Picture pious young Fernando Martins, changing his name
to Antonio and setting off for Africa to pursue his vocation as a Franciscan
monk. Did he ever consider that he would never make it back home to Lisbon?
That his ship would be blown off-course to Sicily? That he would be assigned to
a hermitage in Romagna. That he would impress parishioners by eloquently
delivering a sermon, impromptu?
Would Antonio have imagined what would happen next?
Promotion by Saint Francis of Assisi himself; preaching and teaching at
universities in France and in Italy; rising to become a papal envoy, whose
sermons were much favored by the Vatican. That he would die, convulsive and
grangrenous at the age of 37, after eating some bad bread? I wonder whether he
would have struggled against the sin of pride, had he known the heartbroken pope
would name him Saint Anthony of Padua less than a year after his death.
San Antonio di Padua, patron saint of Lisbon, lost souls,
American Indians, amputees, and animals. Patron saint of mail, mariners, poor
people, pregnant women. Patron saint of starvation, travellers, runts and
revolutionaries. His name lives on from Texas to Teresopolis to Tamil Nadu. And
at the small chapel I pass every day in Valle de Anton.
Think about the closest commercial crossroads to your
home. You can tell a fair bit about your neighborhood and society based on what
business goes on there. Does it consist of three shopping plazas and a gas
station? Three specialty boutiques and a coffee shop? Two fast food joints, a
hardware store and an empty lot?
My closest intersection features the San Antonio chapel carving
a wedge in the calle El Hato road
flanked by the estates of wealthy Panamanians. It is a modest pavilion with a
façade covering wood pews, a crucifix and the porcelain statue of the saint holding
a child. Alongside, in the shade of mango trees, are some skinny saddled ponies.
Tied with lengths of nylon, they wait mindlessly for tourists. Tail twitches,
hoof stomps, slim muscle ripples, flies buzz. To the right, a hole-in-the-wall barberia – I’ve never seen it open – leads
to an unpaved alley and the modest homes of the poor campesinos who tend to the homes and gardens of the rich.