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JOHN THE BEAR
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(Mexican folk story from the Eastern Sierra Madre)
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One day, when we were at Don
Evaristo’s ranch, we all rode up to the hills on horseback to look for
some missing cattle. We spent a whole night in the woods. It was the
perfect place to listen to stories, sitting under a starlit sky, eating
wild rabbit, roasted slowly over our campfire...
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Suddenly, we heard a strange noise. Emily and I immediately reacted and jumped to our feet, but Don
Evaristo and the cowboys didn’t seem to pay any attention to the
sounds. “I guess it’s a bear,” one of the cowboys commented, quite
calmly.
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“Yes, it’s a bear,” Don Evaristo replied, “and it’s a pretty big one.”
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Emily and I felt really nervous. We have heard hundreds of terrifying stories about dangerous bears and innocent tourists. But Don
Evaristo calmed us down, saying the bear would never come near the
fire. Sure enough, almost immediately we heard the bear going off into
the forest, probably more afraid than we were! Our host was thoughtful
for a moment. Then his eyes shone as he remembered a new tale to tell.
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“Ah, thank you for reminding me, Brother Bear,” he laughed. “It is time to tell the tale of John the Bear, or Juan Oso.
It’s one of the most common tales from the Mexican mountains, and it
seems that it came to these lands with the Spanish conquest, for the
same story is also told in Spain and other parts of Europe. Homero Adame's legends.
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“Not
long ago, there was a rumor that a very big bear was wandering around
near a small country town by the foothills somewhere in the State of
Nuevo Leon. Very few people saw it. Those who did thought it was very
strange, because it was not a time of famine, the rains had been good,
and there was plenty of food for all the wild animals up in the
mountains. ‘What is the bear doing around here?’ they wondered. Of
course, they were a little scared at first. But as the days went by, and
the bear showed no form of aggression, they gradually lost interest in
it, and went about their business as usual.
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“One
afternoon, however, a rumor that a young girl was missing immediately
created a state of alert. ‘Who has kidnapped the girl?’ ‘Where have they
taken her?’ ‘Has anyone asked for any money?’ Nobody could give an
answer. Finally, the girl’s little brothers, crying desperately, managed
to explain: ‘A big bear came and took our sister off to the mountains!’
They cried. Someone saw her going down to the river to do the washing.
The boys saw the bear. Later on, when the men searched along the river
bank, sure enough, they found the double footprints of a bear and a
girl, and a solitary basket full of dirty clothes, still waiting for
someone to wash them... The children were telling the truth, it seemed.
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“An
angry crowd of people noisily followed the footprints well into the
mountains, but they found nothing. Not a trace! The trails became hard
to follow, and after a couple of river crossings, they finally lost
track of the footprints completely. Homero Adame's legends.
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“Time
passed, and after about three years, the sad event became just a vague
memory for most of the village. Just imagine everyone’s surprise when
one afternoon, a pretty, young woman appeared in town with a baby in her
arms. Of course, it was the same girl, a little older and perhaps
wiser, too. The neighbors hurried round to hear her story. She said the
great bear captured her and took her to his cave, far off in the
mountains. He took very good care of her and fed her well. Although he
was very kind to her, she was always afraid of him. What she really
hated, was being his prisoner, a helpless captive in the dark, smoky
cave. Early in the mornings, the bear used to go out hunting, but
whenever he left, he always closed the cave entrance with a very large,
heavy rock. There was no escape.
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“A
few months later, the bear and the girl had a healthy baby boy. The
girl loved the baby more each day. But then, so did the bear. One fine
day, when the bear went off to hunt, for some reason he forgot to block
the entrance to the cave. Maybe he trusted his young ‘wife’ at last.
Nevertheless, she seized the opportunity at once and escaped back to her
town, taking her darling little baby with her, of course.
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“It
seemed like a real happy ending. The big bear was never seen in the
area again, though some hunters said they often heard a bear crying
alone in the mountains at night. The baby grew tall and strong, though a
little more hairy than the other village boys. No one knows why, but
one day, many years later, when he was a man, Juan Oso disappeared.
People say he decided to go back to his real home, high up in the
mountains. But nobody can tell if he ever found his loving father — the
great bear — still crying for his wife and son in his dark and smoky
cave... Folk tale found in Homero Adame's blog.
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Written by Homero Adame and translated by Pat Grounds. Originally published in the English textbook Orbit 3. By Homero Adame, Pat Grounds and Carol Lethaby. Ediciones Castillo, S.A. de C.V. Monterrey, Mexico. 2000. Pp. 67-68.
The drawing was done by Jennifer Hennen
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