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by Izzy
There's a famous quote by Nietzsche: Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster.
What brought this quote to mind was not something about terrorists or torturers, bombs or war, but two stories I happened to read today about everyday things here at home. One is a story about teenage girls in a small town. The other about a prison artist in solitary confinement. Meet Helen Brady:
She is just 14 years old. While many other girls her age are filling the chatmosphere with gabby text messages, Helen is practicing arresting illegal immigrants. (Or, in this case, her friend Courtney.)
And Donny Johnson:
His paintbrush, made from plastic wrap, foil and strands of his own hair, lay on the lower bunk. So did his paints, leached from M&Ms and sitting in little white plastic containers that once held packets of grape jelly. Next to them was a stack of the blank postcards that are his canvases. Helen's story is told in the LA Weekly's Girls Gone Border Patrol. Donny's is described in the New York Times article (via the IHT), M&Ms color a prison artist's solitary life. Both articles are quite lengthy, but well worth reading in full. Both articles have stuck with me all day. They're odd stories.
Another day, and what sounds like another arrest on the Arizona border. Naco is a city where "The Border" is no abstraction. It is the painfully real corrugated-steel barrier -- rusted in spots, barbed in others -- that slices the town neatly in two. One half for the United States, one half for Mexico. In Naco, the border is where illegal immigrants and the Border Patrol come to perform their intricate ballet of catch-and-release.
Last Friday night, more than 500 people jammed into a gallery in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, to assess 25 of Donny Johnson's small, intense works. There was sangria, as well as big bowls of M&Ms. By the end of the evening, six of the postcard paintings had sold, for $500 each. But it's the details that get to me.
For teens on the American side of Naco, the border is a means of security -- and even a potential career opportunity. But below the line, in Naco, Mexico, the border is the subject of hatred. For Mexican teens developing an identity and a sense of their place in the world, it represents a constant slap in the face -- and, in their eyes, the ultimate double standard. It keeps friends and family on opposite sides of the fence from visiting each other, while ensuring that the Mexican half of Naco is forever abloom with border crossers and drug smugglers.
About 3,300 of the state's most dangerous prisoners are held at Pelican Bay, which is among the toughest prisons in the nation. But even here there are varying levels of security. The problem prisoners, like Johnson, are held in the Security Housing Unit, which everyone calls the SHU. I can't shake the thoughts of Helen and Donny, although they couldn't be more different. Donny's a murderer, Helen's a kid, but they're both a part of something bigger. They're connected somehow with something brutal, something monstrous, in the heart of our system. They're symptoms of some madness we indulge. We need to stop fighting monsters. Nietzsche's quote ends with this warning -- And if you gaze long enough into the abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.
I imagine the abyss stares out of Donny's eyes, the eyes of a killer who hasn't touched another human in 17 years. But I imagine a glint of it in Helen's eyes as well, and all the other little girls learning to hunt humans.
Whoever Fights Monsters | 8 comments (8 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Whoever Fights Monsters | 8 comments (8 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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