Pigfoot and Pigeon Hands
            
            
            
   PIGFOOT   AND   PIGEON   HANDS
   By
   DAVID    WASHINGTON
   The   people   and   situations   depicted   in  this  story  are   fictional.  Any   resemblance   to  persons  living  or  deceased  is   purely   coincidental.
   Copyright   ©    2009   David  Washington
   The front cover illustration is from a 19th century  magazine.
   TABLE OF C0NTENTS
   Introductory   Note
   Pigfoot   and   Pigeon   Hands
   Talking   Points   for  Bibliotherapy
   Bibliotherapy   Lesson   Plans
   Creative   Writing Work   Page
   About  David  Washington
   Other Books by this Author
   Connect  with  Me  Online
   Introductory   Note
   Bibliotherapy   or  literature  therapy,  uses   literature  as  a  means   of   promoting   personal    development   and  the   resolution   of  conflicts.   The  workbooks   in  the  Kenroy  Stories   series   trace  the  development   of   the  title character.   The  stories   follow  him   as  he  is  confronted   with    various   challenges   to  healthy     growth   common  to   our  society.   Bibliotherapy   is   not   a  cure-all,   but   another  tool  to  be  used  in  the   intensive   effort  required  on  the  part  of  parents,  teachers  and  others  who  work   with   young   people.   To   assist  them   in   arriving   at  adulthood   with   a  reasonable   degree  of   soundness   of  mind  and  a   healthy  sense  of  themselves  as  individuals,  of  whatever  culture  or  background,   capable   of  coping  successfully   with  the  pressures  of  the   modern day   and  of  living  a  purposeful   life  is  indeed  a . difficult  challenge.
   Pigfoot   and   Pigeon   Hands    is  a  story  within  a  story.  The  principal   issues  of  concern  in  it  are   living   things  and  the  environment.   The  quality  of  life   on   planet  earth   is   continues   to  decline    for  all   of  its  living   creatures   on  land  and   sea.  Poverty,  degradation  of  the  environment,   short-sighted  greed  and   a   general   devaluation  of  life  all   contribute  to   the  rapid   of   diversity  of  fauna  and  flora.  The   issues   are   both   complex   and   simple.    Since  all   of  us  are  involved  in  their   outcome,   there   is  a    need   for   all  of  us,   even  young  ones,   to   see  clearly  how  the  decisions  we  make,  both  large  and  small,   effect  the  quality  of   life   for   better  or  for  worse.
   David   Washington
   B.  A.  Psychology,   Colby  College
   M.  A.  Anthropology,   Howard   University
   Pigfoot   and   Pigeon    Hands
   “I  can  remember  a  long, long  time ago, before  I  knew   any  better,  wanting  to  know  all  about  everything.  I  must  have  been    around   four   years   old.  I    hit   a   bird   with   my   slingshot.  It fell   from  the  tree  and  was  lying  on  the  ground  in  our  backyard.  I   picked   it   up   and   as  I   held   it   in  my   hand   I    could  feel   its   heart   beating  against   my   thumb.    It   felt   warm    in  my   hand.   It   looked   up   at  me   and   seemed   like  it  wanted   to  say   something,    but   then   it  died,   right  in   my  hand.  I  wondered  what    it   wanted   to   tell   me.   So   I    went   inside  and   told  Granny.    Granny   knows   a   lot,   and  like   I  said   I   wanted   to  know   all   about  everything   and    especially   what   the   bird   might   have  wanted   to   say.”
   “Granny  looked  at  me a  long  time,  like   she  was  about  to  say  something   but  then  she   looked  up   and  started  to   singing    instead  of  explaining.  It  sounded  something  like   a  church  song,  but   it  was  like  in  a  different  kind  of  language.  Some  of  the   words   I  could  almost   understand,  the   rest  I  couldn’t  none  at  all.   And  I  thought  to  myself,   as   she   was  looking   up   and   singing  like   that,  this  must   be   the   wrong    time   to   bother  Granny.     Right   then   she  stopped  singing  and  looked  at  me  in  a way  I  can’t  never   forget   ’cause   that   was   the   first  time  I   ever   seen   Granny  cry.  Then  she  said:”
   ‘ “Sit  down  Kenroy. I  know  how  you  like   stories,  so   just  sit  down  and   let   me  tell   you   one  story  my  granny  once  told  me.”
   “And  I   said,  “Granny,  you  have  a  Granny?!”’
