Decolonizing the Nativity

 


Every week I get sometimes a few, sometimes quite a few requests for information, for interviews, for assistance. I am not a very well-organized person and so sometimes these requests fall through the cracks, and I miss them. But for the most part I try to accommodate as many people as I can. I recall that if I can help someone in their research, finish a paper, gain some perspective for their thesis or even provide a key quote or insight for their article, it could help put Guam or Chamoru issues in a more critical light, and it may push someone, tied to the island, to be more engaged about things important to me (and hopefully to them). 

It is always nice to look back and see if I did have an impact, albeit even a small one on someone's perspective or even the course of their intellectual journey. A few months ago, I was a guest speaker for a college course focusing on cultural diversity in psychology. I talked about my experiences growing up Chamoru, but also not very stereotypically Chamorus, my theatrical framework for understanding colonization and also various theories of decolonization. Earlier today the professor messaged me thanking me and saying most of her students were quoting me in their final papers and that more than one student said that their whole view of things like academic, the future of our islands shifted after listening to my grainy, pixelated and bearded face for 90 minutes. This type of feedback helps, especially at times when I feel like important messages are getting lost and that minds are closing up and possibilities for important change are being shut down. As I've written many times on this blog over the years, it is important for me to know that I am reaching some. Even if the evidence is primarily anecdotal, that alone is helpful in sustaining my drive. 

Below is an interview with a student who I gave an interview to you a few years back for an undergraduate research project. I'm glad to see that I, along with others he interviewed help to provide some critical insights for seeing things like Chamoru culture, history and political status. 


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A Conversation with Ralph Eurich Patacsil' 18

December 21, 2017

LMU Magazine


Ralph Eurich Patacsil ’18 is a senior in the College of Communication and Fine Arts whose major is studio arts, with an emphasis on graphic design. Patacsil was born in Tamuning, Guam, a U.S. territory that was once a Spanish colony. In the fall 2017 semester, Patacsil enrolled in a course called Meeting Christ in Faith and Art, taught by Professor Cecilia González-Andrieu, a professor in the Department of Theological Studies. For the class’ final assignment, students were required to make a work of art related to themes of the course. Patacsil painted a Nativity scene, titled “Puengen Yu’us (Night of God),” that combines elements of Spain’s colonial legacy with those of Guam’s native people, the Chamorro. Patacsil was interviewed about his painting by Editor Joseph Wakelee-Lynch.

Why did you choose to paint the Nativity?
First, because of the time of year: Christmas. Christmas in Guam is very significant, with lots of celebration. About 85 percent of the population is Catholic. That’s something that we trace to our Spanish roots. Setting up a Nativity scene is called a belen, and it’s a tradition we inherit from the Spanish. Second, since Guam is going through a decolonization process, anything that we inherit from the Spanish becomes a point of tension. So, [my question] is how do I reimagine that, or how do I enculturate that tradition so we can heal, or bridge the gap between our own cultural roots and the point of conflict.

What do you mean by decolonization process?
Guam is an unincorporated territory of the United States. [Guam became an unincorporated territory of the United States as a result of the Spanish-American War of 1898, and it was briefly occupied by Japan during the Second World War.] The U.S. is obligated by the United Nations to help carry out the transition process from territorial status to whatever status the people of Guam see fit to choose. So, there are three options [in Guam’s future]: independence, U.S. statehood or free association with the United States. 

About the painting—there are three men to the left: a priest, a conquistador and a man with a basket.
They represent the three wise men.

Who is the man with the staff?
The man with the staff represents Joseph, Jesus’s father. 

The priest and conquistador are clearly not native to Guam, and they're easily recognizable. But Joseph wasn’t very recognizable to me.
I wanted to present him as a native chieftain. Not only are the Spanish coming to worship Jesus in the painting, but also the native community at large. Ultimately, I’m targeting division. I don’t want there to be division. So, that’s my ultimate goal: for the painting to act as a piece of healing, to help the community take pride. As brutal as our colonized past was, the beauty of Chamorro culture today is in being able to enculturate the colonists’ practices. This speaks to the indigenization of the colonizers’ cultural practices in a way that fits the need of the community. 

The conquistador seems to have a gift for the baby Jesus, while the priest is clutching a cross. Is the cross a gift?
Yes, the cross is the priest’s gift. There is an openness in the priest’s arm gesture, his right arm. I also thought it was interesting to have the cross mirror the baby Jesus.

Who are the women behind Mary?
They aren’t anyone in particular. They’re present as a nod to the matrilineal culture of the Chamorros. When the Spanish came, their society was patriarchal, and the system of matrilineal inheritance was replaced. The women represent a reclaiming of the culture. Also, in most images of the Nativity, Mary is the only woman present. By having the other women there, I’m re-contextualizing the importance of women in the overall story of who Jesus comes to save. It mirrors Jesus’ community. Some of the closest disciples to him were women — Mary Magdalene and Veronica, who wipes Jesus’ face. We forget sometimes that some of the most prominent figures in his life were women.

What is the significance of the pillars in the background?
Aesthetically, they replace the frame of the stable [in the Gospel story]. But in ancient times, pillars supported huts. Also, they mark graves where the dead are buried. You see them in ancestral sites. Prior to colonization, the Chamorros worshiped their ancestors. A lot of Chamorros today still believe the ancestors play a role in our lives. My hope is that that doesn’t need to be a point of conflict with the Catholic faith because we believe in the resurrection of the dead, and we pray to the saints. 

What about the skulls in the lower right of the painting?
Sometimes skulls allude to the saying “memento mori” — “Remember that you will die” and the idea that the true saving power of Christ is in the Resurrection, it’s is not here in this physical world but is in life after death. 

Animals are always found in nativity scenes. Is it a nod to custom that you included them?
Donkeys were a work animal brought by the Spanish. The other animal is a carabao, a domesticated water buffalo. They came from the Philippines. The carabao came from the colonizer, but it is a very prominent, beloved symbol of Chamorro culture today. It doesn’t have negative connotations.

I want to ask about the light in the painting. Is the crescent moon symbolic?
The moon and stars play special roles in Chamorro culture. They use the moon to chart out the year, in lunar cycles and in fishing cycles. And, of course, a lot of islanders used the stars to navigate.

In this nighttime scene, even though the moon and stars are depicted, Mary and Jesus are the brightest elements in the entire painting.
They are the figures lighting the scene. That’s a message in itself.

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