When The Lord Is With Thee
“This is the day the Lord has made
Let us rejoice and be glad in it.”
“I stepped out from the bus into the glamorous city of New York on a
beautiful Sunday evening in October. The Sun was still in the sky, its eyes
dull and ruddy, but starring lazily at the innocent citizens of New York
City; however it was hurrying up to round up the day’s business because
it was drifting steadily toward the western horizon, perhaps to where
the sky and the earth nudged cheek to cheek with its sleeping place on
Mount Olympus. Seeing the Sun so tired made my mind flip backward to
the village farmer, returning home after a busy and laborious day on the
farm and ready to go to bed at the taste of the first cup of palm wine. The
city looked so gentle and pristine as if it just jumped out of the bottom of
the ocean, and civilization voluntarily descended all over its boarder. I
could have sworn that no one ever ventured to bring any dirt to the city,
talk less of trying to disturb its placid inhabitants. I was proud of myself; I
was going to live among civilized people; I was going to wear cowboy boots,
vest and hats; I was going to ride horses very soon, and I was going to be
really educated, perhaps more educated than the former Nigerian British
High Commissioner in my district.
That sensuous aura of elitism completely consumed my being that I didn’t
know when I walked into an open area, cordoned off by police. There were
yellow tapes going round some of the benches in that small spot, and the ropes
crossed over to some parked cars on the street.
“Stop!” a cop on duty yelled as I approached to ask him for direction to
the railway line going to Pennsylvania.
I froze as I saw him place his left hand on his rifle holster. I never saw a
cop carrying a gun, at least publicly, and never saw one who was a lefty. “This
country must be unique” I thought.
The cop came closer and asked in a hoarse voice if I was blind.
“No, Sir.”
“And how come you didn’t see the yellow tapes?”
“I—I—don’t—”
Before I settled with my new found stammering jig, he yelled some
things that sounded nice to the ear as a new expression but not so decent to
reason. The culture of my new found land was gradually presenting itself in
miniature figurines; then a fuzzy haze seemed to cover the picture I carried
in my mind.
As I stepped away from the cop, a Good Samaritan-Taxi Cab driver was
waiting for me. “Come on, young man; welcome to America; let’s go.”
“Oh my goodness, this country is full of everything under the sun; how
kind; how descent; how imaginative! I didn’t flag him down, but he knows my
need, and he remembers to call me ‘a young man;’ that’s neat, and I fell in love
with him as if he was one of my relatives from my mother’s home.”
He opened his trunk, and in a jiffy, my lone luggage was in, and we began
negotiating for the fare and a possible moderate hotel. A couple who heard our
conversation stopped as if they admired my checkered suit, checkered shirt,
checkered tie, and platform checkered shoes to match the rest of my checkers.
When they heard the Taxi Cab driver assure me of a twenty-dollar-a-night
hotel, the Gentleman said, “You’re coming from Africa, aren’t you?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“You’re sure dressed up like it,” he said and added, “And because you’re
coming from Africa, you shouldn’t be throwing your life unto people simply
because they’re Americans; you should be on your way to your destination
instead of looking for a cheap hotel; this is America; it’s never too dark to
complete your travel to your destination because a sleepover in a cheap hotel
may be costlier than life. By the way, where’re you going?”
“Pennsylvania, Sir”
“Where in Pennsylvania?”
“Lincoln University, Sir.”
“There’s no way you’re going to go to Lincoln University tonight; the last
Gray Hound Busses for Pennsylvania left about six. Do you have any relatives
or friends in the U.S.?”
“Yes, I do, Sir.”
“Where does he live?”
“Washington, D. C., Sir.”
“Then you should be going to Washington, D.C. instead of looking for a
hotel.”
The Taxi Cab driver became mad and yelled some of those expletives
the cop yelled at me except that this driver had a warehouse of those fine
ways of saying ugly things; he unleashed an arsenal of good words that were
qualified with the same adjective, and the most common of them referred
to the Gentleman’s mother. I was shocked at the “Good Samaritan,” but the
Gentleman paid him no mind; and in a voice that seemed to quell the nastiest
of storms, he said, “Are you bringing down his luggage or not?”
The “Good Samaritan” put down my luggage and sped off with a final
finger sign to the Gentleman to emphasize his anger. Then the Gentle Man
introduced himself and his wife. “I’m Donald Iverson, and this is my wife
Michelle. Here’s my card” as he handed me a beautiful business card. “But
listen carefully, America is a good country, but it is peopled by humans. Don’t
forget that, and be on your P’s and Q’s.”
I thanked him and told him my name, my home, and my mission. He
and his wife said they were happy to see young Africans come out to study in
the U.S. They took me to the Pennsylvania Train Station in Manhattan. They
bought three tokens, so they could cross over the box office and take me to the
train platform, about two flights down in the ground just to see me through.
His business card identified him as an Insurance Manager for New York Life.