Showing posts with label Maria (Amaro) Perrotin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maria (Amaro) Perrotin. Show all posts

Thursday, February 07, 2013

Those Places Thursday: Abuelita's World





Moorish Kiosk, The Alameda Park, Mexico City. By Ulisesmorales (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

My grandmother, Catalina (Perrotin) Huesca, lived in a small one bedroom flat at 145-B Carpio Street, in the Santa Maria la Ribera neighborhood.  The neighborhood, or colonia, was the oldest in the Federal District.  Its centerpiece, just a block from my grandmother's house, was The Alameda Park, a beautiful colonial square block park perfect for family gatherings and lazy Sunday afternoons.  My father, Gilbert Cayetano Huesca, taught me to ride a two-wheel bicycle in that park.

In the middle of the park was a stunning, arched Moorish-style kiosk built of colorful tiles laid in intricate geometric designs.  Made of iron from given the engineer by his friend, Andrew Carnegie, the kiosk had been designed as the Mexican Pavilion at the World's Fair from 1884 - 1885 in New Orleans and later at the Saint Louis Fair of 1904 before being dismantled and brought to Mexico City in the early 1900s. On weekends it was often the scene of concerts and other performances.  You can see a panoramic view of the kiosk here.

Abuelita lived in one of two first floor flats in a four unit building on a tree-lined street.  Her living room looked out to the sidewalk. 

As you entered into the house, you passed under a small shelf that hung over the door.  The shelf held a framed picture of Saint Martin de Porres, my grandmother's favorite saint.  You would continue down a long two-tone green hallway that ran the length of the home as you walked down a tile floor of brown and beige octagonal mosaic tiles set in a honeycomb pattern. To your left, you would see each of the other rooms.


My grandmother's bedroom and bathroom were in the center of the house, followed by a tiny kitchen and a dining room at the rear.  All the rooms had windows overlooking the courtyard next door. The courtyard itself led to the home of my Bisabuelita or great-grandmother, Maria (Amaro) Perrotin, and my great aunt, Blanca Perrotin.  Maria was in her late 90s and had survived three husbands; Blanca was a spinster.  They came over every day and stayed past dinner, telling stories around the dining room table.  

About halfway down the hall to the right, you would follow the hallway around an angled turn.  There, the lathe-and-plaster wall ended and a metal half wall began.  It was topped by a long bank of glass block windows.  A metal door opened into a small patio filled with potted geraniums and other flowers and plants whose perfume permeated the air. Abuelita left the door propped open door open all day long to let the fresh air and sunshine into the house.

She also loved to listen to the chirping of her canaries.  Though she had a radio and television in the dining room, the canaries made the real music in the house.  They lived in cages in the hallway between her bedroom and the kitchen.  At any given time they numbered between 6 and 15, all singing their own cheerful songs.  My grandmother said they were singing their prayers to God, because God loved all creatures, especially the small ones. She put them out in her sunny patio when she awoke and brought them in the late afternoon, covering their cages with an old towel so they would quiet down for the night.  

My grandmother's home (to the right) at 145-B Manuel
Carpio Street, in Mexico City.  Courtesy Google Street Maps.
I recall asking whether they had names, and she said no, but she knew which one was which, anyway.  After counting them, I announced that she had as many canaries as she had children, so we should name each of them after my father and his 10 brothers and sisters.  She threw her head back and laughed heartily, rubbing my head.  "Go ahead, then," she said.  We tried that for a while until I realized that unlike my grandmother, I could not tell them apart. Still, I credit her with giving me a love for birds and their sweet songs, especially those colorful canaries, which even to this day, remind of of her and give me reason to smile.

The Spanish language uses a lot of diminutives, and this seemed to apply especially well to my grandmother.  The word Abuelita translates into English as "little grandmother," and she was barely taller than I was.  Everything about her was petite, her hands, her feet, even the tiny wavy curls crowning her head.  She had so many!  I just couldn't figure out how they stayed that way.  I never saw her curl her hair at bedtime, so in my little nine-year-old mind I decided that she must have had to put it up in pin curls and just left them that way for oh, maybe a year or so.  I had not yet heard of permanents.

I think that because she had raised 11 children, she had incredible patience to put up with all of us while we lived with her in that little house.  She never complained but seemed overjoyed to have us, even though it must have meant a lot of extra work.  She was an excellent cook, having learned from her own mother.  She also had been the cook at the hotels and restaurants she and my grandfather, Cayetano Huesca, owned in Tierra Blanca and Perote, Veracruz.  She did not have many pots and pans, but I do remember watching her cook her amazing Mexican-style rice in a cast-iron skillet on a gas stove.

