We took almost the same picture
from inside the courtyard
facing the cobblestoned street:
the horse through the arched mudéjar doorway
it’s carriage-carrying tourists hidden
behind the thick ancient wall.
I am drawn to doorways here
thick and imposing
tall, often arched
hinged with hand-hammered iron hardware
studded metal designs
doors behind wrought iron gates and bars
the second set of interior doors
ten feet behind the exterior ones
an inner area for natural cooling
and safety
small cut-out doors within massive immobile ones
that opened to allow entrance
while leaving the rest of the entrance closed.
Some modern
some restored 200 years ago
or by contemporary architects
some not
pigment and finish faded
doors used for 600 years
Muslim doors
gothic doors
baroque doors
post-Inquisition geometric patterns
intricate tile and brick
mudéjar beauty belying forced conversion
Muslim ancestors who didn’t flee or die
gold-gilded palace doors
sitting atop repurposed mosques
demolished synagogues
traces to life in the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries
soil seeped with blood and violence
ethnic purge and conquest
messy –
now as always –
truth of the horrors washed away
by the victor’s historical rhetoric
rain, sun, time
descendants’ privilege and guilt
the erasure of those who lived and knew.
These doors could tell the stories
centuries of people
kept safe within
kept out
forced inside
forced to hide
heat managed through courtyards and windows and open spaces
heat blistering without relief behind shuttered doors
cold stone floors and walls unable to be warmed in winter
braziers burning smoky
charring and blackening walls, tapestries, lungs.
On the day after strong winds closed parks and gardens
wrought iron gates forged 100 years ago
remained padlocked
modern tendrils of the centuries-long practice
protection by exclusion
whole communities locked in
to protect the ones outside.
My ancestors lived within these doors and gates
knocked on the doors of neighbors
bought and sold vegetables and fruit in the gardens
built and decorated homes
placed modest food on tables
for hungry mouths
honored the feast days and rituals of Muslim and Christian families in their midst
lived with daily hardship of life in the 15th century
until the climate changed
and the ways of the few
were seen as a threat to the incoming regime.
My ancestors were confined to the walls of the barrio
some fled
some converted and passed
adding lard to centuries-old recipes
hiding observance
some retained their faith and customs
behind the walls
where they remained until they were killed
by plague or massacre.
And what if they weren’t my ancestors?
What extra claim do I seek
through personal connection to suffering?
Behind every wall –
every group targeted for extinction
relocation
confinement
restriction of access
restriction of entry –
is a descendent
an ancestor.
Centuries from now
when they tell the story of those behind today’s walls
descendants will walk freely
take photos of tourist attractions
stop for a moment to marvel in the beauty of a horse
framed in an archway
wonder what it means to be free
and the price paid by those who weren’t.
Beautiful.
Thank you
What an interesting and lovely poem. Marrano, Sephardi or Ashkenaz, ancestors and descendants, doors did what you say. And, of course, there are doors to your own adventure of this year.
I am very taken by this poem. Preserve it. i do hope you consider submitting it somewhere.