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Deziree and Me
By Amy Eldon
Deziree was the only constant woman in my brother's
life. Unlike Dan's other women-sexy, exotic and shy-Deziree was
big, obstinate and loud. She was demanding, expensive and prone
to breakdowns. Deziree, Dan's topless Land Rover, was adorned with
treasures Dan collected from around the world. The buffalo skull
perched on the hood distracted policemen who might otherwise notice
the lack of registration on this 22 year old antique with "Fight
the Power" painted on the steering wheel.
As co-pilot, I had to push while Dan pumped
the clutch and Deziree roared into life, then fling myself into
the back. We would soar off, with everything from opera and reggae
to classical music and Zairean rock blasting from the stereo. As
soon as Deziree bounced into any town she was greeted by cheers,
waves and smiles. Dan would leap out and almost dance around town,
stopping in shops to develop photos and flirting with shy waitresses
in street cafes, while he shopped for odds and ends considered strange
enough to be attached to Deziree's frame.
One day I followed Dan through Nairobi. He
was greeted by friends everywhere: a beggar whose legs were grotesquely
swollen with elephantiasis, wide-eyed street children permanently
high on glue, Masai tribesmen wrapped in red togas, and the thick
spicy smell of incense pouring out of shop keeper's dukas. Dan disregarded
external differences and focused only on a person's spirit.
Dan was no saint and as flawed as any human
being. Like me, he was criminally bad at math; he couldn't tell
the difference between a parabola and a tuna fish. He was a slob,
and turned his room into an archaeological dig, layered with dirty
t-shirts, art supplies, snake skins, African artifacts and gray
sheets. Dan referred to his room as his "depot" in order to deflect
my parents' constant protests. He had tempestuous relationships
with crazy women and he teased me, his "little sister," mercilessly.
But he was my hero. When Dan was a college
student in America, he organized a group of 15 students to raise
$17,000 for a rollicking safari across five African countries to
a refugee camp in Malawi. We earned money by selling t-shirts, belts,
bracelets-virtually everything short of our own bodies. With the
proceeds we bought a Land Rover, which we donated to the Save the
Children Fund in Malawi, brought blankets for the children's ward
in a simple bush hospital, and funded the building of two wells
for a refugee village.Not only did we learn from the dignity of
the starving people we met, but we also learned how to manage ourselves-a
group of demanding students from very different backgrounds and
seven countries.
One sticky night in Malawi as we roasted a
can of beans over a makeshift fire, we noticed a group of refugees
arranging skewers of neatly strung pieces of meat over their fire.
"What are you cooking?" I asked one of the young boys who seemed
to be the chef. "Mbewa," he said, and tore off a piece for me. It
tasted like slimy chicken and could have been improved with a dollop
of hollandaise sauce. "Not bad," I smiled. "What does mbewa mean?"
"Rat," replied the chef.
Dan's life was an eternal adventure. By the
age of 22 he had attended four colleges, set up a T-shirt and postcard
business and had seen his photos appear in Time, Newsweek, and other
newspapers and magazines around the world. Dan was one of the first
photojournalists to use powerful images to call attention to the
horror taking place in Somalia. He felt responsible for communicating
truth through his compelling images.
*****
I stopped typing when my friend handed me the
phone. I knew something was terribly wrong from the way she stood
close to me as if waiting for me to fall. My mother's voice echoed
down the line. She sounded weak. "Amy, I have horrible news. Dan
has been killed in Somalia."
I managed to whisper, "It's not true. I don't
believe you." My mother sounded stronger now. "I'm sorry, darling,
I'm so sorry." I fell to the floor wailing, "No, no, not my brother,
not my Dan."
Before his 23rd birthday, on July 12th, 1993,
an angry mob beat and stoned my brother and his three colleagues
to death in Mogadishu. The mere thought of Dan being afraid made
me furious. I could see him falling onto the dusty street, being
beaten and kicked, but I could not see the expression on his face.
