A more polite way of going through life
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The other day I was taking my usual walk down town to buy some
groceries. There are two signals on my way -- one at Poppy and one at
Marguerite Avenue. Now, I obey those signals. There was a time when I
might have skipped across regardless, but that time is long in the
past, so now I wait for the green pedestrian signal before crossing
the street.
So there I was, standing at the corner of Marguerite and Coast
Highway, waiting for the OK. The signal changed and I proceeded to
cross the street, only to find a large black car barreling straight
at me. To say I leaped out of the way would be an exaggeration. At my
age, rapid shuffle is probably more accurate, but somehow I managed
to maneuver my decrepit body out of the way, and the driver flew by,
horn blaring disdainfully.
That took me back to American Samoa and how differently automobile
horns are used there. In most places in the world, automobile horns
are used to express impatience (the driver of the black car), anger,
frustration or rage. Not in American Samoa. Their horns are used to
express friendship, courtesy, cooperation and gratitude. The only
time you would ever hear a horn was if you were waiting to make a
left-hand turn into a flow of oncoming traffic or if you are waiting
to pull into such a flow.
Here, everyone speeds up and crowds in jealously. Let someone else
in? Not on your life. There, a car in the oncoming flow would stop
and sound his horn with a polite beep. That meant, “Please come out
[or through].” In return, you sounded your horn with a responding
beep to say thank you. Try that here and both drivers would be shot.
Of course, it helps that there is a great deal less traffic in Samoa,
but it also helps that Samoans are uniformly polite.
While I was there, I saw a letter in which the sender accused the
recipient of everything under the sun. He was a liar, a thief, a
fraud and a deceitful, mendacious, conniving scoundrel. After a
couple of pages of unrestrained vituperation, the last sentence read,
“May the spirit of the approaching Christmas and New Year’s bring you
and all your loved ones happiness, success and good health.”
This politeness is probably an outgrowth of all the ceremony that
is so much a part, even today, of Samoan life. They love to make
long, effusive speeches, and this often extended to the court room
where I presided. I remember, in particular, one witness who had been
called to give testimony.
Attorney: “State your name, please.”
Witness: “Thank you for asking that question. May it please the
honorable court, I would like to say how honored I am to be in the
presence of this honorable court which I honor and respect. Insofar
as the oath I just took I wish to advise the honorable court that I
am a sincere Christian, that I am active in my church, that I worship
God, and that I will, in the presence of God, give nothing but honest
evidence. Will you repeat the question please?”
Less flowery but even more memorable was a witness in another case
I heard. The witness stood in the witness box and raised his right
hand.
Clerk: “Do you solemnly swear that the evidence you are about to
give in the matter before this court will be the truth, the whole
truth and nothing but the truth?”
Witness: “No.”
Now there’s someone who took the oath seriously.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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