|
|
|
Something unexpected at the easternmost
point of the Americas
Financial Times, November
25, 2006
It was, I guess, with typical laidbackness that Brazil seemed
to have lost the Easternmost Point of the Americas. We were
driving north from Olinda, just inland from the spectacular north-east Brazilian
coast
when we saw the sign and an arrow pointing towards the sea.
Brazil is so solidly Latin American that it's surprising
when you see on a map just how far it shoves its shapely rump out into the
Atlantic Ocean. So far in fact that Rio - distant, exotic, all tangas and
candomble- is sometimes only three hours behind London, while New York -
who are our next-door neighbours, really - is never less than five. So when
we saw the sign, we had to find the point.
We turned right, the road narrowed, downgraded a couple of
notches and took us straight into a farmyard. A chicken clucked but otherwise
the place was deserted. We went back on ourselves, tried another exit (don't
imagine Brazilian trunk roads are anything like the ones at home), came
to a T-junction and took a random left. The road slalomed its way between
sugar-cane fields and the occasional pile of old tyres. But there was no
sign of the point and, when we flagged down a passing motorist, we may as
well have been asking directions to Monte Carlo.
After a few more abortive turns and blank faces, we were
ready to give up when, down the end of a tiny lane, we caught a glimpse
of blue, a wave breaking on sand and the colourful hoarding of a beach bar.
If nothing else, we could get a beer.
"Excuse me," we said to a man hanging around the back door of
the bar. "Do
you know where we can find the Easternmost point of the Americas?"
He looked around, scratched his belly and shook is head.
"Nao."
We looked at the sea, weighed up having a beer with getting
sooner to our next destination, and were wandering back to the car when
his wife came bustling out of the door behind him.
"It's here, it's here," she called, pointing towards the sand. "This
is it." And, turning on her husband, said, not quite sotto voce, "You
idiot. How do you expect tourism to develop if you don't
even know where you are?"
The beach was deserted except for a couple of white plastic
chairs and a mangy black and white dog scratching itself in the early evening
sun, and as we wandered down to the sea we felt a little self-conscious,
unsure what to do next. It's inevitable that these extreme points of continents
are less dramatic than you think they are going to be but we had hoped for
a plaque or something. (It turned out later that there's one at a nearby
lighthouse). But as we looked out over the water, next stop Luanda, we did
feel something: that poignant, heavy melancholy of the traveller contemplating
distance. One of the Brazilians' favourite words is saudade, that bittersweet
longing for home. And at the edges of land, even in these days of long-haul
flights, you always feel it.
Back in the car, we were quieter as we found the road again.
Our destination was Joao Pessoa, just a few kilometres north, and when it
arrived, after the slow meanderings of the coastline, it burst on to our
consciousness like a drag queen at an end-of-peer show. Joao Pessoa is an
exuberant place. Its seafront is a parade of open-air restaurants, brightly
lit bars, joggers, food stalls, groups of kids, families out for a stroll
and grannies shooting the breeze under the palm trees. We were hungry and
we needed somewhere to stay but first we wanted to see Joao Pessoa's strangest
attraction: the Hotel Tambau.
A creation of the 1960s, the Tambau looks exactly like one
of those wheel-shaped space stations from early sci-fi movies. Built entirely
in Soviet grey - which must have been so chic when it opened - its rooms
form a perfect circle around a central hub to which they are connected by
four concrete spokes. The entrance is only marginally more welcoming than
the door to a nuclear bunker - though the staff are cheery enough.
Inside this huge structure are gardens, tennis courts, open-air
restaurants and a children's play area decked out with strange hanging seats
like vertical hammocks. At high tide, part of the Tambau's arc pushes out
into the waves and when it opened, it must have been thrilling to sit in
the observation room as the water splashed over the windows in front of
you. Now, however, nearly 40 years of wind and salt have etched themselves
into the glass and all you see is a murky, distant version of the natural
beauty outside. It feels like being in quarantine, though apparently the
place is very popular with conference goers.
Back in the streets, it was time for food. The dozens of
open-air restaurants along the beach all serve the same kind of thing: fish,
seafood, meat, grilled on huge we-mean-business barbecues, plus fresh salads
and heady caipirinhas.
As we tucked into a typically enormous feast, we noticed
a small boy - ragged, thin, startled - watching us from the pavement. Every
so often a waiter would shoo him away but he soon came back, hovering nervously
on the edge of the action. Rich western tourists that we were, his hunger
threw a harsh light on our indulgence (the Brazilians around us barely gave
him a second look) so we packed up a bag of meat and salad and took it over
to him.
I watched him as he wandered off with his booty - a strangely
adult solemnity about him. For the second time that day, I felt that traveller's
melancholy and wondered if, in his own city, he felt as far from home as
we did. |