Special

por Marcelo Teixeira

The day I was in Heaven

I worked in the city of Rio de Janeiro for many years and in different periods. There, I completed my two university courses. In fact, I love the so called “Marvelous City”, despite all its troubles.

In one of these periods, from 1983 to 1993, I acted as a foreign trade adviser for a multinational company that imported and exported paper and pulp. It was a great company, by the way. Good atmosphere, excellent colleagues and salary. It was at the time of the inflation in Brazil; I do not even remember which currency was then in force. But the salary was enough and there was still left over.

It was a Friday of April or May of 1988. Work ended at 5:00 p.m., but I stayed a little longer to solve some issues. It was raining. I left the company around 6:30 p.m. and went to C & A department store. Winter was approaching and there were pullovers at C & A of an Italian stylist named Angelo Litrico. Everything of this fashion stylist was very good and I was in need of warm clothes. I went to the store on the corner of Rua do Ouvidor and Largo de S. Francisco and bought two sweaters and a pair of pants. I left there a little before eight o'clock. In addition to the C & A bag, I carried my briefcase and an umbrella. It was still raining.

I walked down the Rua do Ouvidor to Rua Primeiro de Março, where I would take a bus that would drop me at the Main Bus Station Novo Rio. At that time, the last bus leaving from Terminal Meneses Côrtes (Center of Rio) to Petrópolis, where I live, was the 7:30 p.m. one. There was hardly anyone else in those streets with commercial buildings in its majority.

I was in the section of Rua do Ouvidor that is between Rio Branco Avenue and the Primeiro de Março. Everything was closed. Suddenly, I noticed a man across the street (the Ouvidor is a very narrow street) paired with me and looking insistently at me. He was a black man, about 40 years old, with a mustache. He wore pants and a t-shirt. He was as tall as I am (1.86m) and a strong built man. He crossed the street, came towards me and approached me. He asked for money for a snack.

I went with him up to a setback of one of those buildings, closed the umbrella, asked him to hold the bag and my briefcase, put my hand in my pocket, took my wallet, got a note (I cannot remember how much) and I gave it to him as we chatted normally. At no point was I afraid or anything like that. I treated him with warmth and sympathy.

He was very grateful and touched. You have no idea how much! He was so happy that he accompanied me to Rua Primeiro de Março. It looks like as if I am lying, but he even held me by the arm to help me cross the street. And I was in my 20s while he was about 40!

Because of the rain, I accompanied him to a snack bar - on Primeiro de Março Street - a busy street where the shops are open until late.

The man was enchanted with me, and I do not know why. In my opinion, I had done nothing but the Christian duty to help others and treated him with sympathy. He said I deserved a kiss! He said his name was Jorge, but I could call him Negão (big black man).

We started to talk. He said he was part of a cleanup team and he was in charge of leaving one of those commercial buildings shining from Friday to Saturday. A bank branch, if I'm not mistaken. They swept, waxed the floor, washed the windows, the bathrooms, and so on. Big Black Man was going to work all night. Since he had not yet been paid, he was out of money for his lunch. So he went to the streets to ask for money, but he knew that it would be difficult because he was black, because the streets were deserted, and so on. Some people had already walked away from him in a hurry or given a few rude denials. Until the moment we came across.

Then he told me about his wife, children, and football. We talked for a long time about several things. I clearly realized that the man was delighted because he was being treated as an equal, because I had not shown fear or any kind of prejudice, because I asked him to hold my bags while I took the money out of my wallet... Anyway, he had been treated like a normal person, and probably due to his social position, racial prejudice, and the work he did, he was not used to being treated like this.

As it was getting late, I told him that I had to take a bus to the Central Bus Station and then to Petrópolis. We embraced. He again thanked me, praised me. I was embarrassed and thanked him too.

I signaled for the bus - it was the 172, Gavea-Bus Station, I remember this very well. At the time, in the “Marvelous City”, the boarding gate was at the rear of the bus. When I was going towards it, Jorge took me by the arm, put me on the bus through the front door and told the driver to take Marcelinho (little Marcelo) free to the bus station because Marcelinho was a very good person. There he waved at me gratefully and walked away. The bus was full, everyone kept looking at me, and I was very embarrassed. What were those people thinking?

When the bus left, I told the driver that, when I got to my destiny, I would pass the bus roulette and pay my ticket. He said that it would not be necessary.

The Spiritist Doctrine clarifies that Heaven and Hell are not geographic locations but states of consciousness. In the book "Heaven and Hell", Allan Kardec, in item 18 of Chapter III - first part, states that Heaven is everywhere and that there are no limits for it. The most advanced worlds, according to the Encoder are the last stations that lead to the state of total communion with God. This state we call Heaven. Then the book says that virtues open the door to these Higher Worlds. Therefore, although we are in a world still far from perfect, where there are souls (incarnate or disincarnated) willing to sow good in their multiple expressions, there will be Heaven widening the understanding of us all.

It had all had done me good. I was surprised and amazed at everything I had managed to do to that man, and with a simple, modest gesture! That sense of well-being accompanied me up the mountain and through the weekend. Yes, dear readers. I was in Heaven! A Heaven "where true sympathies and noble affections are perpetuated and consolidated by the purification and continuity of relationships," as item 15 says in the same chapter already quoted from "Heaven and Hell".

I never heard from Big Black Man again. I'd like to know his whereabouts, I admit. He was the kind of person who marks our lives and we lose sight of them. I would be delighted to hear from him; today he should be in his 70s. Had this happened today and I would have recorded his Whatsapp. But I believe that we will meet again and God will schedule this meeting in this or in another life. Jorge Negão is a friendly Spirit that I confess would like to meet again.

I had forgotten this story, which took place on a distant rainy day in the fall of 1988. I hope that Jorge is well and that he has met other people who treated him as he deserves. He is a very fine man! To him I owe a trip to the Heaven of fullness, of good done in a simple and detached way and of the certainty that, as a Spiritist song says, "When we do good to someone, how much good this good brings us”.

I do not know if my words succeeded in passing the spiritual joy I felt. I don’t think so. Words cannot always translate what happens to us. So I refer to question number three of "The Book of Spirits". In it, Kardec asks if God is the infinite. Spiritual instructors then answer that the definition is incomplete because human language is poor and insufficient to determine what is far above our limitations. That's when I understood the content of that question. What I felt had no words to describe it! There were no words that could accurately express such ecstasy. After all, I was in Heaven. And when you go to Heaven, you feel God intensely. Any attempt by me to define what I felt was - and still is - a way to limit my feeling to our vocabulary. And there was no word that could fit within the spiritual fullness that I experienced! But I reiterate that it was a high emotion that took me to Heaven and left me there a long time!

I will never forget the joy and commotion of that man! Negão (Big Black Man) spoke loudly, gestured a lot, and was happy with life! He is marked in my life!


Translation:
Eleni Frangatos - eleni.moreira@uol.com.br

 

     
     

O Consolador
 Revista Semanal de Divulgação Espírita