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Beneath the Same
Sheltering Sky
by: Noel Zamora
The suns shines bright red over the horizon as dawn dissolves the
surrounding darkness. Slowly, like pigments being smeared together,
stains of purple fade into maroon, then orange, then pink, till the
palest blue emerges and scatters all over the dome of the sky.
Again, the miracle of morning unfolds.
I remember witnessing this same miracle many, many mornings before
with my father. He would wake me up early and we would ride on his
bicycle to the bridge over Cutud. There we would hold vigil for the
gentle rising of the sun from behind the lofty lonely summit of
Arayat. I would watch in that twilight the water buffalo wade
through the golden fields of ripening rice. Behind him walked the
farmer singing an ancient kundiman to his beloved, while crickets
and cicadas hummed their own little ditties.
But there is no Arayat summit before me here. Instead, I have the
day breaking from behind the indigo-shadowed Appalachian range. I
watch the thoroughbreds graze on the bluegrass-blanketed hills as
the robins chirp away in the shades of the elms. In the distance, an
old man plays his fiddle while his young companion wails the loss of
his wife, his dog, and his automobile.
I close my eyes as I stand here, a stranger in a strange land. I
know that my feet do not rest on the soft, pliant earth of my
homeland, yet I find my heart and my soul truly at rest. Yes, this
mountain rock may be unmarked by the hooves of the damulag and
unwatered by monsoon rains. Still, I stand here, my feet now rooted
to this foreign soil, basking beneath the same sheltering sky.
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