This was beautiful, painful and overwhelming, but also empowering and life giving. Paul Monette's words are just so beautiful and even though written in grief they give life and vision. They make me realise that love can make a difference, not just the love of a partner but also the love and compassion of a stranger.
The grief expressed in this slim book is raw and palpable. Written after the death of his partner Roger, Paul Monette gives voice to the pain, anger and loss of losing his lover and best friend. The writing also shows him grappling to understand what has happened. Suddenly the war he fought to keep Roger alive is over and death has won.
But has it?
It took great courage to write this. It is raw and passionate and angry and deeply emotional. It really pulled at my heart and is a fitting tribute to both men.
It also took great courage to read this and to enter into the grief of another. Grief touches all of us at some point in our lives. It is never easy but there are times when it is expected and accepted as part of the course of life. Grief at the end of a long, satisfying well lived life can also be thankful and express gratitude, but there are times when grief is agony because a life was cut off before its time and there is a sense of life not being finished or not flourishing because of injustice.
Paul's grief is angry and painful because there is no peace about Roger's untimely death. In this sense there is something deep to rage against.
'Rage, rage against the dying of the light'!!
Roger's death was grief to rage against because AIDS was ignored by the US Govt as it ravaged the gay community in the early days of the pandemic. Roger's death and later Paul's were individual examples of these untimely deaths, lives from the tip of an iceberg that is still silently growing. I am grateful that their lives were not in vain because their stories have taught many to rage against the complacency of governments, to rage against stigma and discrimination, to rage against people who want to ignore the needs of the most vulnerable and silence them.
Even me with my quiet life and reticence have found ways to write and speak about and rage against AIDS. I too have found my own way to rage against the 'dying of the light' and the millions of people who have died, and the stigma and discrimination that continues along with the brutalisation of minority communities.
It is elegies and stories such as these that help sharpen my vision and give me courage and determination, not just to me but also to others who struggle against injustice in all its insidious forms.
It took courage for Paul Monette to publish these feelings of grief but this grief has somehow given life and vision. I being one of those. Death and grief are not the end. In writing these words he has also emphasised that life is precious. Not a minute is to be wasted and life is to be explored. His words remind me to be courageous and remind me not to be scared. And Paul has reached out to touch me at the beginning of a new year. As I try my best to be a priest and to love my positive brothers and sisters, as I try my best to love my LGBT brothers and sisters Paul shows me how.
In his very last elegy he writes of finding a roll of undeveloped film 3 years after Roger's death. He rushes to develop the pictures and finds photos of a trip to Tuscany. He and Roger visited a monastery where they were embraced and welcomed by one of the monks. And this monk, Brother John, in his love and hospitality makes Paul and Roger welcome. He can't speak english and they can't speak much italian but Brother John welcomes them and makes them laugh and shows them around. Brother John takes pictures with them and for them, and three years after the devastating loss of Roger, Paul finds this beautiful picture. A picture which graces the front page of this book of beauty and pain. A picture which Paul calls his wedding picture. A picture which I spent much time gazing at, reflecting thinking.
And I read this last elegy and I cried not just for their loss but for the simplicity of love and hospitality. And because even though Paul rages against a hostile and excluding church, I can see the touch of love and the presence of the divine in a simple monk who reached out to two men before the darkness descended and in that small way brought a little light to somehow help when the darkness of grief seemed so utter.
And that simple touch of love is something that I can do in this world around me. And I feel hopeful, empowered and comforted.
And I feel privileged. I feel privileged that I have been able to share in the lives of Roger and Paul. Their lives and losses are not in vain because their lives are giving life to others.
'Oh death where is thy sting? Oh grave where is thy victory?'