Calgary Herald

A memoir full of magic

- ROSA BOSHIER

Ingrid Rojas Contreras calls her new book, The Man Who Could Move Clouds, “a memoir of the ghostly.” It tells the story of her grandfathe­r Rafael Contreras Alfonso, or Nono, a Colombian curandero, or healer, who had magical gifts that he passed down to Rojas Contreras and her mother. Nono could speak to the dead and heal the sick. Rojas Contreras's mother, Sojaila, can see into the future and be in two places at once. Using symbols, family stories and national history, Rojas Contreras threads other characters in and out of a narrative that focuses primarily on the separate bouts of amnesia that led her and her mother to acquire Nono's spiritual gifts, and their journey, years later, to exhume his body and properly lay him to rest.

Rojas Contreras temporaril­y lost her memory after a 2007 bike accident in Chicago, and Sojaila lost her memory in Cúcuta, Colombia, at age eight when she fell down a well. For both, the experience was a portal into the magical. Sojaila, for example, discovers that she can communicat­e with spirits as her father could. For Rojas Contreras, losing her memory also means relearning the rich history and ancestral practices that her mother had forbidden her to reveal.

Rojas Contreras's family members hid their practice of Indigenous spirituali­ty and healing to avoid persecutio­n.

Yet, after memory loss, Rojas Contreras grows less fearful of the hold that colonial oppression has on her cultural history; she wants to share the family stories. Her mother at first refuses to give her daughter her blessing to write their personal history. But after Sojaila and her sister have dreams in which Nono entreats them to help him pass onto the afterlife, she and Rojas Contreras travel to Colombia to exhume Nono's remains and collect the family histories.

The accounts in The Man Who Could Move Clouds come directly from the mouths of those who saw Sojaila appear in two places at once or witnessed Nono moving clouds.

The book also speaks to the near-constant violence in Colombia and the national amnesia that has accompanie­d it. Beyond a family history, The Man Who Could Move Clouds is about the ways in which this violence can take root in the body. In the early 1990s, Rojas Contreras and her sister Ximena were nearly kidnapped by guerrillas, prompting her family to leave Colombia in search of safety.

In recalling the psychologi­cal toll of living under constant threat, and her family's subsequent migrations throughout South America, Rojas Contreras writes, “I saw that crossing a border, starting anew, was the sorcery through which we tried to forget what had happened. But where the mind forgets, the body remembers. The past returns, especially when it is suppressed, like a live wire.”

Much to Sojaila's confusion, her daughters carry childhood trauma into adulthood. Although ostensibly out of harm's way, Rojas Contreras shoulders survivor's guilt and acute anxiety, and her sister Ximena struggles with a life-threatenin­g eating disorder.

 ?? ?? The Man Who Could Move Clouds Ingrid Rojas Contreras
Doubleday
The Man Who Could Move Clouds Ingrid Rojas Contreras Doubleday

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