Neither
Julia Alvarez nor her husband Bill can remember exactly when she fell
in love with a Haitian boy named Piti. But both distinctly recall the
first meeting, which happened in 2001 on one of their many trips to
Alvarez’s native Dominican Republic. “[S]hort and slender with the round
face of a boy,” Piti – whose Kreyòl name means “little one,” was 17,
19, possibly even 20. “Somewhere in Haiti,” Alvarez realizes, “a mother
had sent her young son to the wealthier neighbor country to help the
impoverished family.” Never having experienced childbirth herself,
something about Piti nonetheless releases “unaccountably maternal”
feelings in Alvarez: “Who knows why we fall in love with people who are
nothing to us?” she muses.
Piti
becomes ingrained in the hearts and lives of both Alvarez and Bill as
they travel frequently from their Vermont home to their organic coffee
farm in the Dominican mountains, where eventually Piti comes to work.
One night, Alvarez promises she will be at his wedding, “[o]ne of those
big-hearted promises … you never think you’ll be called on to deliver
someday.” Eight years later, ‘someday’ arrives … and so begins Alvarez’s
latest – her 22nd! – title, A Wedding in Haiti.
A
week before the Aug. 20, 2009, nuptials, Piti announces his intention
to marry Eseline, the mother of his infant daughter, and wants to know:
Are Julia and Bill coming?
After
arguing with her conscience (she was supposed to attend a conference at
the same time), Alvarez and hubby arrive in Santiago, DR, two days
before the wedding. They assemble their motley crew of attendees, pack
the truck, and head toward Haiti, which Alvarez describes “like a sister
I’ve never gotten to know.” In spite of the shared border, Alvarez has
been next-door only once before, a quarter century ago. Piti’s family’s
remote home doesn’t have an actual address or even appear on any map,
but the adventure – long, uncertain, occasionally illegal – will end
just in time for Alvarez and Bill to preside as the revered godparents
as Piti and Eseline exchange of vows.
The
truck must depart immediately after the ceremony, this time with the
newly-wedded threesome, as Piti doesn’t want to subject his new family
to public transportation. That neither wife nor baby has any immigration
documentation is an obstacle they must face at the border. In spite of
her fear and frustration with the situation, Alvarez “will not abandon
them.… There is a bottom line below which you cannot go and still call
yourself a human being.” Over just three days, Alvarez’s familial
constellation changes remarkably.
Five
months later, the horrific 2010 earthquake hits Haiti: its government
reports “316,000 dead, 300,000 injured, 1.3 million displaced, 97,300
houses destroyed.” Piti and Eseline finally learn their immediate
families have survived, but Eseline is not well; a trip home is deemed
necessary. In July, Alvarez and Bill, Piti, Eseline, baby Ludy, and
three more extended near-family, overload the truck and head over the
border into devastated Haiti, bearing witness to indescribable
tragedies.
“The
one thing we cannot do is turn away,” Alvarez insists. “When we have
seen a thing, we have an obligation. To see and to allow ourselves to be
transformed by what we have seen.” Her bond with Piti allows Alvarez to
experience Haiti through Piti’s shocked eyes, and witness his
transformation “[f]rom laborer to capataz [supervisor] to president of
CJM [Young People of Moustique Cooperative],” as he “work[s] toward the
future of Haiti.”
Alvarez, internationally renowned for her novels, How the GarcÃa Girls Lost Their Accents and In the Time of the Butterflies,
says of her latest book (in an essay included with the advance copy),
“[r]ather than a ‘me-moir,’ I prefer to call this book an ‘us-moir.’”
While Piti’s story takes center page, Alvarez also weaves in her own
marriage to her beloved Bill, her parents’ decades-long love story still
unbroken in spite of the mutual dementia that has stolen most of their
memories, as well as the complicated relationship of two
less-than-sisterly nations.
Although Wedding
occasionally reads too much like an unedited personal journal –
especially the first half (which, Alvarez reveals, is how the book
began) – Alvarez’s devotion, her admiration and hope, and most clearly,
the love for her extended family, is palpable throughout. The small
black-and-white-pictures scattered on the pages help emphasize the
individual humanity throughout. Indeed, as Alvarez explains, Wedding
proves to be “a love story that is many love stories; a story of how
history can be reimagined when people from two countries, traditional
enemies and strangers, become friends.”
Readers: Adult
Published: 2012