Storyteller Reaching Out to Children in Mexico

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Percibald Garcia uses a microphone to read aloud children’s stories amid the high-rise housing complex of Tlatelolco, in Mexico City, Saturday, July 18, 2020.

Percibald Garcia knew that staying at home during the coronavirus lockdown is especially difficult for children. So, the 27-year-old architect decided to read them stories.

Almost every day since the beginning of May, Garcia can be seen in Mexico City with his “wandering microphone.” With it, he broadcasts stories to children who gather at apartment building windows to listen.

While many children today have cellphones or computers, Garcia wants them to hear the human voice. He also wants them to realize they can use, even from a distance, the public plazas that have been an important part of Mexican life for hundreds of years.

“We realized that almost nobody was looking after the way that kids were experiencing this lockdown,” Garcia said recently.

Setting up in one of the green spaces near apartment buildings, he read “The Crazy Opossum,” by David Martín del Campo. It tells the story of a possum who suffers because he is so short. The possum tries to reach the moon to feel taller. Once there, he eats the moon — and then must decide, with other animals, how to bring it back.

Before reading a story, Garcia often plays music by the Mexican composer Francisco Gabilondo Soler, known for his children’s songs.

Sometimes other storytellers perform, as does a puppet troop. And always, children appear at the windows of the apartment building to listen to the show.

“In the last three months, everything has gone online, — work, contacts, shopping,” said Garcia. He added that he thinks of his work as an “act of resistance” against technology moving into every part of human life.

Rogelio Morales listened to the stories from the window of his grandmother’s home. Since March, the 9-year-old has spent much of his time playing video games.

“The only thing I go out for is to walk my dog,” he said. “It’s a little boring. I miss school.”

“It’s nice,” Rogelio said of the storytelling. “If we have something to do, or if we’re very frustrated, we can relax a little.”

Luna Gonzalez came with her mother, Tatiana Vega, to listen to the stories from a safe distance. They both wore face masks.

“I imagine the characters, I imagine what the animals are like,” said Luna. “Sometimes we go out, because I get bored at home.”

Garcia calls his project “De la Casa a la Plaza.” In English, that means “From the house to the plaza.”

“The public plaza has been extremely important in Mexico since the time of our ancestors,” Garcia noted. “It is where people meet, talk, where the life of a neighborhood develops.”

Some children have even asked Garcia to read their own stories. Other people have been invited to read stories too.

“This is an invitation to people to continue using the public plaza,” he said.

It is not only children who listen.

Rogelio’s grandmother, Maria Elena Sevilla, also listened from her window.

“This young man will get a special reward from God, because it is not just children he is entertaining, it is people of my age, too,” she said.

I’m John Russell.

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