Read Yeny and the Children for Peace Online

Authors: Michelle Mulder

Tags: #JUV000000, #JUV039220, #JUV039140

Yeny and the Children for Peace (3 page)

BOOK: Yeny and the Children for Peace
11.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Hey,” David said, interrupting her thoughts, “are you coming to the meeting after school tomorrow, on the soccer field?”

“A meeting?” Yeny asked. “About what?”

“Peace!” David said. “Haven't you heard? Kids all over town are getting together to talk about how to stop the fighting and violence.”

Juan laughed. “Who's going to listen to a bunch of kids? If the grown-ups can't make the grupos armados stop fighting, what are
we
supposed to do?”

“That's what the meeting's about, silly,” said Beto. “If we already knew how to do it, we wouldn't have to meet, would we? Lots of kids have been meeting for months already. A bunch of them asked the teachers if we could meet right here in the schoolyard, to get more kids to come, but the teachers said it was too dangerous. No one wants to make the grupos armados mad.”

“No one's going to get hurt at this meeting, though,” David added. “I hear they're trying to get as many kids as possible to show up. There might be hundreds there. Can you imagine a
soccer field packed full of kids who want to talk about something? There'll be so many of us that the groups will
have
to listen.”

Yeny liked the idea of seeing that many children in one place, but she agreed with Juan. “It sounds kind of weird,” she said. “Many people have tried to stop the fighting, but it's impossible. The grupos come along and do whatever they want. My family never bothered anyone, but suddenly someone decided they wanted our land, so they took it.”

“But that's what I mean,” Beto said. “It's not fair, but we're not doing anything to stop it.”

Juan still looked as doubtful as Yeny felt. She did want to see what hundreds of children in one place looked like, though. “Are you going, Juan?” she asked. She'd never figure out how to get to the soccer field on her own. She missed the familiar mountain paths around her village. She never got lost
there
.

Juan shrugged. “I might as well,” he said. “We usually play soccer there in the afternoon, but we can't play with hundreds of kids in the way.”

Yeny grinned. No matter how big and overwhelming this noisy city was, it looked like Mamá was right: soon she'd have plenty of friends here. In fact, she'd have hundreds and hundreds to choose from.
“Good morning, girls and boys.” Señorita Barraza was a young teacher with a twinkling smile and a heart-shaped face. Yeny's old teacher had always looked tired and had hardly ever smiled. And the one before that had disappeared. Some people said she had taught the “wrong” lessons, and the grupos armados had taken their revenge. This new classroom was different too. The walls were smooth and painted bright blue, nothing like the old wood of the schoolhouse whose cracks let sunlight shine through. And the map of Colombia on the far wall here looked almost new. The blackboard didn't have any chips in it, and in the corner was a shelf with more books than she had ever seen.

“I'd like you to meet Yeny, our newest student,” said Señorita Barraza. “She's Juan's cousin, and she's come all the way from the mountains to study with us. Yeny, would you like to tell us a little bit about where you're from?”

Yeny stood at the front of the class, looking at the tables full of children. She wondered what she could say to help them imagine the green mountains with narrow dirt paths between the trees, the sound of cicadas chirping, the glow of fireflies at night, and how everything smelled like wild parsley when it rained. She didn't know where to begin. “My village was nothing like here,” she said, looking down at her hands.

“It's really far away,” Juan agreed.

Village children help gather leftover bananas after the harvest.

And that gave Yeny a great idea. If her classmates knew how long it took to get to her village, maybe then they'd understand why it was so different. She thought about her trip to the city and tried to describe it in reverse. “If you want to go to my village, you have to ride for hours in a crowded
chiva
—a jeep that's crammed full of people, bags of rice, chickens, and all the things that people usually buy in the city. It's so crowded that sometimes people ride on the roof or hang off the side.”

A few kids in the class were nodding, as though they'd been on a trip like that before. Señorita Barraza smiled, and Juan grinned at her.

