viernes, 20 de febrero de 2026

Beautiful Crouching Gazelle

El País, 21 de marzo 2026

     Today, on my walk through the Dehesa del Generalife, on this beautiful morning of the spring equinox—when the Earth, on its annual astral journey around the Sun, achieves that miracle of equal duration for day and night—my steps happened upon two beautiful flocks. Another miracle!

One of ochre, plump, and happy Lojeña sheep with patient gazes; accompanied by their shepherd and his burly, clumsy Saint Bernard, they graze on the tender blades of abundant grass—a prodigy of diversity here—born from the embrace of the rains of this atypical and stormy winter. The other flock, equally beautiful in this overflowing natural landscape but more diverse, is formed by a large group of adolescent girls, some with East Asian features. Happy and leaping, guided by their selfless teachers, they greet me with smiles as our paths cross. They herald the spring, the return of Proserpina after her cruel winter abduction!

What beautiful animals, what a bucolic landscape, what clean harmony. And how far human wickedness seems from this here and now.

Upon descending to the city, I encounter a new consonance, this one more conspicuous, more foul and banal. I discover it in today’s press: Abascal visits Netanyahu, who claims to consider this specimen of "Iberian male" and his European allies as "brothers-in-arms." (A Nazi and a Jew conversing amicably. How far we have come!, I think to my dark inner self).

How different that blessed corner of the world, there among the fertile olive trees, from the gray battlefields in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, devastated by the greed of pitiless hearts. Yet the tentacles of those wars, whether near or far, begin and end right here next to us: last night in the historic center of Granada, at Plaza de Martínez Contreras, an elderly woman took shelter from the fine rain under the eaves of a roof, huddled on an old mattress. Beside her, a young man lay on another, clutching a ragtag pile of dirty blankets. A rickety wheelchair waited in silence for the night to end. As I passed, the old woman greeted me with a timid "good night," while lowering her somber gaze toward her inert hands. Bewildered, I continue to wonder what to do.

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