   “Had,  Kenroy,  she  said.  “Had,  this  was  a  long,  long  time  ago,   before   you   or   even  your   ma   was  even   thought  of,   long  ago.   Then   she   told   me   about    how    her   Granny  had  come   to   Belize,  only  it  wasn’t  called  Belize  back  then,  but  British   Honduras.  She  came  here  from  the  Alabama  in  the  US,  she  said.   The    son   of    the    clear-skinned   man   that   had   owned     her    mother   during  the  slaving  times   bought  her  here  to  Belize  with   him.    After   the  War   when  the  slaves  were  set   free   was   over   some   of   the   men  that   lost  came  down   here  and   sake  of  he   wanted  to  keep  Granny’s  granny,  he  bought  her  here.”
   “I  wanted  to  ask   her   what   about   slavery   time,    but   I    was   afraid  she  might  start   that  singing  again    and  I   wanted   to   hear  the  story  too, so  I  asked, ‘ “What’s   the   name  of  the  story  Granny?” ‘
   “The  story  don’t  really  have  a  name, but  I guess  if  we  wanted  to  give  it  a  name  we  could  call  it  ‘Pigfoot and  Pigeon ‘Hands.’”
   Itchy,  who  had   been  listening  quietly  to  Kenroy,  almost  fell  off   of  the   limb   of   the   black  mango  tree  where  they   was  sitting.   The  tree,  was  about  the  length  of  a  football  field   behind  the   Clinic.  Kenroy  lived   on   above  the  Clinic  with  his  grandmother,   who  everybody  called  ‘Nurse  D’. Itchy and  Kenroy  had  made  the   tree  their  after  school  ‘hangout’  with  the  appearance  of  the  first   ‘big   enough  to  eat’  but  still  green  ‘Black’  green mangos.  Now  Itchy  was  laughing  so   hard  tears  came  to  his  eyes. 
    “Pigfoot   and   what?”   he  asked  grabbing  the tree  trunk  to  steady  himself.
   “Pigfoot  and  Pigeon  Hands,  I  heard  her  say.  At  least I  thought   that’s   what  she  said.  Remember  now  I   was only  ‘bout  four  at  the   time  she  told  me  this,  so  maybe  pigeons  have  hands  for  all  I   know.  Anyway,  ‘Granny’,  I   say,  so...” 
   Kenroy  too  wanted  to laugh  and  was  hoping  his  friend  didn’t   notice  how  hard  he  was  trying  not  to.  He   leaned   back  on   the  limb  on  which  he  sat  to   hide  his   face   from   Emanuel,  Itchy’s  real  name.  The  kids  called  him  ‘Itchy’  because  of  his  Ketchi  last name  was, Ich.
   “So  back  then  the  people  had  pigeon  hands?” Itchy  asked,   trying   to  imagine  what  a  pigeon  hand  might  look  like.
   “Just  hold  your  horses  Emanuel,  I’m   going  to  get  to  that.”  Kenroy   said   it in   the   way   his   Granny   always   said  it  to  him   and  allowed  himself  a  chuckle.
   “Granny  said,  ‘Let  me  tell   you  ‘bout  Pigfoot   first,   only   Pigfoot   wasn’t   his   real   name,  according  to   Granny’s   granny.   Granny   said   she   figured  out   after  she  had  become   a  nurse   that   the   man   they  called  “Pigfoot”   must   have  had   a   clubfoot.”
   “Clubfoot,  what’s  a  ‘clubfoot’?”   Itchy  asked,   holding   back  a   laugh,  thinking   it  must   be   something  Kenroy,  who  still  loved .  hearing  and  telling  stories,  had   made  up.
   “Well,   according   to   Nurse   D.,   Granny   I   mean,   it’s   when  somebody   may  be  born   with   a   foot    that   curved  back   towards   the   heel  of  their   foot so  it   reminds   you    of   a club  or   a  heavy   stick.   I   remember   that   was   exactly   what  she  said    
					     					 			‘cause   right  away  I  started   to   feel  sorry   for    poor  Pigfoot.   The   only   thing   is   that   Granny’s   granny   tell  she    that   to   the   people   back   then  Pigfoot’s   foot  reminded   them  of   a  pig’s    foot.   But   nobody   made  fun  of  him   and   he  was  not    much  worse  off   than    all  of  the  black   people  was  back   then.   Matter  of  fact,   according    to   Granny   he  got  be   much    better   off  than   some   of   even  the   people   that  used   to   own   slaves.”
