Jesus Torbado. El imperio de arena. Barcelona. Plaza & Janes. 1998. 286 pages. ISBN 84-01-38583-0.
Gerling, David Ross
Of all the Spanish overseas territories, perhaps the least known
were those protectorates in the western Sahara whose boundaries were the
Atlantic Ocean on the west and Morocco, Algeria, and Mauritania on the
north, east, and south respectively. This veritable "empire of
sand" was created by Isabel La Catolica and abandoned by General
Franco, once and for all, in 1975.
Jesus Torbado invites us to relive the last forty years of this
quasi- extraterrestrial enclave through a series of flashbacks and
flashforwards that he weaves around the protagonist, Lisa Cifuentes de
Vega. She was the only Spaniard who stayed behind when all the others,
including the Spanish Foreign Legion, left. For almost the entire novel
we think we know why Lisa refused to go, but it is not until
story's end that we are jolted with the truth. In fact, Torbado so
completely lulls us into a sense of complacency that we do not even look
forward to a surprise ending. Instead, like the protagonist herself, we
abandon any attempt to control time in this timeless outpost and give
ourselves over to the existential moment.
By and large, most of those moments are worth living, even though
the Spanish Civil War looms ominously overhead like a Saharan sirocco.
Mercifully, Torbado dispenses with the sordid details of the war and
begins his story with young Lisa's departure from La Mancha and her
arrival, via the Canary Islands, in sun-drenched, coastal Sidi Ifni,
where her aunt and uncle became in loco parentis. In one sense, it was
as if Lisa had been brought there by a genie, since the land was one
where even the most commonplace possessed an aura of marvel.
Accordingly, when Lisa relinquished her virginity to Captain Rafa
Hernandez, the rite de passage unfolded in a starlit palm grove with
crescent moon overhead and a muezzin's languorous chanting
emanating from a distant minaret. There are also moments of adventure
for adventure's sake reminiscent of Percival Wren's Beau
Geste, as when we glimpse life lived on the edge by legionnaires at Ug
Gug and Tabelcut, whose toponymy was as exotic as their locations were
remote.
Notwithstanding the extraordinariness of Lisa's surroundings,
she was not blinded to the inexorable duplicity and betrayal by Franco
and Spain as a whole that led to the ultimate demise of the
protectorates and the life-style associated with them. Torbado makes
very clear that Franco and his cabinet ministers at the Foreign Office
displayed arrogant ingratitude toward those Spaniards who had tried to
make of the empire of sand something more than a mirage and a stage for
international proxy wars. Nevertheless, the demoralization that the
General's political expediency caused among the troops gave rise to
some unforgettable compensatory behavior, such as that which occurred
one Saturday afternoon when Lisa was visited by a dejected young
recruit. The combination of an older, more worldly Lisa's generous
desire to lift the spirits of the homesick boy while simultaneously
releasing her own pent-up emotions culminates in a scene that makes the
movie Deep Throat pale by comparison.
Jesus Torbado's intimate knowledge of western Saharan
geography, along with his historically based fiction, puts into motion a
most pleasing sphere of discourse whose intertextual components never
once allow the story line to crash.
David Ross Gerling
Sam Houston State University