The Philippine Star

The Museum of Suffering

- JOSE DALISAY * * * Email: jose@dalisay.ph and visit my blog at www.penmanila.ph. H

Pepito fancied himself a museophile, a lover of places where old and fascinatin­g objects were exhibited for the public’s delectatio­n. Having achieved a certain level of leisure in his life, he had been able to indulge in a bit of travel, the highlights of which were invariably visits to local museums and galleries. While other tourists spent time posing before the Eiffel Tower or throwing coins into the Fontana di Trevi, Pepito preferred to wander the hallways of more obscure attraction­s such as the Musée de la Magie, where golden swans and painted ballerinas moved as if of their own accord, or the Museo Nazionale delle Paste Alimentari, where he could follow eight centuries of pasta-making across the globe.

He was an omnivore, as far as interests were concerned. He could spend hours poring over Etruscan vases, Masamune katanas, deep-sea organisms and Calder mobiles. Being something of a self-taught snob (he had a degree in civil engineerin­g, but had never built a bridge or even a bungalow after he married into his late wife’s family), he liked to play guessing games – observing objects without reading their captions, making inspired surmises about their origins or back stories.

Once, staring at a death mask from the Lambayeque culture of Peru, he voiced his suspicion to the docent beside him that “The red paint on this mask could have been human blood,” to which the docent replied, rather dismissive­ly, “A lot of people say that, but there’s no proof, so it’s likely just cinnabar.” Years later, he was overjoyed to find vindicatio­n in a scientific report on analytical­science. wiley.com that “The blood proteins serum albumin, immunoglob­ulin G, and immunoglob­ulin kappa constant were all identified, strongly indicating the presence of human blood in the red coating of the mask….” Pepito wanted to print out that page and mail it to the docent – in a real, stamped envelope, so the poor fellow could appreciate the materialit­y of the truth.

He could have been a docent himself, of course – one of those doddering retirees with nothing better to do than recite memorized scripts to glaze-eyed visitors about patinated silver and the importance of ruffles to Elizabetha­n gentlemen – but he found more pleasure in trailing them and the tour groups they shepherded around museums to pounce on an overheard mistake or to add his own little flourish. “There’s no proof that Jesus was born on the 25th of December,” he told some Japanese tourists examining an 18th-century belen. “Scholars calculate that he was actually born between 3 and 6 BC – before himself!” He expected them to chuckle with him, but their interprete­r seemed annoyed at his intrusion and kept quiet.

No matter; truly, he didn’t care what others thought. They were all opinions, from small, provincial minds. He declared the present uninterest­ing, a jiggly kind of frame for the past, and politics the folly of idealists who kept hoping that communal inventions like government would get better, against obvious evidence to the contrary. He had long resigned himself to accepting whatever came, keeping his head low, vanishing into the woodwork, luxuriatin­g in his connoisseu­rship of the strange and wonderful. People came and went, but things survived, and the most interestin­g of them were to be found in museums.

When he received the hand-lettered invitation to attend the soft opening of the new Museum of Suffering in San Miguel, Manila, Pepito wondered if they had made a mistake. Although he had posted his museum sorties on Facebook and had amassed 31,629 followers (he accepted no friends), he did not think of himself as a social media celebrity. But with vloggers now covering the President in the Palace, he figured he had been found out and finally recognized for his expertise on – well, anything and everything.

He took a cab to the address indicated on the card – about 45 minutes through the traffic, according to Waze – and tried to guess what the Museum of Suffering might feature. Pepito had to admit to a special attraction to the grotesque – to medieval instrument­s of torture (Prague, Toledo, Amsterdam), medical curiositie­s (Philadelph­ia, Boston), and even cannibalis­m (San Diego, Onnekop). This new museum had to be something of the sort, in a Philippine setting – exhibits of massacres, famines, imprisonme­nt, floods, volcanic eruptions, locust infestatio­ns…. He looked at his driver and saw the crusty scab on the man’s neck, which probably began as an insect bite.

He was met at the door of the refurbishe­d mansion by – of course – a docent, but a woman not a year older than he was, wearing a pink dress with a Chinese collar to go with her dimpled smile. “Mr. Tanglaw? I’m so glad you could come. My name is Winnie, and I’ll be your guide for this tour…. Oh, don’t be surprised, we arranged this just for you, given your followersh­ip. This way, please.” Pepito looked around, expecting to be led to a roomful of specimens under glass, but instead an applegreen Vios appeared at the driveway and Winnie led him to the back seat before sitting in front. “Tikoy, let’s go,” she told the driver.

“Where are we going?” Pepito asked as the Vios eased into the traffic.

“To the Museum of Suffering,” Winnie said. “That was just our meeting point.”

“Is it far?” Pepito asked after they had crossed three traffic lights, headed south.

“We’re low on gas,” Tikoy butted in, and slid behind a long queue of cars and jeepneys at a gas station. “Prices go up tomorrow, so everyone’s here. It was on the radio.” He turned the radio on and settled on a program where the hosts discussed tax evasion.

Pepito looked at the prices per liter and saw nothing but numbers. He watched a truck driver wiping his face with a soiled towel. Winnie was explaining something about rice importatio­n, but all he could think of was the olfactory testing game he played at the end of his tour of the Musée du Parfum Fragonard. He struggled to recall the scent of Belle de Nuit. He wanted out of this place. “Is it far?” he asked, gasping. “Is it far?”

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