The Great Binding Weave
They say that you can know a people by the weavings that they wear. This is
true of the Inka of the Andes, who wear
specific ponchos that speak of their
family lines, the Dagara people of West Africa, the Din?and Pueblo people of
Arizona and, it would seem, most other indigenous peoples throughout the world
as well.
To the trained eye the weavings of tribal peoples speak volumes. With a mere
glance, a seasoned culturalist has
access to all sorts of information, such as
history of migrations, battles fought, the lore
surrounding certain great
ancestors and other special events that no one else may see in the
bindingweave of a garment.
My first experience of this
phenomenon occured in 1996. On this particular
evening I had been to a Celtic cultural
gathering complete with music, dancing
and lots of
heather ale. The evening addressed a variety of topics of
interest such as Celtic mysticism, the Celtic love of nature and focused a
great deal on the importance of the ancestors in Celtic traditions. As a Scot,
I was, of course, in my kilt.
At the conclusion of the ceilidh, I
decided to go visit a friend of mine who
was hospitalized in the
intensive care unit at the
community hospital in
Boulder. He was experiencing a rare medical situation
whereby the bones in
his neck had deteriorated and had actually pinched off some of the nerves from
his brain to the rest of his body. The result was the necessity of an
emergencysurgery to remove the fragments of vertebrae and his
recovery time
would be several days, with the
likelihood that he would not walk again. I
doubted seriously that Phil would even know I was present in the room, yet I
felt the need to check in on him.
Upon my arrival in Phil's room I was surprised to discover that he was
completely conscious and, although slightly groggy from medications, could
communicate clearly with me. The grim prognosis that he would never walk
again had also been overturned, as he had miraculously
sprung from the bed
earlier in the day and began walking himself around with the aid of a walker.
I was astonished.
After a while, more visitors entered the room and I
decided to go on my way. I
took the
elevator down a few floors, stepped out and began walking down the
hall toward the front lobby of the hospital. I noticed an
elderly gentleman
in a wheelchair rolling himself down the hall toward me. Just as we began
passing each other he let out a yell and pointed to my kilt, which I was still
wearing from the activities before.
"Hey! I know that! It's the MacEwen!" he declared with
assurance.
I was surprised that he knew this just from sight. With over four thousand
recorded tartans in the world, the identification of
specific tartans takes
many years of practice.
"How did you know that, sir?" I asked.
"Well, son, the way I knew that is because I'm a Ewing!" he replied.
Like so many other Scottish family names, the name Ewing is an anglicized
version of an older Gaelic name, MacEwen, and is but one of nearly a hundred
variant spellings of this particular clan.
I became very, very excited by his introduction because I had only recently
become aware of the thick bloodlines of my Scots
heritage on both sides of my
family, and here was an older man who really seemed to know what he was
talking about.
Our conversation was jovial and went on and on, with the man began telling me
about how he and his son used to be very active in the Scottish
community many
years before. They had played the bagpipes, went to Scottish
gatherings and
had even been planning a trip to Scotland, . . . . that is, before his son had
been killed in the Vietnam War. With the mentioning of this, Mr. Ewing's
demeanor changed.
As he spoke, the obvious pain the man was living with day in and day out began
to grip me. I knealt down and took his hand into mine. He had no family left
and he had been diagnosed with a
terminal illness that required him to make
frequent stays in the hospital. He reported that his lungs were damaged and
how we had to give up playing the bagpipes years before, and how his life had
also decreased in quality over the last year as he had lost his ability to
walk and had become "tied to a damn chair."
What I had
previously thought would be a quick conversation about my kilt with
an interested stranger gradually transformed to a deep heartfelt time. Mr.
Ewing expressed his desire to get up to Estes Park, Colorado, to attend the
Longs Peak Highland Festival but that he knew he would never lay eyes on the
gathering. He told me how he didn't really have any possessions, and
certainly none that tied him to his Scottish
heritage. I made a mental note
when I heard this, instantly knowing that I would be getting Mr. Ewing a gift.
After a while, it was time for me to go. I stood up, leaned over and we had a
final embrace before my depature.
