As one who moved around a lot in his earlier decades, the eventual finding, making and sustaining a place I call home has resulted in the most productive and content chapter of my life.
The
yearning of my wandering years—a sea-wide yearning that some day I would find
lasting harbor—was the homesickness of the never rooted, much like that of an orphan hoping to
one day to reconnect with a lost mother or father. And now, having formed a deep sense of place
over the years in this location I call home, homecomings are always dear,
whether it’s from coming back from a trip (as I have just done, visiting an old
father in Pennsylvania who prays to die in his
house), or simply driving back home after another day working in an office at
the far end of a commute.
I’m
very aware how fortunate I am, and give thanks for it daily; it is a privilege I
do not greatly deserve, and I understand how readily, randomly and viciously the
Wheel can turn round the other way. But not today.
More
than 65 million people world-wide are refugees, displaced from their home due
to political instability. Very few—about a hundred thousand—return to their
homes every year, while an equal fraction find new homes in new countries. The
rest are in limbo, with no welcome behind or ahead of them. And as global warming floods populated coastlines
and turns vaster tracts to desert, the number of these homeless refugees will tower.
They may become the defining demographic
of our present century.
What
happens to the heart when one loses their home? Glenn Albrecht, an Australian philosopher
and professor of sustainability, put it this way:
People have heart’s ease when they’re on their own
country. If you force them off that country, if you take them away from their
land, they feel the loss of heart’s ease as a kind of vertigo, a disintegration
of their whole life.
Albrecht
observed that many native inhabitants -- Australian aborigines and any number
of indigenous peoples around the world—reported this sense of mournful
disorientation after being displaced. But he also found that many people
feel this same sense of “place pathology,” not because they had been removed
from home soil, but as their home communities became ruined by development.
In
a 2004 essay, Albrecht named this condition solastalgia,
a combination of the Latin word solacium (comfort) and the Greek root –algia (pain),
which he defined as “the pain experienced when there is recognition that the
place where one resides and that one loves is under immediate assault . . . a
form of homesickness one gets when one is still at ‘home.’” Albrecht even
called solastalgia is a depressive
mental condition.
Solastalgia
may be the melancholia of the Anthropocene, to grow so homesick in our
sickening home.
Mohammed
Mohiedin Anis, 70, smokes his pipe as he sits in his destroyed bedroom
listening to music in Aleppo (Joseph Eid/AFP/Getty Images) |
Finally,
this. I’ve just finished a second reading of Peter Matthiessen’s In Paradise, published just after his
death in 2014 at age 86. A difficult tale, the novel is set in Poland in the
mid-1990s and follows a meditation retreat in the death-camp of Auschwitz. For
three days, people of various national, religious and philosophical bent
meditate and attempt to bear ecumenical “witness” to one of the most horrifying
relics of Nazi Germany’s final solution to racial impurity.
Over
the course of this night sea journey Matthiessen raises and dispenses many
questions: Whether any but a survivor of the death camp experience can bear
true witness to what happened there. If there can be any legitimate response to
a place of annihilation. Whether any true voice or presence of holocaust can
still be heard there. Can humanity ever be free of the guilt of such altars of
genocide? If the sins of this place are forgotten (denied even), then what can keep
the fourteen thousand throats of Muslim men and boys in Srveneika from being slashed
fatally wide, as they will be at same time this story is set? (As we who have
more recently watched the children of Aleppo bombed to dust their by their own government
while we fretted about Donald Trump, the answer is Nothing.) And are the unburied dead still present,
hungry ghosts for whom our lament is forever insufficient food?
Tough
questions, and Matthiessen is sparing in his answers. Auschwitz is what it is,
and no one living passes through that morgue of the spirit without catching its
chill. A rabbi leads participants in the Kaddish
or Prayer for the Dead at the Black Wall, where some 30 to 40 thousand
prisoners were shot to death in the early years of the camp. “It is the voice
of the living calling out prayer across the void to the nameless, numberless
dead who do not answer,” he says. Most of Matthiessen’s answers are calibrated
by that silence.
