Sunday, April 26, 2009

Part II

I'm wandering toward the back of our group of 4 in utter disgust of where we were, wondering why the writers who reviewed Belen thought it would be funny to send tourists there. Good joke, guys. You got us! There we were, with our cameras and backpacks in true tourist fashion standing completely off guard and out of place. I look down to see a small, naked child squatted at my feet peeing in the soggy garbage and muck. It wasn't even worth concerning myself about getting urine on my shoes. They had already been through much worse. I did not find relief in this.

Completely absorbed in my thoughts about how awful this place smelled, I was unaware of what was happening around me. In one single instant I feel a strong squeeze and pull on my wrist. I panicked, releasing my grasp of my little red pouch that had my digital camera and cash in it. The bag has a loop that was wrapped around my wrist, but didn't add much more security. The man yanked the pouch right from the loop - straight out of my hand - and ran.

It all happened in seconds, but somewhere in there I screamed which grabbed the attention of all the locals in the market. Three more guys ran after the thief, and in my ignorant innocence I thought they were running after him to tackle him and get my camera back. But in reality, they were not trying to rescue a damsel in distress but were in fact running because they too had just robbed someone.

I frantically yelled to my friends walking ahead what had happened. There was only one boy in our group, and he just so happens to be the team captain and record holding track star at his university. He tosses us his bag and takes off after the man who had stolen my camera. We follow behind by directions from locals who are out watching the whole debacle from their wobbly decks. "He went that way, Senorita!" "Down the stairs! To the left!" The whole town was involved, even friends of the perpetrator who posed as concerned witnesses and attempted to steer us in the wrong direction.

Finally after sliding down slimy stone staircases and crossing swamps of trash on wooden planks we find our friend. He is surrounded by street kids who are all excited from the chaos and talking at once. It was clear that they knew who we were looking for and where he was but out of loyalty, or possibly fear, were not going to rat him out. One kid explained to us that the thief is a very bad, dangerous man with a knife and we should go to the cops rather than searching for him ourselves throughout the floating neighborhood.

So that's exactly what we did.

In the police station there was a man sitting on the floor against the wall holding a bloody cloth to his eye yelling something at the officer that I couldn't understand and I would be surprised if the officer could either. My fluent Spanish-speaking friend explained what had happened to the man behind the desk, and he took us upstairs to flip through photo albums jammed packed with pictures of grim, morose men who had been arrested for whatever reason in the past to see if we could identify him. Unfortunately none of us had gotten a very good look at him, and we were too unsure to choose a criminal from a photo. The cops went down to the street and grabbed a kid who claimed he knew what the man looked like. He said that none of the men in the photos were the one.

We sat in the incredibly hot police station for what seemed like hours on end telling our testimonies and stating a report. I described the camera, the clothes he was wearing, and any other helpful information which was not much. I had to repeat myself a few times because at this point one of the two officers had turned on his favorite iTunes playlist on full blast and it was difficult for us to hear each other. I knew I was never going to get my things back, yet I felt it was for some reason necessary to go through the motions of it all.

After the papers were signed and one of the officers had thoroughly hit on my friend, we started to leave. We asked if it was true that Belen was a hotspot for tourists, and the cops replied that yes, yes it is, but only with police escorts at all times. Something the guidebooks failed to mention. It was getting dark by now, so the officer walked us to the edge of the market to get a cab. The locals watched as we left with our tails between our legs and one camera and 150 soles less than we came with.



I think getting stolen from is one of the worst, most helpless feelings. Even though I was incredibly freaked out by the whole experience and deeply hurt that a stranger wanted to take advantage of me like that, I was and am still am immensely grateful that my track star friend never caught up with the thief. Also that my little red pouch had been with me through the years and was worn weak enough to break easily from my wrist. Who knows what could have happened. I just lost a camera and some cash which can be easily replaced, but things could have gotten a lot worse very quickly. So I guess in a twisted, roundabout way, I was very lucky that afternoon in Belen.



Too bad that luck didn't last me during my time in the Amazon jungle. But that story is an entry in itself.

1 comment:

  1. Jill, I am so glad it was only money and your camera. I hate that your camera was stolen I know you are missing the photos you had taken, but I am glad you are safe! Sounds like it is all a learning experience. I know you are enjoying the journey!

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