   “How   he  do    that,  Kenroy”,   Emanuel,  quite  curious  to   know   the  secret,  asked.  “Well,  that’s  what  the  story  was   all   about.   Only,  I  don’t  quite  remember  everything   exactly   as   Granny    told   me  it,   but   I  can   tell   you  the   part   I   do   remember.”
   He   began   to   picture   it  in   his  mind  the  way  he  had   at   four   years  old   when   he   heard   it.
   “Couldn’t   read   nor   write,   this  Pigfoot,”  he  could   hear    Granny  say.    He   was   seeing    in    his  mind   her  Granny    telling    his  Granny.    “Smart  as   a  whip,  even   from   boyhood   and  loved  animals,  all   kinds,  but   ‘specially   birds.   Birds   to  Pigfoot   were  his  kind  of  people.   Folks   used  to   say    Pigfoot  lived  in   a   bird’s   world.   Maybe   he  did,  maybe he   didn’t.   Maybe  he   just  felt   freer  in  the   company   of   birds   and  strangely  enough  the   birds   seem  to   accept  him   into  their  world.”
   “In  those   years   after   the   War,   according  to   Granny  the  blacks   weren’t  slaves  no   more   but   they  wasn’t    what  you  could    call   free   neither.    After  they   had  waited   a  while  thinking  they  was  going  to  get   40  acres   of   land  and  a  mule   to  plow   like   the   government   had   said  they  would,   they  saw   after  a  while   it  wasn’t  turning   out   like   that.   So   they  wander  around  from  place  to   place    until  some  of   them   just  went on  back   to  the   plantations  they   had  worked  on  as slaves.  Granny   said  it   was   sort  of   like   the   Israelites   who  wanted   to  go   back   to   Egypt   sake  of    all   the  food  they    had    before   they’d  gone   out  with   Moses.   And   when   the    pigeons    came   it   was   really   like   in   the   Bible    when   God   sent    the    birds   for   the   people  to   eat  while  they  was  out  there  in  the   wilderness   hungry.”
   “Wait  a   minute   Kenroy   I   know   you   making   this   up  now.   You  always  like   to   tell   stories   you   make  up   by  yourself.   What   birds?   What  pigeons?”   asked   Emanuel,   incredulous   at  his   friend’s   imagination.
   “I’m   not   making   it   up   this   time.   If   it  was   anyone   made  it  up  it  had   to  be  Granny,   and   my   Granny   don’t   believe   in   making   up,   she   always   be  telling  the   truth   when  she  talk  to  me.    I   telling  you   what  she   said.   And  she  said   her   granny  told   her   that   one   day  back  then   the   people    started  hearing  a  noise   that   sounded    like   thunder   getting  louder  and   louder.   The   sky   became  dark  even  thought  it   was   daytime   and   it   was  a   clear   day.   When   the   people   looked   up   toward    the   north   they  saw   coming   so   many    bird   that  they  filled  the  sky  all   around.    There   were   so  many  birds   it  took  all   day   for  them  to   pass  by.”*
   “Pigeons,  Kenroy?!”
   “Pigeons.  I’m   telling   you   what   she   said   her   Granny   told   her.  I  think   she  said   they   were   called  ‘passing  under  pigeons’   or   something   like  that,   I’m   not  too   sure   about    the   real   name  she   said.   But   then  she   said  everybody   started  to  hunt   the   pigeons   for   food.   It   was   hard   to   afford   meat  so  they   ate   the  pigeons.   There   were  so  many   it  was  easy   to   kill   as  much  as   you  want   and   then  some. It was like in the Bible when God sent so many quail birds to feed the Israelites when they was hungry for some meat after all that manna, she said.
   “Man   o’  man,  I  wish I could  see  so  many   birds.  I  wonder   why  they  don’t   pass   by  like   that   nowadays.”,   Emanuel   asked   in   sheer  amazement.
   “Well,  that’s  exactly  what   the  story  was  all  about.  You  see,   when   Pigfoot   saw   how   fast  the   people   greedy  up   the  pigeons   he   started  to  warn  them  not   to   kill   so   many   or   they  wouldn’t   be   none  left   after  a  while.  They   said  he  was   crazy   and  laughed  at   him   and   said    no  way   they  could   kill  off  all  the  millions  and millions   of  pigeons.”