But
Matthiessen observes this: After three days of meditation, prayer, encounter
and hard debate among the participants in this Hadean harrow of death, many
felt a homesickness as they were leaving—as if by
making space for inhumanity and death inside themselves, their humanity was
enlarged. The only whole heart is the
broken heart, but it must be fully broken—another rabbi says that in the shadowy
gloom of the Oven—and strangely, on the last night they are there, those
utterly broken by the encounter find themselves suddenly dancing like children,
as if they had come home at last. It’s an utterly unexpected gift, hilarious,
profane, perfect.
Go
figure. What do we know about the heart, that compass whose pole star ever
points us toward home? Well, let’s find out. Write a new poem on the theme of home in one of these variations or as a
tandem or contrast of several: home,
longing for home, losing a home, homelessness, homesickness, finding one’s way
home, homecoming, making a home, wrecking a home, offering sanctuary to strangers
in one’s home, homesickness at home, leaving home, leaving one’s home in this
life for the next.
Let’s
find out what this home business is all
about: Then bring your discoveries back home to the Garden.
— Brendan
— Brendan
Solastalgia is such a terribly appropriate term these days...
ReplyDeleteExcellent post. Being able to put a name on this feeling is empowering. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteSuch an enriching reading experience, Brendan. I truly appreciate the lengths you have gone to provide an enlightening and inspirational writing prompt for the garden.
ReplyDeleteI captured this in a personal way. I never did get what I always wanted, a home of my own. I have never owned a home and only rented a house twice. I feel trapped in these apartments I've lived in for most of my life (at high rents) because I can't afford better. Maybe someday?
ReplyDeleteI hope everyone has a good week ahead. Hugs!
So many great opportunities to explore here... once again I'm pulled into my library.
ReplyDeleteThere was so much to explore in this challenge, Brendan, and I wish I had more time this weekend. A topic to return to, I think.
ReplyDeleteSorry I missed this posting yesterday, Brendan--a very full and inspiring challenge. I will see if my recalcitrant muse can be coaxed in any way, but even if not, thanks for sharing your thoughts, and making thoughts arise for the reader, on these 'home' truths.
ReplyDeleteI knew from the first sentence that this was Brendan writing. Such timbre to your voice. This is a challenge for me. Home is a big question in my life right now. I'll see what I can do.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this thought provoking challenge Brendan.
ReplyDeleteOver the past few days I have 'responded' to several prompts in that I have written them, but was never quite happy with the result, so didn't post.
However, I am happy with this one. Cheers!
Kind regards
Anna :o]
Apologies if you visited my site and saw no poem..gremlins...it's there now
ReplyDeleteI will be attempting this but I will most likely be posting late - Monday or Tuesday. Thanks for the well thought out challenge.
ReplyDeleteBrendan--a wonderful prompt. I am really not feeling like writing or posting poetry these days, but put up a drawing. Since it's not a poem, I won't put up on Mr. Linky, but here's link if anyone interested. thanks. k. https://manicddaily.com/2017/03/19/drawing-on-home-in-time-of-refugees/
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone -- I've so enjoyed reading all of your responses. Each has been like a quaver or note in a shell deep in the ear, the one that rhymes with that heaven and hell we call home. Happy homecomings to all.
ReplyDeleteThis one tugs, Brendan. I may write later today, other duties called over the weekend. I'm for sure that I've "lived" in more places than you. Mostly rooming houses, rented rooms, but a few short term apartment stays, or with a friend. Both time periods, totaled close to ten years and then I was rescued by marrying. For a security clearance and another time I needed a full extra sheet of paper, perhaps two, to list all the places I had "lived". Many have been torn down now.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, at all times I had a job, sometimes more than one.
..
I'm late, but I wanted to write for this one.
ReplyDeleteComing to this very late, but my river poem for dVerse is so apt here too.
ReplyDeleteVERY LATE ... also posting on The Tuesday Platform... Will go and read all the poems here and there. Thanks again for this challenge... I really wanted it more edgy - the bombed out "home" really moved me ... such a poignant photo - breaks my heart. But that isn't anything I've experienced...
ReplyDelete