13 Kasım 2017 Pazartesi

Making Peace with Raspberries on Hedgebrook Farm & Redefining the Radical




January 21, 2017, Berkeley: I am out on the streets with hundreds of conscientious citizens of all skin colors and background, mostly women. It is a coldish bright day. I am awkward with marches but the number of strollers and friendly officers eased my initial intimidation. Coming from Istanbul, peace and human rights’ marches make me apprehensive. We’ve got a lot in our hands today, not just the women’s rights. Simple math indicates that the U.S. President can cause more damage on this planet and its people than the Turkish one. We are well aware of the intersectionalities so we also march for immigration and healthcare reform, environmentalism, LGBTQ rights, racial equality, and freedom of religion. It is peaceful and powerful. Let the forever-cynics who chose not to be with us today make grumpy faces and criticize, it’s in their nature, don’t get too mad unless they voted for Mr. T. I am glad to be part of the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. Raspberry-colored pussy hats and tops mark the day, reminding us the empowerment in humor. What an excellent color choice to brighten the gloomy White House and days of January!
***
August 27, 2017, San Francisco: I don’t expect anything out of ordinary but remain a staunch believer of miracles in my daily life after surviving the second biggest earthquake ever recorded (7,6) in Turkish history in August 1999. And how many times did I escape terror attacks in the past two years as a frequent flier and public transportation user before moving to California? Every day, I open my eyes, check my body and five senses in awe, and thank God that I am back to life after the small death called sleep. This blissful state usually ends with connecting to the Internet and/or turning on the phone. However, this morning, my awe lingers with the following email:
Dear Ozlem:
The IPJ has established a new residency series with Hedgebrook, in which Peacemakers and/or Immigrant Writers would have the opportunity to spend one week on Whidbey Island, to reflect and write about their work, and simply have some time away from their hectic lives. We are extending an exclusive invitation to you as part of our Women PeaceMakers network. Through this all-expenses-paid experience, you will have your own personal living space and the days will be largely up to your own design, with the exception of communal evening meals so that you have time and space to work on your own writing. This is a unique opportunity from Hedgebrook, as typically a writing residency there involves a very competitive application process. Please let me know if this is something you would be interested in. I'm really excited to extend this invitation and hope you can accept the opportunity for this inaugural year of our partnership with Hedgebrook. 

Emiko Noma | Senior Editor and Writer
Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice
University of San Diego

I read the email twice to make sure that the dates on the screen is right. I need to move out on October 10th from where I live in SF. I was already planning to travel to British Columbia afterward, have some campus meetings, and explore the area before flying to Athens to continue my work with displaced Syrians in November. I accept the offer.
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Raspberry is a miraculous source for toning the muscles of the pelvic region, including the uterus itself. It helps lessen or eliminate menstrual cramps and makes for an easier and faster birth. Its leaves contain vitamins C, E, A, B complex and minerals like magnesium, potassium, phosphorus, manganese, selenium and easily assimilated calcium and iron. In short, raspberry leaf is the best base available for prenatal and postpartum teas.
***
October 2017: One of the definitions of Hedgebrook’s notion of “radical hospitality” is “the complete permission to receive and to write, unapologetically” (Ruth Ozeki); however, I am positive that each participant has her own definition. In my culture, you offer the best possible means that your time and space provide for the guest/guests with whom you are blessed. Blood-relation is not prioritized; in fact, you mobilize your family and friends for better service to the visitor. “God’s guest/Tanrı misafiri” is the term for a perfect stranger signaling that the visitor can be an envoy from God. The first thing I was taught at home was how to make and customize Turkish coffee for each guest (its thickness, amount of sugar, and frothiness). I wasn’t allowed to drink coffee at the age of five, but made sure to ask anyone who came to our house. After hearing it a million times, I was convinced that “a cup of coffee leads to forty years of friendship and memories,” as the proverb goes. The statement didn’t sound all that radical until I began traveling abroad.
With its place on the map and its climate, Hedgebrook differed radically from the whereabouts of the hospitality I have taken for granted, that is, the entire Mediterranean region & the Middle East.  Whidbey Island was green, cool, and rainy, but the welcoming staff of Hedgebrook were the warmest and kindest imaginable. Even the wild blackberries were welcoming, safe to eat and tattooed one’s fingertips creatively. Then, there was the H-Garden; unlatching its gate and helping ourselves with anything was part of our orientation. I opted for the exotic, and thus picked raspberries for the first time in my life. The week also marked my peacemaking with them in this natural habitat; I was able to discard all connotations that I had harbored since January 21, 2017. That they were the most delicious and freshest raspberries helped the reconciliation process! I thus strip the word “radical” from the phrase “radical hospitality” and offer it to the sweet raspberries who were modestly dressed in morning dew and nothing else.
However, here is the problem with Hedgebrook residents. As writers, we make up stuff, embellish every object and living creature with words. We hardly leave anything in its pure form. At least, as the immigrant writers’ group, we try to be careful with colonizing the language. Nevertheless, morning dew as a thin and transparent garment is too provocative for me, especially after reading an article on raspberries dressed up in fancy scientific material. Their thorny leaves are hailed as the best base for prenatal and postpartum teas, and the fruit itself as reducing cramps and serving as a midwife for an easier and faster birth? How can I possibly resist the metaphor of a writer’s giving birth to creative works or the humorous picture in my imagination: The radical hospitality is providing buckets of raspberries so that the self-midwifery taking place in the cottages becomes more widespread among writers, who are pregnant with ideas and images? Be my guest to trace the metaphor further and enjoy word games on hospitality over hospitalization especially if you are an eco-feminist in favor of midwifery.  

P.S: This is only a fragment of my Hedgebrook experience magnified due to a politicized bright colored fruit grown in the H. Garden and served at our communal dinners. Each and every one of you who made this experience possible: Thank You!

Özlem Ezer