My mother, Joan (Schiavon) Huesca, tried her best to learn how to cook my father's favorite Mexican dishes from Abuelita.  One of these was a breakfast casserole of eggs, chiles, and and tortilla strips, called Chilaquiles.  My mother tried her best to pronounce the word, but it always came out as "Chili-Killies."  After trying to cook it and several other dishes a few times, she gave up and stuck to the Italian dishes she had learned from her own father.  My grandmother did not mind and was happy to let my mother cook from time to time, raving especially about her spaghetti and meatballs. 

Water was - and continues to be - a problem for the residents of the Federal District. Mexico City was built on Lake Texcoco in 1519, and the constant draining of water from the lake and has not only caused the city to sink but also has not been enough for the millions of people who live in one of the largest cities in the world.  Water was severely rationed, and people became expert at conserving it.  Every morning after everyone had bathed, my grandmother cleaned her bathtub and filled it with water so she could use it for cooking, and washing hands and dishes, among other things.  Every day, the city turned the water off in mid-afternoon and turned it back on the next morning.  A couple of times a week, we also experienced power outages, and my grandmother would borrow her votive candles from her room to light the way for all of us.

I think the house was built of lathe and plaster, and like many houses down there, it became cold and humid in the winter.  There was no central heating.  Instead, my grandmother used a tall, portable black kerosene stove to keep warm.  With so many people living there, my parents bought second stove.  They were always very cautious around the stoves, mindful of the many fires there had been from people who had been more careless.

Not long after we arrived, I asked if I could claim the pantry, which had been converted into a broom closet and ironing room, as my bedroom.  My grandmother let me put a cot there, but it stuck out into the hall.  I tried it for much of the day, happy to have a place of my own to retreat to from our noisy family, but I think I gave it up before bedtime when I realized I didn't want to sleep there all alone.  That was the end of "my" room.


Copyright ©  2013  Linda Huesca Tully

Did you know, or are you a member of the Huesca or Perrotin families ?  If so, share your memories and comments below.



Wednesday, February 06, 2013

Wisdom Wednesday: A Grandmother's Love


Catalina (Perrotin) Huesca (1893 - 1998)


"Grandmas hold our tiny hands for just a little while, but our hearts forever."   - Author unknown



My grandmother, Catalina (Perrotin) Huesca,
Chicago, about 64 years old, 1956.
One of my earliest - and warmest - memories of living with my grandmother, or Abuelita Catalina (Perrotin) Huesca was our first night in her home, as she said her bedtime prayers.

We had moved to Mexico City in early 1964, and we stayed with her at her home for a couple of months while my parents, Gilbert and Joan (Schiavon) Huesca, looked for a suitable home.

Despite her limited space, Abuelita made us feel welcome and right at home.  Her English was no longer what it had been when she spoke it at home with her parents, Francisco and Maria (Amaro) Perrotin, but she still understood it fairly well. She hugged and kissed us tenderly and laughed along with us as we sat in her tiny painted wooden chairs.  

We could not have been happier to have so much attention.   I think we somehow figured out in our own childish way that a grandmother's love knows no language barriers. 

My parents and my two youngest sisters slept in the living room.  I thought my other sister and I were the lucky ones when we found out we would get to sleep with our grandmother in her large, soft bed.  

She was deeply religious. Wrapped in her black rebozo, or shawl over a soft flannel nightgown and wearing thick dark socks to keep her legs and feet warm, she tucked us gently into bed, turned off the main light, and lit a couple of candles in tall red glass jars covered with images of the Sacred Heart and Saint Michael the Archangel.    

The candles now being the only light in the room, she knelt at her bedside and recited the Rosary. This was followed by various prayers, first to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, then to Virgin of Guadalupe, and lastly to Saint Martin de Porres, her favorite saint.  Walking purposefully around the room, she stopped at each photograph and reverently lit the votive candles in front of them.  The pictures were beautiful and numerous; they covered all the walls of her room, her two dressers, and the bedside tables. 

She prayed for the people in each of the pictures:  her parents and grandparents, her beloved husband Cayetano, their children and grandchildren, and her beloved sister Blanca Perrotin. She seemed to leave no one out, even though ours was a large extended family.


About 30 - 45 minutes later, Abuelita climbed into bed with us.  I think she was surprised I was still awake, especially after our long journey, but I could not take my eyes off her.  The toasty warmth of the tin heater in the corner, the flickering candles in the room and the dancing shadows on the wall, together with the family pictures and the images of God and all the saints smiling down on us made me feel safe and loved and blessed.  I had never  witnessed anyone talk to God as intimately before this night.  We pulled the covers way up to our foreheads and cuddled together in the soft glow as we fell asleep, my grandmother stroking my head.


Copyright ©  2013  Linda Huesca Tully

Did you know, or are you a member of the Huesca or Perrotin families ?  If so, share your memories and comments below.

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