Friday, June 28, 2013

With a Bang!


©2002-2013 Steve Anthony

All rights reserved

With a Bang!
                                                                                by Steve Anthony


            Uri raised his hand in the middle of our discussion on adverbs.  “How do you cel-ee– brrrate dees ‘In-dee-pend-ants Day’?” he asked.  “In my life, I have nev-rrr  at-ten-ded such a ting like dees.  I would like to make shorrre I do eet rrright.”

             I smiled at his broken English.  It was beautiful.  Uri, like the rest of the immigrants in my class, had learned a lot about our language in the months since I had started teaching them to speak it.  Now we spent most of our days drilling in conjugation, spelling, and pronunciation of the large vocabulary they had already learned.  They had heard of the Fourth of July – Independence Day – in the United States, but none had experienced it since arriving here to become citizens.  In just a few days they would know firsthand what traditions comprise our yearly celebration of freedom.  I could tell from Uri’s question that they were more interested in hearing about it than in learning more adjectives and adverbs.  I closed my book and placed it on the dull gray surface of the metal table next to me.

              “Well, Uri,” I started, “the class is doing very well in its lessons, so I think I can take some time to tell you how we celebrate Independence Day.”
 
There was agreement in the classroom and everyone nodded their heads.  Many started clapping their hands and wide grins of glee broke out on their faces.

 “Yes, tee-cherrr, please tell us about it,” they cried in unison.

 So far they knew nothing of the large family gatherings and picnics, in the backyards and parks of America, on the fourth of July.  The extravagant displays of rockets, sparklers, and firecrackers were as far from their minds as the other traditions our families have passed down, to be kept by each of us in remembrance of the freedom we enjoy in the United States.

 I began to tell them what to expect on their first Independence Day in this country. I started with the fireworks stands that sprout here and there along the highways weeks before the big event, like huge white mushrooms waiting for their caps to spring open to reveal rows of brightly colored items designed to entice the child in each of us.  Each stand’s big red letters and colorful streamers shining in the sun or flapping in the breeze, offer us a bigger bang and a brighter flash with each item purchased if we’ll only stop to look.

 Next I told them of the parades with their bright uniforms, marching bands, and twirling batons rising high in the air and falling back again, only to be caught by their owners before hitting the ground.  I spoke about the sound of blaring trumpets, and drums beating in rhythm to the traditional music of  Stars and Stripes Forever, America the Beautiful, and The Star Spangled Banner, and how the music rouses the crowd to heartfelt patriotism.  As throngs of people line the streets and avenues of cities and towns to watch, listen, and cheer them on, they build to a crescendo of sights and sounds to remember. 

 My appetite kicked into high gear when I told them of the picnics, and families getting together on a sultry July afternoon in the park.  I could almost see the paper plates being passed around, filled with generous dollops of velvety smooth potato salad, chicken fried to a golden brown, and piles of sweet and creamy cole slaw enticing the masses. I mentioned the aroma of charcoal mixed with the smell of hot dogs and hamburgers sizzling over it, wafting through the air and making people hungry all over again no matter how much anyone had already eaten. 

I spoke of children laughing and giggling and running everywhere with seemingly limitless energy, while adults chatted with each other and gorged themselves on the traditional cuisine of the day.  Here and there the crack of bat echoed through the air from a nearby baseball game, while the sound of a horseshoe striking a metal post driven into the brown dirt chimes in the distance. Now and then, a prankster tosses a lit firecracker dangerously close to someone’s feet just to see them jump, holler, and run away as it explodes in a white puff of smoke, scattering remnants of paper and smoke in a shower of red confetti. 

Finally I told them of the elaborate fireworks programs when darkness falls, and the whistling sounds of huge loads of gun powder and phosphorous being launched into the dark sky, to erupt in loud booms and paint a brilliant display of luminescent brilliance across it. At the finale of the display there would be a series of rapid fire explosions of sound and light, culminating in the revelation of an American flag in all its red, white, and blue glory above the heads of the crowd.

When I was finished, you could see the awe on their faces slowly replaced by the pride of having chosen to become citizens of this great nation of ours. Although I knew my words couldn’t replace the actual experience of an Independence Day celebration, I tried to make them anticipate it when it came.

“What I have told you is only a small sample of what it is like to experience a real Fourth of July celebration,” I said.  It will be much better when you go for yourselves, and you will build your own traditions over the years, for you and your families.”


There was a pause as they contemplated what I had told them, and briefly discussed it among themselves. 

            Finally, Uri spoke. “It is okay, tee-cherrr.  It is good. You cel-ee-brate ‘In-dee-pend-ants-Day’ like such an im-porrr-tant event should be cel-ee-brated. W-w-wid a bang!”