your good time, come to me, add your voice to mine,
so that together we may afford the same experience to those you’ve left behind.”

Meditation Garden, a place for quiet and contemplation in the woods at Medford Leas, underwent extensive reconstruction in the summer of 2013. These lines were written for its dedication on November 7 of that year.

A MOST PRECIOUS GIFT

The love of a friend is unlike any other,
Unlike husband for wife, unlike sister for brother.

It does not compete, it does not displace,
But claims in your heart its select, reserved space.

It’s not rooted in task, in advancement, or duty,
It’s a bond, pure and simple, and there lies its beauty.

It is honest, sincere, has no need for disguise.
Its embrace is for all, the naïve and the wise.

It is food for the intellect, food for the soul,
It nurtures the spirit and renders it whole.

Should you be despondent or feel cast adrift
Think of a true friend and your spirits will lift

…Indeed,

The love of a friend is a most precious gift.