   “Did   them   kill  them  all?”,  Emanuel  asked,  already  starting  to  worry   over  how    the  story   was   going  to  end.
   “Hold   your   horses Itchy,   I’m   getting   to  that  part.  Anyways,   Pigfoot  decided   he   would   do  something  to   try  and  save   them   for   the   future   generations.   He   started  to   capture  all    the   ones  that   was   wounded   without   being   killed   by   the   hunters.   He  would   go   out   into   the   fields  looking   for   wounded  birds.   When   he   found    one   he   picked   it   up   in   a   cloth.   They   would   be  shaking   and   trembling   in   his   hand  like  my   one  did.   He    would   rub   its   feathers   until   it   calmed  down  some  and  then   he   would   take   it   to  a   secret  place  he   had   for   them  in  the   bush. He  knew   how   to   nurse   and   feed   them   back   to   healthy   again.   He   felt   real   happy   when   he    would   find  a   female   one   ‘cause   he   knew    they   could   breed    more   baby    pigeons,   so   he   took  special  care  of   them   and  their   eggs.”
   “Hey,   wait  a  minute,   what  you call  a  female   pigeon?’,   Itchy  interrupted   Kenroy.
   “Yeah   I   know   now,   but   then   it  sounded   like  Granny  said   pigeon   hands  instead  of   pigeon  hens!”,  Kenroy   said,  as  they  both   had   a   good   laugh   at   this   childish   misunderstanding.    “And   you   know   what,   I   was   seven   years  old  when  it   came   to  me.   But   the   not   so   funny   part   is   that   Pigfoot   turned   out   to   be   right.   The  people   did   kill   off   all   the  millions  and   millions   of   passing   under  pigeons.”
   “What   you   mean   Kenroy,   there’s   plenty   of   pigeons   all   about.   The  other   day  I   went  to  the City  with   my   pop  for   him   to   testify   in  court   about   Big up.  Afterwards, while   he   was   in  the   bank   depositing  money  for   some   family   down  in  San  Miguel,   I   saw    lots   of   pigeons   camped  out   on   the   roof   of    the   courthouse  and   in   the  park.”
   “Yeah,   but   not   this   kind  of   pigeon.  Granny   said   the  last   one  of   this  kind  of  pigeons   died   in   a   zoo   a   long   time  ago.   Even   the  ones   Pigfoot   had   raised   somebody   stole.   She   said  it   hurt  Pigfoot   so   bad   to   lose   what  he   had   tried   so   hard   to   save   he   liked   to   died  of   a   broken   heart.  But   instead  of  dying   broken-hearted    he   taught   himself   to   read  and  write   and  became   kind  of   a   preacher.   Only  instead  of   preaching  about   going  to   heaven  like   other  preachers,   he   went   around  visiting  people  talking  to   them  about   how   we  need  to   show   God   we   can   take   better   care   of   things   here   on  earth,   like  the  plants   and   the   animals.”
   “Hold   on  Kenroy,  I   think  I  can  hear  my  momma   call.   Yep,   see  you   tomorrow   at  school.”
   Quick   as   a  cat,  but  really  much  quicker   than   that,  Itchy  was  down   the   tree,  and  on   the  run.  Kenroy,  who   had   not  heard  a  thing,  stayed  a  while  longer  in   the   tree,  trying  to  remember   the  rest  of  the  story  about  Pigfoot   and  the Pigeon  hens.   After   a  while,  he   decided   to   go   inside  and   ask   Granny,  hoping    she  too    had   not   forgotten.  He   found   her   downstairs   still   in   the   Clinic,   cleaning   up   the   waiting   room.
   “Kenroy   take   this   dirt  out   for  me   and   be   sure  to  wash   
					     					 			 your   hands  afterwards.”
   He   did  so,   quietly,  still   trying  to  remember  the   part  of  the  story  he  had   forgotten.   When  he  came  back   he   couldn’t  hold  it  in   any   longer.
   “Granny,   you   remember  a   story  you  told  me  a   long  time   ago   called    ‘Pigfoot   and   Pigeon  Hands.”,  he  asked.
