These first days of the year 2020 have felt
like dark times. I find it difficult to feel hopeful. The 12 year-long drought
continues in Chile. The temperature everyday soars in the 90s. We live under a
pale, washed out sky under a cover of smoke from the Australian fires. Plants
in my garden are scorched. Since the massive social outburst in October here, life
feels uncertain in this society where angry Chileans, empowered by social
media, challenge authority, established institutions and the rights of others in massive demonstrations,
looting and violent attacks.
The latter
dominated the conversation at tea time in the house of my husband’s cousin. We
were a group of six women all in our seventies and beyond: two of my
sisters-in-law and two friends of the hostess. The house was dark and dreary,
curtains closed to “keep out the heat.” Fortunately, someone opened the double
doors to the minute back patio, letting in a bit of light and air.
I hadn’t met the
hostess’s two friends previously but had heard my sisters-in-law often mention
one woman, Carmen Slight, an unusual name that I immediately connected with our
trip through the Straits of Magellan a few years ago.
Magellan Straits |
Reading historical
anecdotes about the area, I came across the fascinating story of Scottish
engineer George Slight who built many of Chile’s lighthouses, the first
situated on one of the rocky Evangelista islets at the western entrance to the
Straits from the Pacific. I told Carmen that I knew a bit of the history behind
the lighthouses. Her eyes lit up. “Oh, I love talking about it!” she said. “George
Slight was my grandfather. The Chilean government asked him to help design and
build the lighthouse, badly needed to guide ships through the entrance of the
Straits.”
Her grandfather
fascinated his family with tales of four meter high waves, blustery winds and
the inexistence of a place to dock on the rocky outcropping, making access
difficult and dangerous. But Slight had experience with lighthouses in England
and India. In 1898 the light first flashed over the seas, a welcome beacon for
the sailors in those treacherous waters.
Slight went on to build 72 lighthouses
along Chile’s coast. He married and
settled in Chile, becoming head of Chile’s Maritime Signaling Service.
“The Navy
continues commemorating him to this day, often inviting me to ceremonies,”
Carmen told us. “A few years ago they took me in helicopter to visit the
lighthouse! Now for the first time they have women naval officers there.”
We sat to have
tea in the walled-in backyard, the conversation centering on people they all
knew, the names of spouses and those who had passed on. I listened politely,
while praying for a breeze of any kind, but Carmen Sight had brightened my day.
What a privilege to hear the story from Mr. Slight’s granddaughter.
His gravestone
in Valparaiso General Cemetery bears the English epitaph “His lights still
shine over the waters of the Pacific Ocean.”
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