"It has really been good talking with you, son. You're a good lad" Mr. Ewing
announced.
"Yes. Yes it has been good. I'll come back for a visit, ok, and I'll stay
for longer, "I promised him, as I began walking down the rest of the
hallway.
Just as I was about to round the corner I heard a thunderous voice erupt from
behind me. "Hey!"
I turned around, looking back down the long
corridor at the sight of the old
man sitting in his wheelchair, with a fist raised above his head.
". . . .Yea, you! Wear that kilt with pride, boy! It is who we are. You
honor them and yourself when you wear it. Don't ever let anyone make fun of
it. If they call it a skirt or a dress, . . . . give 'em a bloody lip, lad!"
the man yelled.
A wave of pride washed over me in that moment. I saluted to him and he
matched my salute, each of us then going our separate ways.
The chance encounter with the man really
affected me. Within four days
following the synchronistic meeting with Mr. Ewing, I took a trip to
downtownDenver to our local Scottish store, the Thistle and the Shamrock. I
decidedthat I wanted to give Mr. Ewing a gift, so I purchased a MacEwen clan cap
badge (clan crest) and a MacEwen scarf in the ancient colors. I absolutely
couldn't wait to give the items to him. From our conversation I knew that the
objects would be sacred to him and that he would greatly appreciate having
them.
I purchased a card covered in Celtic knotwork and wrote an
inscription to him:
"To Mr. Ewing. A few small gifts for one who had the presence of mind to
identify his family colors as they were passing by. With this small gesture,
may you know in your heart of hearts that you are not alone. Your kinsman,
Frank MacEowen of MacEoghainn."
That afternoon I went back up to the hospital. I checked in at the front desk
and asked what room Mr. Ewing was in. They directed me to what appeared to be
the Oncology ward, which instantly informed me of what
terminal illness he was
grappling with. When I reached his particular floor I checked in with the
help desk and nurse's station, all the while keeping my eyes peeled for the
sight of Mr. Ewing rolling along in his wheelchair.
Eventually a young woman asked if she could help me. I told her I was looking
for an
elderly man named Mr. Ewing. The nurse nodded and then looked down on
a piece of paper attached to a clipboard. Slowly she glanced up at me, with a
slight frown.
"Are you part of the family?" she asked in a gentle tone.
"Well, in a manner of speaking," I replied with a laugh.
"Mmm. I'm sorry, sir. Mr. Ewing died last night," the nurse announced,
placing her hand over mine.
I was shocked. I couldn't believe my ears. I asked to be shown which room he
had been in and I
decided to go sit inside for a time. There was a strange
emptiness to the place, yet a lingering sense that Mr. Ewing had been there.
With the door
securely closed for a few moments, I spoke.
"Mr. Ewing. I'm very sorry I missed you. I brought you some things. I got
you a MacEwen clan cap badge and a scarf, but I guess you won't be needing
them now."
I sat quietly for a long time, contemplating the way in which the old man and
I had met, and the swift nature in which he left his life in just a few short
days after our talk. I cried for a time and his words began echoing inside my
head:
"Wear that kilt with pride. You honor them and yourself when you wear it."
In the day following Mr. Ewing's death, I slowly began to realize that our
connection,
albeit brief, had been rooted in the spirit of Celtic fostership.
As Alexander Carmichael tells us in the
classic Carmina Gadelica: Hymns and
Incantations--Collected in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland in the Last
Century, ''Fostership among the Highlanders is a
peculiarly close and more
tender tie even than blood." What began to dawn on me was that, despite how
little I actually knew the man, Mr. Ewing's death had just made him one of my
ancestors. He was a MacEwen who had passed on.
In the
traditional Celtic sense of kinship there is an old
saying that goes,
"Fuil gu fichead, comhdhaltias gu ceud." It translates, "blood to the
twentieth, fostership to the
hundredth degree." Later on that Fall, I
attended the Longs Peak Highland Festival, not for myself, but in memory of
the man who never told me his first name. I wore that kilt with pride. with
honor for myself, for them and for him.
-Frank Henderson MacEowen, M.A.
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