Yeny kept going. “You pass towns, a police checkpoint, banana fields, and farms. And after a few hours, you get off the chiva and start walking up a long dirt trail into the mountains. Sometimes you pass soldiers washing their clothes in the creek, and you have to wait for them to finish before you can cross.”

Juan was jumping about in his seat now, waving his hand in the air. “Remember when the creek flooded last year?” he asked. “And your father had to carry me over because the water was so deep?”

“Yeah, it rains a lot in the mountains,” Yeny said. “I loved the sound the rain made on the metal roof, especially when I was falling asleep. In my village, most houses were made of wood
and had straw or metal roofs. And all the houses were together in a clearing in the forest, right after the police post, and our house was the one with the great big papaya tree in front of it. I planted it last year and now it's as tall as this school. You could plant anything in my village, and it would grow—bananas, mangos, oranges, and guavas. And there were lots of horses, and pigs, and turkeys too.”

“Oh! Oh!” Juan said. “And last time I was there, I helped Yeny's family with the banana harvest. We cut the bananas down from the trees, and put the stickers on, and packed them up in cardboard boxes to send to away. We had to be careful because people in other countries don't want to buy fruit that's bruised. And we got to eat all the bananas that weren't good enough to send away. Mmm.” He rubbed his tummy.

Yeny laughed. “Juan was the only one who ate the leftovers. The rest of us were already sick of bananas.”

Señorita Barraza nodded. “I look forward to hearing more about your village in some of your writing assignments, Yeny,” she said. “Class, I'd like you to make Yeny feel welcome and help her out in her first few weeks here. Yeny, I'd like you to sit right up here at the front, next to Joaquin.”

Yeny looked where her teacher was pointing. Sure enough, there was an empty seat right next to the tall, thin boy she and Juan had escaped from. Across the classroom, Juan looked worried.
>Yeny wondered if he had only been trying to make her feel better when he said that Joaquin would never pick on a girl.

Well, Yeny thought, she had survived the grupos armados. Surely she could survive the silly-looking boy who was staring at her as though he would eat her for breakfast.

Joaquin ignored Yeny for most of the morning, but as soon as recess was over he started flicking things at her. Little things at first—rolled-up bits of paper that he tore from his notebook or tiny pieces of his eraser. She collected everything in a neat little pile, and when the teacher wasn't looking, she dumped the whole handful into the middle of his page of math problems.

He glared at her. Then his face went red. “You'd better watch out, Banana Girl.”

She met his eyes. “Why?” she asked, a little too loudly.

“Yeny,” their teacher asked, looking up from her desk in the corner, “is something wrong?”

Yeny thought for a few seconds. Complaining would probably make things worse. Complaining would mean she was a
sapo
. A sapo was a toad with a big mouth, and people with big mouths could get other people in trouble. No, she wouldn't say anything. “There's nothing wrong, señorita,” Yeny said.

“Muy bien
. I'm pleased to hear that. Please finish your math problems quietly.”

Joaquin bent over his work, but not before Yeny saw the smirk on his face.

Maybe the city wasn't such a great place to live after all.

“What are you going to do?” Juan asked, on the way home from school.

Yeny shrugged “Just ignore him, I guess.”

They were walking along a wide avenue with a red tile side-walk. Most of the shops and cafés had put little roofs over the walkway, and Yeny was relieved each time she stepped into the shade. The sun was hot. And there were hardly any trees. She missed the cool mountain air of her village. And today, after spending the whole day next to Joaquin, she missed her friends more than ever.

“Maybe he'll give up and leave you alone.” Juan didn't sound hopeful. “I don't know why Señorita Barraza sat you next to him. She must know he's bad news.”

Yeny tried to sound more confident than she felt. “Don't worry,” she said. “I'll figure out something.”

CHAPTER 3
Stay Away

Everyone was already home by the time Yeny and Juan got there. Carlitos was chasing a yellow ball around on the floor. Elena, Sylvia, and Rosa were doing their homework at one end of the table, and her parents and Aunt Nelly were sitting at the other end, drinking coffee and frowning. Juan and Yeny put their bags away and smiled hello. It was best not to interrupt grown-ups who looked
that
serious.

