
Infant Jesus, Refugee - Joy
Cowley
The angel of the Lord appeared
to Joseph in a dream and said, “Get up,
take the child and his mother with you, and
escape into Egypt, and stay there until I tell
you”.
Neither of them knew how he could sleep through
the bombing. Every time the house shook, plaster
cracked and fell from the ceiling like fine
snow, yet still his breathing was deep and
even. Mary held him in her arms, the edge of
her shawl raised to protect his face, but she
could do nothing about the noise. It filled
the night with no space between the explosions,
the sirens, the voices that seemed to float
bodiless in the chaos.
The entire city was on fire.
“ They told us the planes wouldn’t come
this far,” she said.
Joseph didn’t reply. He crouched beside her,
arms around his knees, the reflection of the lantern
blurring in his eyes. He was thinking of his parents,
his brother, sister-in-law, their children, the youngest
only six months older than Jesus and not yet crawling.
The family home next to the bus station had been
one of the first hit.
“ They lied!” Mary drew the baby against
her. He stirred and stretched like a cat but didn’t
wake up. “They lied to us about everything!” Her
words were lost in another explosion, this one so close
that the pressure hurt their ears. A picture fell,
sending shards of glass across the floor, and one of
the shutters came loose from the window. The room filled
with a dull orange light.
Joseph looked at her. “We must leave.”
“ No!” She shook her head as she rocked
the baby. “The curfew, Joseph. They’ll
shoot us. They will kill him!”
“ We’ll die if we stay here.”
“ There’s nowhere else to go!”
Slowly, he slid up the wall until he was level with
the window. “The garage hasn’t been hit,” he
said. “One of the bikes is fuelled and ready
to go. We can get across the border to my cousin’s
place.”
“ They have troops at the border.”
“ Yes, but I know another way. It won’t
be comfortable.” He slid down again, so close
she could feel his breath on her face. “The machine
is old, rigid suspension. But it’ll get us over
the hills where there are no troops, no checkpoints.
God will protect us.”
She took a deep, stuttering breath. “God is
great,” she said, but it sounded like a question.
“God is great! Praised be his name!” Joseph
said firmly. “Wrap him warmly. Coats and blankets.
When we get away from this furnace, the night will
be freezing.” He helped her to her feet.
“ You know, my cousin and her husband are very
important people. They export carpets all over the
world. They have contacts in the West. Pray they can
find us a new country that has never known war.”
Mary sighed. Her husband talked like a teacher when
he wanted to convince her of something, but she had
doubt in her heart. She lifted Jesus in the crook
of her arm and kissed the top of his head. “I
am afraid for him, Joseph”, she said.
“ We’ll find a land where he can fulfil
what has been written for him,” Joseph replied. “He
will never have to...”
The sound of a rocket ended his speech. They froze
as it went overhead, then, as they pressed themselves
against the wall, they heard the explosion, this
time further away. Joseph picked up the keys to his
Motor Cycle Sales and Service Shop, and went to the
door.
“ Stay here,” he said. “I’ll
bring the bike around the back.”
“ Be – be careful!”
As he opened the door, orange smoke spiralled into
the room. He pulled his shirt up over his mouth and
nose, and closed the door behind him, but not before
Jesus woke up, coughing and fretful.
Mary sat on the floor below the smoke, settled the
baby at her breast and sang to him as he drank away
the burnt taste of war. It was a song she made up
about a child of God growing up in a free land.
Joseph kept calling it paradise. The refuge house
was at the edge of the city and from the back door
they could see fields of long grass with black and
white cows and willows along the bank of a small
stream. The rainfall was still a source of wonder
to them. So much water to make everything green!
Here, people actually complained when the clouds
dropped their gift!
“ A paradise of beautiful empty land!” Joseph
said. “We will have our own house and a garden.
I will start another repair shop, and he will go to
school. This is his chosen kingdom.” He held
out his hands to Jesus, who laughed and took a few
unsteady steps towards him, before sitting plumply
on the rug. |
Mary folded the
laundry. Many things here were strange. She
did not understand the language, nor had she
got accustomed to the food. The shops were
like treasure chests, so much of everything
with labels she couldn’t read. The other
women in the refuge went with her, helping
her to choose and to count her money. It would
take a year, they said, for her to get used
to this country.
