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El Niño Que Murió “Como Un Hombre” (León, 1955)

We are deeply interested in knowing to what extent these stories touched our own families, because what you are about to hear was not an isolated case. It was an entire generation sacrificed in the name of tradition. The case of Sebastián Montes began long before his birth. It began in 1920 when his paternal grandfather, Don Aurelio Montes Santibáñez, opened his shoe workshop at 312 Hidalgo Street, in the heart of León.

Don Aurelio was a man trained in the old school.   He had learned the trade at the age of 7, beaten by his own father every time a seam was crooked. And for him, that had been the only education that mattered. León, Guanajuato, in 1947, was a city of just over 90,000 inhabitants, known throughout Mexico [music] as the shoe capital.

The city air smelled permanently of tanned leather [music] and glue.   In the mornings, when the sun was just beginning to warm the cobbled streets, you could hear the clatter of hundreds of hammers hitting soles in workshops scattered throughout the city.   It was the sound of an industry that fed thousands of families, but it was also the sound of thousands of children losing their childhood.

Don Aurelio’s workshop was located in a two-story adobe house with walls almost a meter thick, painted a yellow that time and dust had turned into ochre. The workshop occupied the entire ground floor, a space of approximately 60 square meters  with a cracked cement floor, small windows [music] with wooden frames that were almost never opened, and a [music] high beamed ceiling where cowhides in different stages of tanning hung.

There were four solid wood workbenches , stained by decades of glue and dye. On the walls, tools hung from rusty nails, shoe lasts of different sizes, huge scissors for cutting leather, small-headed hammers, needles as thick as nails. The smell was overwhelming. A mixture of raw leather, toluene-based industrial glue, human sweat, and the smoke from the perpetual cigar that Don Aurelio kept between his lips while he worked.

That smell permeated the clothes, the hair, the skin. The children who worked there would arrive at school on the few days they could attend smelling of chemicals, and their classmates would avoid them. In 1947, Mexico was living through the final years of President Miguel Alemán Valdés’s six-year term.

It was a time of accelerated industrialization, migration from the countryside to the cities, and promises of modernity. But in places like León, the artisanal [music] tradition resisted strongly, and with it, the old customs about how a child should be educated also resisted. Don Aurelio was 62 years old in 1947. He was a man of medium height, robust build the product of decades of physical work, huge hands as calloused as tree bark, and a gaze that rarely revealed any emotion.

She always dressed the same. Navy blue denim pants stained with glue. White cotton shirt with the sleeves rolled up to the elbows. leather apron that reached down to his knees.   She never smiled. His wife, Doña Refugio, had died 10 years earlier from tuberculosis. And from then on, Don Aurelio lived alone on the top floor of the mansion, except when his grandson was there.

Sebastián Montes was born on February 3, 1938. He was the son of Andrés Montes, the only son of Don Aurelio who had survived [music] childhood. Andrés had rejected the shoemaking trade  against his father’s wishes.  He had studied to be a rural teacher.   He had married a woman from a nearby town, Rosa María Gutiérrez, and together they had had Sebastián.

But on September 8, 1946, when Sebastian was just 8 years old, his parents died in a bus accident on the road to Guadalajara. Sebastian was orphaned.   I had no siblings. His mother’s family lived in conditions of extreme poverty and could not take care of him. So Sebastian was taken to León, to the house of his paternal grandfather, the only relative who had the means to support him.

[music] Don Aurelio agreed to receive him, but with one condition that he made clear from the first day. In his house, lazy people were not tolerated. Sebastian was a thin boy, of fragile build, with straight black hair that his mother used to comb carefully every morning. He had his father’s dark eyes, large and expressive, which in the first [music] months after his parents’ death remained almost always full of tears.

He was a naturally quiet, obedient child who had learned in the rural school, where he studied to read and write with remarkable ease. His teacher, Professor Guadalupe Ramirez, had told his parents shortly before his death that Sebastian had a talent for studies, that he could go far if he continued his education.

But Don Aurelio did not believe in formal education. For him, school was a modern invention that created weak men, incapable of working with their hands. He had built a thriving business without being able to read much and was convinced that this was all a man needed, a trade. A trade learned with sacrifice, with pain if necessary.

[music] Sebastian’s first day at the workshop was September 20, 1946. He was 8 years old.  and 10 months. Don Aurelio woke him up at 5 in the morning. Outside it was still dark and the September air in León was cool, almost cold.   He gave her a glass of coffee with milk and a sweet roll. Then he took it downstairs to the workshop.

He showed her a small table in a corner. a table that had been built specifically for a child to work on. The height was lower than the other tables, but not low enough for the child to work comfortably. Sebastian would have to hunch over to see his work. Don Aurelio explained to him in a dry and emotionless voice that from that day on, Sebastián would work in the workshop 6 days a week from 6 in the morning until 6 in the evening.

On Sundays he could rest and go to mass. Regarding school, Don Aurelio was clear: school is for lazy people. You’ll learn something real here. Sebastian said nothing. What could an 8-year-old orphan, alone, say?   He nodded,  and thus began his education. Sebastian’s first tasks were simple [music] but tedious. Clean the wooden shoe lasts, sweep the leather scraps off the floor, and organize the tools.

But Don Aurelio soon showed him the real work. Within two weeks, Sebastian was already gluing soles. The process was simple, in theory. Industrial glue was applied to the sole [music] and the bottom of the shoe. They waited until both surfaces were at the exact point of adhesion, neither too wet nor too dry, and then pressed firmly together.

A poorly glued shoe would come off in a matter of days. A well-glued shoe would last for years. The glue they used was an industrial product based on toluene, a thick, yellowish liquid  with a sweetish smell that initially caused dizziness and nausea. In poorly ventilated spaces, like Don Aurelio’s workshop, the concentration of chemical vapors reached dangerous levels, but that didn’t matter.

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