“I couldn't believe it,” Papá was saying. “He talked about joining the grupos armados as though it were any old job. He kept talking about how well they pay, as if money could make up for what you would have to do.”

“So you're not joining,” Mamá said, more like a statement than a question.

“Of course not! There has to be a better way to put food on the table.” The grown-ups were silent for a moment. Papa took another sip of coffee. “I have to admit, though, that it's harder to find work than I thought it would be.”

“Don't worry,” Aunt Nelly said. “We'll make do. I'm glad you're here, anyway.”

Yeny tiptoed past them to get a glass of water from the sink. Her mother looked up from the kitchen table and smiled. “How was your first day?” she asked.

Yeny hugged her and told her about her teacher and the classes they'd had. She did not mention Joaquin. Judging by her parents' serious conversation, they had enough to worry about right now. “And guess what's happening tomorrow,” she said. “After school, all the kids in the neighborhood are getting together in the soccer field to talk about peace. The field's not far from here, and it'll be the perfect way to meet other kids. Isn't it exciting? Wait till I tell María Cristina.”

Yeny looked back and forth between her parents and her aunt, but none of them looked especially happy about her great news.

“Lo siento, chicos”
Aunt Nelly apologized, “but I'm afraid tomorrow's not a good day. I heard from the radio station that it's our turn to talk again.”

Yeny didn't understand. She'd listened to a radio before, of
course. They'd had one in the village. But the radio was for news, or sometimes music. She'd never known anyone who actually talked on the radio. Was her cousin famous and he'd never told her?

“We're talking on a radio program for people in captivity,” Aunt Nelly explained.

“People in captivity” meant people like her uncle Alfredo. The grupos armados had kidnapped thousands of people in Colombia, and they hid them away in secret places. Sometimes they demanded money from the families. Other times, they kidnapped people to make the other grupos mad and they promised to release their prisoners if the other groups released
theirs
. Yeny's uncle had sent letters to his family, but no one could write back because they didn't know where he was.

“Papá wrote to us once that the kidnappers let them listen to the radio,” Juan said. “There are special programs where families can talk, and that way the kidnapped people can find out how their families are doing. We talk on the program as often as we can. He listens every week, and now he writes to us about the things we've said. Maybe you could come tomorrow too, Yeny. I'm sure he'd be happy to hear from you.”

Yeny nodded, but she couldn't find words to speak. She couldn't imagine not knowing where her father was, or only being able to talk to him over the radio. Maybe David and Beto
were right. Maybe it
was
important for children to get together to talk about what was happening in their country. If there was anything they could possibly do to change things, she wanted to try.

That evening, Yeny's father asked her to go out with him to buy
panda
for the next day's breakfast, and she hurried to put her homework away. He'd been too busy trying to find work in the past few weeks to go for walks with her. In the village, he'd often asked her or Elena to go with him to measure the bananas or check for disease. The buyers were always particular about how big the bananas had to be, so it was important to measure regularly to know when to harvest.

Some of the fields were far from home, but Yeny had never minded. She and her father told each other stories as they walked along the trail, and when they heard something rustling in the bush, they made each other laugh by trying to guess what it was. A monkey or a parrot? A wild
tatabra
, even bigger than the pigs at home, or one of those giant rodents called
guaguas?
(Usually it was just someone's turkey that had wandered out of the village.)

BOOK: Yeny and the Children for Peace
11.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Goblin King by Heather Killough-Walden
The Killing Floor by Craig Dilouie
Couples Who Kill by Carol Anne Davis
Love Everlasting by Speer, Flora
From Slate to Crimson by Brandon Hill
Bling It On! by Jill Santopolo
Something More Than Night by Tregillis, Ian
Portent by James Herbert
Miracle Woman by Marita Conlon-McKenna