Dan never showed fear but exuded a sense of
invincibility and inner power. He was the one who found fears in
other people and helped them to overcome them. His method was to
face fear head-on. I remember Dan coaxing me to be brave as I posed
by a cheetah while he snapped pictures at a safe distance. He confessed
later that he would have never sat so close. But my brother could
convince anyone to do just about anything.
He was like a Pied Piper, using funny hats,
masks and even a pair of stuffed iguana feet, to delight and win
people over. He worked his magic in over 40 countries, including
Romania, Mozambique, Japan, and Ethiopia. I was left alone with
Deziree. Dan was no longer around to take me on adventures.
Now I had to initiate them. I wasn't ready
to drive Deziree without Dan. I floated around letting others make
decisions while I sobbed, raged and searched for answers. "Why Dan?
Why me? When will I see him again? I knew I would never be able
to laugh again without my best friend and brother. No matter how
many people cared about me, I still felt utterly alone.
I wanted to hold onto everything Dan had touched.
When Dan's bag was sent back from Somalia, I sat cradling it for
hours. I rummaged through it and found his toothbrush. I wanted
to keep this dirty, old artifact until I snapped back into reality
and knew Dan would have giggled at my foolishness.
After a while, I stopped grieving for Dan and
started grieving for myself. I had been abandoned by my most avid
supporter and I was beginning to realize that now I was the only
one in control of my destiny. This sudden sense of independence
terrified me. It felt too big. I cursed Dan for leaving me and I
lacked the energy and the drive to move on. I numbly watched myself
go through the motions of daily life. I was often dazed and several
times found myself in the men's bathroom at college without even
noticing how I got there. As I curled up in bed each night, I would
congratulate myself for achieving the impossible-for making it through
another day.
Eventually I tired of hurting, so I decided
to make a new beginning. I took the bus from my college into New
York and walked into an expensive hair salon. I confronted the hairdresser
who stared greedily at my long hair. "Take it all off! I said defiantly.
"What happened?" whispered the hairdresser sympathetically. "It
was a man, wasn't it? "Yes," I said. "He left me."
Practically bald and minus $100, I found I
could laugh again. I shifted my focus from Dan's death to Dan's
life and tried to live as he would have. I took more chances. I
left my college, which suddenly felt claustrophobic. I applied to
Columbia University and Boston University, and knew Dan would have
been proud when I got in. I started having fun again, even treating
myself to large pieces of chocolate cake, justifying my decadence
by thinking, "Dan would have wanted me to!"
I still needed a sign from Dan, something which
could make me want to be alive again. I sat watching birds, waiting
for one to wink and say, "Hey Amy, it's me, Dan." The sign never
came.
But I found Dan's spirit in the world around
me, in the warmth of my friends, and in myself when I began to reach
out to others. I started volunteering at a hospital and gave my
energy to children who were suffering. I felt I could understand
their pain. I also discovered how few things seemed really important
in life. Petty arguments, parking tickets and lousy boyfriends didn't
matter so much to me anymore. I found that honesty and love for
the people around me were more important. I decided that if I were
to die unexpectedly, I would make sure I resolved everything with
those I loved. I didn't want to have any regrets. In time I found
the pain visited less frequently, and when the sorrow washed through
me, it wasn't quite as deep or intense as it used to be.
When I felt happy, it was bliss because I had
known the extremes of sadness. I was reborn through my pain, and
was profoundly aware of how precious life really is. I knew that
my home could burn down and my fingers could be cut off, but after
dealing with Dan's death, I could survive just about anything. My
worst nightmare had become reality and I survived.
Even now, as a whole day passes without my
eyes welling up, I panic. I have to tell myself that I am not betraying
Dan if I don't think about him all the time. I am still afraid that
when I am old enough to have my children on my lap and tell them
tales about their nutty Uncle Dan, I won't be able to visualize
his face or hear his voice as clearly as I do now. I am losing details
and specific memories of my brother, but I will always remember
his essence.
Dan's bright, powerful light will continue
to guide me through milieu until I meet him at the gates of Heaven
and we go off dancing again. Meanwhile, Deziree and I are becoming
good friends. I've bought maps and a compass and have re-painted
the words on the steering wheel to read: "Be the Power."
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