The
Golf Ball
Part
One of Three...
'What else am I supposed to do', he says, his
voice angry and cracking. 'You expect me to sit in front of
some cafe with a bunch of the boys and await my own death?
Is that what you want?' He rattles the back of his hand at
me, in the telltale Italian way. As the tears spill down his
cheeks, I swallow hard and reach down into my pocket, turning
the tiny digital recorder into the 'off' position. I spin my
camera around onto my back and close my notepad. I put the
cap back on the pen. Our eyes connect, and it's such a moment
of intense intimacy that it triggers my flight response: I
want to turn away, or even run. And there it is again, the
golf ball. Lately, it won't seem to go away, no matter how
hard I try.
I'm starting to wonder if it's my fault that he's upset, that
this is the fourth time today I've had some old man in tears.
I've seen anger too, and profound frustration, the kind that
borders on the suicidal. And all of this has come about from
the same question, a question that I thought was so innocuous
that no one would really think to answer it, that no one would
take me seriously. My question has been this: How long have
you been working these olive fields?
I saw it earlier today too
when I pulled over and leaned my bicycle on an old stone wall,
not far from a group of men all laying nets on the ground.
'What else do we know', one finally asked as he pulled a swath
of cloth from his pocket to wipe his flooding eyes.
And I saw it even earlier still when I asked a man on a tractor.
We talked for half an hour before it occurred to me that I
was holding him up. 'I'm not in any rush', he said, and then
he started asking me silly, small-talk questions, the kind
of questions you ask when you want to prolong a conversation,
so you don't have to return to the thing you were doing before.
Even at 10am I could smell the grappa on his breath. His smooth
forehead, the heavy lines around his mouth and eyes told me
that he spent the last 60 years smiling, yet he never once
smiled as we spoke. 'This used to be my favourite part of the
year', he said, implying that now, it was anything but. We
said goodbye and he pulled up to an empty intersection and
just sat there for four minutes, his shoulders shaking. No
cars passed. My own eyes began to fill. Eventually he popped
his tractor into gear and slogged on, to the mill, I hoped.
But it just stuck in my throat again, that sandy golf ball
that won't seem to go away lately.
This
is not the story of a type of people that we may be tempted
to call 'peasants'. These people don't whistle on their way
to work, any more than you do. The thing is, that if you
live here and speak their language, these people have names,
mortgages, colour televisions and children that live up north.
They catch colds. They cut coupons. They're people like you
and me, so I want to resist the notion that they're any happier
over bad situations, any more than you or I would be. Why
am I telling you this? Because every time you buy a litre
of olive oil, you become involved in all of this, whether
you know it or not. And the odds are good that you're being
swindled. You'd be mad if you knew.
The price of olives in Italy has fallen so low that it often
no longer makes any sense to pick them. Those that still do
often feel embarrassed, ashamed that they have nothing better
to do with their time. They feel that they need to explain
themselves and many stories start with, 'Well, when Margherita
died', or, 'When my children moved away I was very alone but
I just kept picking each year'. 'I don't know anything else'.
And olives in Puglia are not just another crop. They're everything.
The olive is to Puglia what the cow is to Normandy, Ireland
or Texas, what the soy bean is to China, what petrol is to
the Middle East. And life here is changing fast.

But, read on: The story only gets more interesting.
Well, unless you live around these parts and happen to drive
a tractor.
Reserve your place now!