It had taken Mary almost a month to get used to the
way everything in the house worked. Press a switch
and a light went on. Turn a knob and food cooked. There
was a hair dryer in the bathroom, a toilet that flushed
every time, a vacuum cleaner, television, washing and
drying machines. The woman Greta who managed the refuge,
had a car. She had taken them to a beach of white sand
where Mary had gathered shells and Joseph had sat at
the edge of the sea with God’s child in his lap.
Jesus had laughed and clapped his hands every time
a wave broke over his feet.
Yes, this place was truly paradise.
A man came to the refuge to offer Joseph a night job
in a fast food place. Joseph took it to earn a little
money while they were waiting for their papers to come
through. He cleared tables, swept floors, took out
the garbage and came home to bed as his wife and son
were waking. It was only for a while, he said. When
they got their papers, he would find a job servicing
motor cycles.
One morning, he did not come home from work. One of
the other refugees who could speak English, went to
the fast food place and spoke to the manager. The night
before, two men had taken Joseph away in their car.
What men? No one knew.
Greta, the refuge manager, was away that morning, but
she came in the afternoon to comfort a distraught Mary. “It’s
the Department of Immigration. They have some questions
they want to ask your husband.”
“ Has he been arrested?”
Greta smiled. “No, no, nothing like that. They’ll
visit you this evening to explain. I’ll be here
to translate what they say.”
“ Please. Is it because he is working?” Mary
tugged at Greta’s sleeve. “I told him to
wait until the papers were finished.”
“ I’m sure there is nothing to worry about,” Greta
said.
The two men who came that evening were pleasant. The
younger one picked up Jesus and spoke to him, and they
both shook hands with Mary, but their smiles did not
go above their mouths. They inspected the family’s
room and wanted to know what possessions Joseph had
brought with him.
“ They are asking,” said Greta, “if
your husband has anything stored at someone else’s
house. Papers, letters, legal documents.”
“ No, nothing.” Mary picked up Jesus and
held him close. “What are they looking for? I
don’t understand this. When is Joseph coming
home?”
The men had pulled the mattress off the bed and were
now examining the pillows. Greta spoke many words to
them and the older man replied, shaking his forefinger
in the air.
Greta took Mary’s arm. “They say there
has been a security problem. You had forged passports.”
“ What? It was Joseph’s cousin...” Mary
stopped. But of course. Where would he have got valid
passports? “We left in the night,” she
explained. “The three of us. We escaped only
with our lives.”
Greta turned back to the men who had finished searching
the room. The older one kicked the end of the bed for
no reason and folded his arms. He spoke to Greta who
looked quickly at Mary.
“ What is it?” Mary hugged Jesus to her. “What
is he saying?”
“ He keeps saying it is a security issue,” said
Greta.
“ What security? My husband is a good man. He
works hard. Greta, I need to know where he is!”
“ You will see him tomorrow.” Greta glanced
at the men. “They are sorry to be so strict.
They are just doing their job, they say. These days
there is a much pressure on their department. It is
the threat of terrorism, you understand. Men in parliament
are saying there are too many refugees in this country.”
Mary stepped back. “Too many? How can it be?
The land is so empty of people.”
“ I’m sorry,” said Greta. “I’m
telling you what they said.”
“ They won’t make us go back.” She
stared at Greta. “Will they?”
Greta didn’t answer.
“ We can’t go back there!” Mary cried. “There
is nothing for us but death. No future for our son.
Please, will you tell them that?”
“ I have done so,” Greta replied.
“ Did they understand?”
Greta hesitated. “They told me it is what all
illegal immigrants say.”
Mary sat down on the sofa. Jesus wriggled from her
arms to the floor and crawled to the tangled bedding.
Laughing, he put his head under the duvet and out again.
He was playing a game. She smiled at him, although
she was shaking right through to her heart. Be calm,
she told herself. Joseph will be home in the morning
and he will know what to do. He will sort out the problems.
God has not brought us all this way for nothing.
She tried not to look at the men who were still talking
to Greta. God is great, she said to herself. Holy is
his name, and his mercy reaches from age to age for
those who fear him.
Jesus pulled the duvet over his head, peeped out at
her and laughed.
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