Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Don Marcio, 1945-2015


Growing up, my Tio Marcio always had a movie to share. His library was extensive. Each one of his VHS tapes held anywhere between three to six movies. New releases, classic joints, B-movies, Spanish, English, comedy, action flicks, you name it. He always had the two VCR set up in his home, perfect for dubbing. He’d rent a movie damn near every day and recorded it just for fun. It was his hobby. Every time we visited him, we’d always leave with a new release. He was our family’s Red Box, our very own live stream app. I’d browse his collection like walking through Blockbuster. And the great thing was we didn’t owe him anything. “Have you seen this one?” he’d say. His reviews were simple and to the point, something like “esta buena” was equivalent to Siskell & Ebert’s “two thumbs up.” But that was the only time he kept things short and sweet. He knew how to command an audience. My Tio had excellent oratory skills. He had a speaking voice akin to how Vicente Fernandez sings. His word play was poetic and poignant. He used vivid examples and painted pictures during his speeches at weddings, quincenieras, and family gatherings. I always looked forward to hearing him speak because I knew he was about to drop the mic on everyone. That’s who I remember growing up, a stoic man with many depths. He had his demons too but I’ve learned now as a grown man, we all battle those daily.


During my childhood, my family never really talked about the past. No one sat the younger generation down to tell “back in my day” stories. At least not when we were kids because, hey, we were kids and we were on a need-to-know basis. The only way you’d learn about your family history was by eavesdropping on grown folks conversations during the holidays or in passing when visiting Abuelita Consuelo’s house.  I say that to say, I cannot give you the definitive history about my uncle’s life. I can only share my perspective, what I saw, heard and experienced.  And from what I know, he was a well-known, super connected business man in Honduras and brought that same passion to the United States. He instilled that work ethic and drive in his children and it trickled down generationally to me and my younger cousins. I looked up to his sons and daughters as examples of what to do with my life: go to college and establish a career (not just a job). Their success is the realization of his vision when he left Honduras to escape political turmoil. He had deep political ties in his birth country and remained passionate about it all until the day he died— ironically or poetically while on vacation in Honduras. 



The other day, my mother shared that it was my Tio Marcio who helped put her paperwork in order so that she could come to the U.S. and be with my dad after they were married. Skimming through old photo albums she pointed to a picture of her with my Tio and said: that was the day he drove me to the airport. We continued skimming the album and we came across my parent’s backyard wedding in Honduras. That was your Tio Marcio’s house, she said.  Of course it was, I thought. My Tio was more a grandfather-figure to me than uncle and it was clear that he dutifully filled the role of patriarch for the entire Sanchez family in one way or another. Over the next two days, we’ll say goodbye to him at his wake and funeral as he joins his son Juan Carlos, his sister Ceneyda, his mother Consuelo and his father Andres in heaven. The Sanchez-Montoya legacy they all helped create will be there to mourn him. In that gathering and moving forward, I hope to celebrate him by remembering and honoring what he and his siblings have endlessly preached my entire life: family always comes first.

Tio Marcio taking my mother, Janett, to the airport to come to the U.S.




Abuela Consuelo, Tio Marcio, Tia Ceneyda