kindness of strangers

stitch grandeur

stitch grandeur
Written by Cathoel Jorss,

In Berlin people do all kinds of things out loud in public. You can buy drugs, smoke pot in the street and drink beers, you can walk with your dog into restaurants and boutiques. You can dance on street corners. One of the blisses of living here is that everyone is stranger and no one’s a stranger: my lifelong habit of conversing with passersby as though we were resuming a discussion only briefly interrupted is welcomed and usual, it’s easier, fine.

I had never seen anyone embroidering on the underground. Sleeping, yes, fighting, putting on make up; drunk men banging in unison their fists on the roof of the carriage on their way home victorious from some football game – those were English men, ‘educated hooligans’ – and people jump on and sing, for money, or make speeches, and sell things, or just beg: and the man on the U1 who shows mutely his malformed and tiny index finger that pokes the air like a children’s puppet, the more whole hand holding a grimy crumpled cup for coins. A week ago there was a can of green peas, with a spoon standing in it, empty and neatly tucked under the corner of the seat were someone, presumably, had been eating them from the tin. To say it took courage to pull out my embroidery seems ludicrous. But so it felt.

It is an egg I drew freehand, a world egg, and have been filling with gradual slow stitches ever since. The egg shape is crossed with a bulging peace sign. I started it to sew for my suitcase, a new suitcase, khaki swirling, for my first trip to New York in 2011. The suitcase was a present, its army camouflage motif bothered me. “I want to sign that there can be peace, there can be love, that I am not part of the army,” I said, stitching next to the Brooklyn nightclub singer who at the request of our mutual friend was putting me up. We had bonded. We’d spent long hours sitting side by side on her bed, talking about our lives. “But,” she said, “you are also a warrior.” And hugging me, on her stoop opposite “the park” (an all-concrete basketball court) in the snow. She was smoking, and her voice was deep and compelling and rough.

I made that trip, and another, longer trip, with the peace egg still missing from my luggage. Now in Berlin I have decided it is time to get it done. So on the underground I pull it out. With trepidation but not sure why. The first thing that happens is a good-looking, somewhat raddled man whose tangle of hair attracts me gets on and sits opposite. We are the only two people in the carriage. Noticing my stitching he says, terrifyingly, “This city belongs to us True Germans.” Nods many times. I try to smile, neutrally. His arm goes up in a blessedly hybrid but tyrannical salute. “We belong here. All of those foreigners need to just get out. They should go.” I say something, noncommittal and small, afraid of what violence I might bring on myself if my accent or choice of words gives me away. Then nodding also I get up and slide from the carriage, clutching the fold of canvas and my hidden needle.

Real Germans sew in public. I felt I had identified myself with a certain kind of wholesomeness, or primness. The screaming mess at the back of my tapestry, with its gouts of wool and complex knotting clots of colour hardening the cloth, embarrassed me. It was so clear to anyone looking on – which they did – that I was a rank beginner. Perhaps that’s why the man in his seventies who had been strap-hanging nearby finally swung his upper body over me and confided, in a shy, sweet voice, We used to learn embroidery in primary school. We made cross-stitch. (Modestly, with a soft pride): I was really good at it.

As she got off at Wittenbergplatz a lady clutching her hands before her chest paused to say, It’s hard, isn’t it, keeping the tension even. Yes, I said, relieved that she had articulated this issue I had only half-noticed myself noticing. You need an embroidery hoop, she said. Oh! I said. I really do. Thank you for mentioning it. Then I carried the feel of her all the way home. There is something innate, I think, in us – in me – which responds to the wisdom of an older woman, however pragmatic and small, however tentative, because it is what we are missing wherever else we look. Sneering at age, excluding the oldest cultures, enslaved to the young and the new; literary festivals falling over themselves to include schoolkids’ first raps at the expense of experienced writer elders; orchestras staging dismal photo shoots in which fiddle-clutching violinists leap uncomfortably. The trouble with hip is, it never lasts. I long for the inner knowing, the voice of experience, the hip replacement: the lasting.

17 comments on “stitch grandeur

  1. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Dear True German, this is marvellous. I would love to borrow your hoop, thank you very much. Also… now you put it that way, it occurs to me ’embroidering on the underground’ is maybe another way to describe the rebellion & then the slow gentrification that’s Our Berlin.

  2. Cathoel Jorss says:

    So true, Bronwen, and this is a wonderful way of looking at the shared space. I love its randomness & its inadvertant communities, forever falling together and then dissolving. Your comments put me in mind of what Hugh Mackay said about multiculturalism (indeed, I think, traffic, urban life, all of human modernity): “a giant work of art on which we are all engaged.”

  3. Cathoel Jorss says:

    It does seem. When I think how relatively cushioned my own experience of it inevitably is… it’s mind-blowing.

  4. ksmum says:

    Lovely way to see the dreaded hip replacement.

  5. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Thank you, Koruna.

  6. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Yes; tasks, or chores. Depending perhaps on the receptivity of the sharees.

    It’s true, Cynthia, I hadn’t thought of that. But I rather think this guy was more speaking of moneyed arrivals by air: pushing the rents up and writing on their Macbooks in coffee shops. Moi, pour example.

  7. Cathoel Jorss says:

    :) thx Eliane

  8. James says:

    Hip replacement :-D . . . hoopsters with miles and miles of yarns.

  9. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Such hoopocracy, eh!

  10. Russell Obst says:

    Why do those uncomfortable conversations come when you don’t have the comfort and protection of a crowd, a crowdlet, or anyone?

  11. Cathoel Jorss says:

    I wondered that too. He was frightening. I guess some bullies like to bully when there are no witnesses; but in our case, the fellow mistook me for a good German. He thought I would agree with him & defend the fatherland. I worried back and forth between mistrusting my accent (You’re One of Them!) and simply carrying it off… kind of.

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