   “I   remember   one   I   called   Pigfoot    and   Pigeon   Hens,  but   maybe   you   remember   pigeon   hands   since   you   must   have   been  around   four   years  old   at   the   time,  which,   by   the  way   wasn’t   that   long  ago   to   somebody   my   age,   even  if  it  seems   so   to   you.    But,   what  about  it,   I’m    a  little  surprised   you   still   remember  that   when   you   can’t  seem   to   remember  what    time  you   supposed   to  come  help   your  Granny   clean   up   around  here.”
   “Sorry    Granny.  I    guess   my    mind   was  on  Pigfoot.”
   “What’s   all   this  about   Pigfoot   all  of   sudden.   You   didn’t   go out   and    kill   some   poor   bird   again   did   you?”
   “No,  Granny,   I  promised   you   back   then   I   wouldn’t   never   do   it   again   and   I’m   keeping   my   promise  up   to   now.   Itchy   wanted  us   to  kill   some   birds   for   fun   so  I  started   telling  him  the  story  about   Pigfoot,   but  when   I   got  to   the   part    where   Pigfoot   starts    to   preaching   I   couldn’t   think   of    what    happened   after  that.   He    had   to  go  anyway,  but   I  still  was   wondering   what   had   happened   in  the   end  of   the  story.”
   Nurse   D.  sat   down.  and  listened  with   interest  as   her   grandson   talked.   He   was   eleven   years    old   now.    A  lesson   she   had   taught   him  so  ‘long   ago’   had   stuck   with   him.   It  made  her   feel   that  her  efforts  to   instill   certain  values  that   she   held   dear  in   him   were   not   entirely    in   vain.   She   often   tried   to  do   so   by  means  of  stories   and   had  found  that  method  often   worked   best.  ‘Everybody   loves   a   good   story,’  she   thought   to   herself   as   he  finished   talking.
   “Well,   Kenny,   there    really   isn’t   too,   too   much  to  tell  after  that,   as   far   as   my   dear   grandmother   related   it   to  me.   One   thing   though   Big Momma   did  mention  was  she   said   Pigfoot,   even   though he   was   born   with  a   handicap,   never  felt   sorry  for  himself.   He   used   to  say  self-pity   was  like  a   trap  laid   by  a  bird-catcher.   So    instead   of  feeling  sorry   for  himself,  he   kept   busy   in   helping   others.
   “Help   others?  How   could   he   help  other  people   when  he  was  so   poor  and   cripple  himself.   I   don’t  see   how   he  could  help  somebody  else,   Granny,”   Kenroy  asked,  feeling   sorry   for   Pigfoot.
   “I  said  Pigfoot  was   lame  in   his   foot,   but   that  don’t  mean   he  was   cripple   up   here,”   she   said   touching   the   side   of  her   head  with  her  pointed  finger.  “You   see,   not  only  did  he   raise   his  pigeon   hens,   he  would   give  some   away   to  poor   people   to  raise  for  themselves  and   have   food  on   the  table.  Some   did   that   way,  but   again   some  would   just   greedy   up   what  he   gave  them   and   come   looking  for  more.   Still  he  was  patient  with  them   tried   time  and  again   to   teach   them  the   wisdom    of  ‘living   at   home.’ 
   “Living  at   home,  where  was  they  were   living  Granny?”
   “That  came  fro  something   Dr. Carver  went   around   teaching   the  poor   farmers in Alabama  back   then.   By   ‘living  at   home’   he   meant   not   having   to  depend   so  much   on  buying   from   the  shop   and   instead  to   grow   your   own  vegetables    and   raise   your   own    animals   for  meat.  He  meant  we   don’t  have   to  ruin   the   farmland   with  the  kind  of  crops  we   grow  just  for  money   or  to  kill  off   the  animals,  birds   and   fish,  so  fast that  they  don’t   have  a  chance  to   reproduce    more  animals,   birds  and   fish.    Pigfoot   had  listened    to   Dr.  Carver   and   got   the  sense.   He   went  about   doing  it   and   trying  to  help  his   poor  neighbors  to  ‘live   at  home’   too.”  Nurse   D.   was   finished  cleaning  and   ready   to   head  upstairs  to  get   supper   going,   but   looking   down  at  Kenroy,  she  could   see  it   coming.
   “Granny   who  was  Dr.  Carver?”, Kenroy  asked.
   “I  knew   you  were  going  to  ask  that, let me sit down  cause  Ok,  Dr. George  Washington  Carver,  one   of   America’s  greatest   scientists.  But   let’s   go  upstairs  I  have  to  get   tea   ready.  We   can  talk  about  him    at  the  table.”