THE ROJÃO
When bedding down on the straw for the night, it is not uncommon for the gentle preamble before sleep takes hold to be punctuated by a loud noise from outside in the street. This is normally due to the detonation of the rojão, a loud and unentertaining cousin of what we westerners would describe as a firework. Those responsible are normally adolescents with undoubtedly glittering academic careers ahead of them, though on occasion it is, in fact, the settling of a mild disagreement between drug dealers through the employment of firearms.
Even the dedicated curmudgeon wouldn’t begrudge the odd firework display to celebrate important events. I particularly remember watching the enchanting spectacle of the Millennium Eve fireworks from Southwark Bridge in London, my delight only slightly overshadowed by the growing certainty that I was about to fall over amid the swirling crowds and be trampled to death, never to discover if my computer had crashed due to that Y2K business or not. Fireworks are symbols of joy, of celebration, and on Bonfire Night, are the perfect accompaniment to the burning of an effigy of a bloke who maybe, in hindsight, had an idea worth considering.
One Bonfire Night in the mid-eighties was dubbed the Merley Riots, when one school companion had the crafty idea of launching rockets through a piece of down pipe from some guttering that his father had recently renovated, creating, in effect, a rudimentary bazooka/panzerfaust. Keen to keep up in this miniature arms race, other teens made similar weaponry and there followed a night of running battles around the housing estate, terrified residents watching scenes through their net curtains reminiscent of the Battle of Kursk. Dorset Police sent squad cars and even a specially-equipped Land Rover to quell the disturbances, eventually managing to detain one youth, who turned out to be the one youth out that night who wasn’t involved in the perilous high jinks. It was a sobering glimpse of the potential challenges involved in installing anarchy in the
The rojão, on the other hand, is simply annoying, both in function and frequency of use. If their football team scores, fans rush out into the garden to make a couple of celebratory banging noises. If any team scores against a team they don’t like, they rush out into the garden to make a couple of celebratory banging noises. It wouldn’t be so tiresome if the rojão had some style to it, but the result of its employment is similar to the small arms fire that greets Afghan weddings – a few puffs of smoke and a cowering neighbourhood full of hysterical, woofing/yapping dogs.
Whilst I’m no expert, there seem to be two basic types of rojão. The first is one that just makes an almighty bang, and is good for mining. The other, which I have unofficially dubbed the Warlord, is similar to a burst of sub-machinegun fire, followed after a momentary pause by a lobbed grenade. Some say that they are used by drug dealers to indicate to their clientele that the latest delivery has arrived, but I cannot confirm the accuracy of this information.
The day after I arrived in
It was hardly the welcome to
6 Comments:
I sympathise with you about the crap fireworks, MC! I don't usually have a rant and, hey, nobody enjoys a good party more than me (except maybe people who don't have jobs to go to in the morning and young people), but random explosions should only be permissible during acts of terrorism, and probably not even then.
Ukrainians have taken to devaluing the firework celebration in a big way, too. Our house out there is near a popular lake surrounded by watering holes, porkeries etc, and hardly a summer night passes without major pyrotechnics to mark the purchase of a graduation certificate by some minigarch's chubby BMW-adorned son. Ouer daughter, who was only a few months old, would sleep through it all.
Luckily I'm a heavy sleeper too, and once I'm under they bother me not. I recently dribbled my way peacefully through a spectacular industrial accident involving the explosion of an entire paint factory not 500m from our cave. It was bedlam, apparently.
Wow. Funnily enough, I had a parallel experience in 2005: I was staying at the family nest in Hemel Hempstead when the Buncefield Oil Depot exploded*. I woke up, thought it was probably the nuclear armageddon that I'd always expected in my lifetime, but realised that I still felt a bit tired and so went back to sleep. I discovered a disturbing truth about myself that day.
*Biggest fire in Europe since World War II
If it were the big one, there'd be little you could do anyway, so I think you were right to snooze on.
You're probably right, MC. But I'd hoped that the idea, even if wholly futile, of going to see whether the rest of the family were alright might have occured to me. But it didn't. Is this Amor Fati? Boyo's daughter can probably explain!
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