Back from my wanderings through the land of  straight roads and windmills and at home in a Barcelona distinctly less happy  from the one I’d left behind, I noticed how  high the number of beggars had risen. Before, I had known them all, or rather  it never surprised me to see one, because they either looked familiar or it  were about time a beggar would emerge. The  accidental beggar, you could say, was part of the scenery, and it was in this  tranquil and touristic manner that I had learned to endure the classic portrait  of a young gypsie woman, sometimes not all that young, with a sleeping baby on  her arm, drugged they are, some say, picturing a devoted mother Mary in  faithful trust that her lord will have decided what’s best for her. Some fall for this image and spend their  guilty money, some ignore it and some, like myself at times I must admit, get  upset from what we see, not always able to accept the mockery that is made of  feelings we still value sacred and true, even though our parents left their  churches for us a long time ago.
        When I left town to set out on adventures which  have been described in detail on ondertusseninbarcelona.blogspot.com, the first  kneelers had been appearing in the streets. You’ll probably know them, they are  standing on their knees on the sidewalk with a piece of carton in front of them  or sometimes hanging round their neck. No tengo trabajo y tres niños enfermos,  the cards normally read. Their posture is just as devotional and a lot more  painful than the gypsie women‘s, but since they seem  prepared to truly suffer and they usually are of the prescribed faith, they  seldom provoke outrage. I suddenly saw a whole lot more of them upon entering  what during my absence I realized had become my hometown.
        Then I went underground and I saw a man of  northafrican descent who prostrated himself between stations in the manner of  the brethren, lamenting and smashing his hands on the floor where other people  just had put there shoes, and although his speech was well-delivered and  equally understood (he had just been released from prison and hadn’t been able  to find work), he attracted positive reactions only from some pakistani,  accustomed I guess to this particular mode of submission.
        I saw begging musicians  as well, or musical beggars perhaps, either way you couldn’t call them real musicians. Their trade was not to evoke  pleasure or admiration, but pity. They were a man and a woman dragging behind  them a dirty shopping bag on wheels, laden with a soundsystem and with a cd  player on top. The man sort of accompanied their soundbag on the concertina and  the woman sort of asked money for it. They clearly felt uncomfortable about  their affairs, and I thought they must be from Donetsk or somewhere.
All of this made me wonder how many beggars the  streets of Barcelona would bear. Although there still is a lot of it around, la  ciudad condal is not the best place to go asking for money. We expect people to  have regular paychecks and full access to all services here. Even a simple tip  in a bar is sometimes too much asked for. This is, after all, the best city in  the world to live in. I remembered what la chica crisis had said when she left  me behind on the cobbled streets of tiny windy Tarifa: not everybody gets to  meet me, but you did and I hope you’ll think fondly of me. Would the  unfortunate ones who end up on the pavement recall earlier times when others  took it hard here, I asked, and would those stories yield the inspiration  needed to rise up against arrogance and complacency? Or would they be happy  with barely escaping alive, letting themselves be shoved aside by a society  that can’t find means for them any longer? I had seen economic hard times  before, but in a different place and in a different mood, as careless and  easily motivated as I was and still so unimaginably young. Now I felt old, even  middleaged, like I were no longer ready to accept the stupidity of this world  and at the same time not having the taste to fight it. And I longed for reason,  but there isn’t much of it around these days when money is the only thing  that’s counted.