Mind you the anticipation was not for the evening feast that would bring forth a hundred rugrats from every nearby village.
All the baited expectancy was for the slaughter of the pig that would be roasted for the Feast.For the locals, as well as for most rural subsistence cultures, this is a fairly routine, albeit infrequent, event. Diets do not often include proteins like pigs or cows; rice and beans are the staples here, sometimes accompanied by chicken or freshly-caught fish. For us, the prissy American suburbanites, the sole hazard of obtaining meat is encountering depressed temperatures at the supermarket refrigerated section.
The Killing Crew and Victim: David, Greg, Mario and Charlotte
I have heard for months how Mario and Greg were to slay the little oinker, that it would be Greg himself who would plunge the final knife blow directly into that little porcine heart. But in the past few days, David had also expressed wanting to participate in the offing. Thereupon a plan of sorts was hatched: David would stun the beast by clubbing it on the head; Mario would help hold the animal down and Greg would deliver the final stab. Theoretically, it would all work so swiftly, humanely. Theoretically.
The morning of, I arrived at our hosts’ home to find the Rotaractors sorting clothing, sports equipment, toiletries and school supplies for door-to-door distribution that morning to the people of Playa Gigante. This would be accompanied by Rotaractors’ assistance in water treatment in the form of spiking domestic water wells and tanks with a purifying powder.Unfortunately, the medical team did not arrive at the appointed 8:00 a.m. Nor at 9:00 a.m. Nor 10:00. The ensuing idle time invariably refocused on the impending slaughter. Plans of attack were offered up; roles were checked and rechecked; the group was divided into participants and spectators who would watch the swelling scene from a safe distance. High Noon would commence the ritual (which we have come to learn in Nicaraguan time actually is around 1:00, but more likely 3:00).
Charlotte (that is Dale Jaedtke’s nom de porc) arrived about 11:00 a.m., protesting noisily. With Charlotte tied to a tree, Mario spent time charming and relaxing the pig, as Mario is apt to do. David prepared his role by repeatedly hitting a tree stump with a mallet. Over and over again. Much to the amusement of us spectators. Then more waiting.The arrival of the local slaughter crew signaled: Time to Kill.
The rapidity of what next occurred stood in sharp contrast to the lounge languid morning. Dale and I scrambled closer to the surf to video and photograph respectively. David, in his green Rotaract shirt, stood briefly and muttered a prayer, while next to him Greg fashioned a bandanna into a quasi-warrior’s headband (the overall incongruous effect, however, was more that of a stubble-faced sushi chef). The tropical sun glinted off his butcher knife. David walked down to the pig, quietly ensconced by the large shade tree that roofed our beach patio. Alongside and facing surfward in the same direction as the pig, David again took practice swings, striking air some two feet above the head of the cowering Charlotte. Then he dropped his shoulder and delivered the blow, square to the broad forehead. Charlotte recoiled back on all fours and launched a guttural scream that broke the sedate surf-serenaded scene; a wrenching pig howl of fear and surprise; a veritable ‘WTF!” of Pig Latin pissoffedness. The pig reacted swiftly, trotting south a few feet, still tethered. Mario grabbed the mallet from David and delivered another glancing strike, again sending Charlotte running until restrained by the limit of her ever-tightening noose. David, having collected himself ,again took the mallet and delivered the effective blow: down she went to her right flank, her body convulsing in rolling spasms not unlike bacon jumping and sizzling in a hot pan.
This was Greg’s cue. He positioned himself astride the quivering Charlotte, towering as the Rhodian Colossus over his harbor. He positioned his knife flat to the plane of the ribs and deftly inserted at the site where he and Mario determined to be best: the heart. A squeal. Knife retracted and reinserted. One final, demur porcine protest, a spurt of blood, another plunge of the knife, this time alongside Mario’s dagger, and Charlotte lay still.A poignant moment as pig became pork.
David delivers the first blow.
Mario delivers the second blow.
Greg stabs the first time.
Mario stabs with his dagger..
Greg, triumphant.
Dinner!


