The Narco News Bulletin |
August 16, 2018 | Issue #34 |
narconews.com - Reporting on the Drug War and Democracy from Latin America |
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Being an academic and anthropologist, I never would have believed that cats could be subjected to the primordial practice of herding. The shepherd normally works with goats, cows and sheep. What's more, herding is such an ancient practice, one that corresponds to the times of hunting and gathering that our pre-agricultural ancestors used as a style of pre-communal production. Well then, who in our anthropological discipline could have imagined that cats could also be herded in the urban spaces of Cochabamba, the biodiversity of the Chapare, and the world of cyber-globalization?
Al Giordano Photo: Jeremy Bigwood D.R. 2004 |
Jennifer Whitney Photo: Jeremy Bigwood D.R. 2004 |
The spirit of the cats is readjusted to hunt the imperial rats of deception that work under orders of the dozens of Goliaths of information. We will clearly understand that the rats of deception are those mercenaries that tell stories only to gain a dollar or so to satisfy the version of truth told by the grand Goliath.
On Saturday, July 31, I arrived at this strange and beautiful place. It is a country hotel a man from Munich has constructed outside of Cochabamba with the flavor of Southern Germany. A bit confused and tired from my university activities, I arrived by taxi from the airport. Standing outside the reception area of the Country House I was surprised by one of the assistants of shepherd Giordano, named Lucho Gómez, who with his customary kindness and sweetness offered to escort me into a breakfast buffet. Entering the dining room of the cats, many of them tourist cats - nothing to do with the cats of the school - I sat down at a table. The assistant pastor pointed out the shepherd Giordano who was preparing, on his laptop, the program that the cats would have to hunt on this Saturday. Lucho Gómez introduced me to the shepherd Giordano, who with his attentive gaze, semi-lost, resulting from the inaugural activities from the night before, gave me a warm welcome, thanking me for being present at the School.
Luis "Lucho" Gómez Photo: Jeremy Bigwood D.R. 2004 |
Turning my eyes, I saw the familiar sombrero of a feline with gravitas, whose strange custom is to chew coca leaves beginning at two p.m. each day, instead of Cat Chow. Her name is Silvia Rivera, who I already knew from other times in the fight for democracy and truth. In her essence she is a magic-religious feline that sometimes becomes a shepherd and sometimes a feline with her claws finely sharpened.
Silvia Rivera Photo: Jeremy Bigwood D.R. 2004 |
Once I received my room assignment, I learned that I was going to share a room with the grand shepherd Wálter Maierovitch, a Brazilian with a Polish chin and a brilliant judge made of iron: Straight and sensible as a sheet of pure silk, but with feet planted firmly on the ground. It was a true pleasure to share a room with this great feline, a theorist of drug policy, who was placed between a rock and a hard place by none other than President Fernando Enrique Cardoso.
Once the first plenary session of the cats, felines, and shepherds was convoked, I was welcomed once more to the group and I had to say something. There, I gave them all a welcome to dramatic and creative Bolivia and the fact that I could only share with them knowledge but not information: Well, that is the prerogative of an anthropologist over a journalist.
José Mirtenbaum with George Sanchez Photo: Noah Friedsky D.R. 2004 |
Amy Casada-Alaniz Photo: Jeremy Bigwood D.R. 2004 |
Of course, in this debate, the figure of the evil inquisitor-editor-censor cats that work for Goliath emerged. The conflict between license and self-determination of what to read and write to define the truth of the facts became a kind of Rubric's cube, not only for the journalist, but also for the reader. A dialectic battle between the cognitive consciousness of the individual reader, the conscience of the journalist, the public consciousness of the State and the role of the responsible and sometimes mercenary journalist evolved.
Finally I was baptized in the world of the shepherds, cats, and felines of Authentic Journalism that had occurred in the great hall of the Country House in just one day. I understood at once what shepherd Giordano meant when he talked about "the art of herding cats."
After this, my first day, during the subsequent days I became a shepherd-cat getting to know many cats, kittens, felines, and shepherds all at once, who I learned to respect, to love, and to protect. But that is another story...
What I did learn, though, is to fall in love again with those cats, kittens and felines who seek the truth, whether through simple curiosity or through basic human ethics.