No matter where you go, the past goes with you Read the full description.
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Piece Description
No matter where you go, the past goes with you... In Florez, Guatemala, I come across my mother, even though she's been dead over 10yrs. Aired NPR: All Things Considered, May 6, 2008 http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=90231948 Jake Warga's mother died more than 10 years ago, but he found her on the streets of Guatemala and in a homeless German woman.
Broadcast History
Aired NPR: All Things Considered, May 6, 2008
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=90231948







James Reiss
Posted on May 17, 2008 at 05:57 AM | Permalink
Review of Postcard from Guatemala: No matter where you go...
Jake Warga is a prolific freelance photographer/journalist-cum-wandering minstrel whose stories have taken him to such far-flung places as Israel, South Africa and Australia. He certainly doesn't need my plaudits. His piece under review here was aired on "All Things Considered" last week. His other stories have regularly been broadcast on various NPR and PRI shows.
I was blown away by "Postcard from Guatemala"'s humility and generosity of spirit. After describing his mother, dead for a decade, he comes upon a homeless German widow while he's treading the backwaters of Guatemala. With his mic carefully attuned to the woman's mix of English and German-accented Spanish, Warga's portrait of the lady is neither sentimental nor condescending. Except for his written summary statement, "No matter where you go, the past goes with you," his script barely talks about deja vu, that a disheveled, skin-and-bones 55-year-old street person named Olga thousands of miles from home can bring back the image of his American mom wasted away from a terminal illness, Warga subtly conveys what many listeners might call his "message."
With gentle probing questions that expose his interviewee as a liar -- she says she doesn't smoke, then lights a cigarette; she says she doesn't drink, yet it's clear she's a tippler -- Warga gives us a nuanced character whom we care about.
This cutaway was aired the Tuesday after Mother's Day. It's obviously more than a holiday special.
I'd say Warga's mini-docudrama resembles a kind of one-act verse play, something that could have been co-written by Malcolm Lowry and Bertolt Brecht. It's a first-class act with three-hundred-and-sixty-degree appeal.
Listen up, PDs!