lune 12, 2013 (The Portlanì» (Dhscruer An Audience at Last Arts X c o n t i n u e d f r o m page 11 two ardent fans began a years-long search to find out what happened to their musical idol. Their enthusiasm fo r th at se a rc h —and d ire c to r Bendjelloul s enthusiasm for the re- markable story that attended its outcom e-fueled the making of this film, which was itself a passion project that took years to make. As it turns out, truth was stranger, and more interesting, than fiction, While his music was fueling the anti- apartheid movement half a world away, Rodriguez went on living an obscure working-class existence in Detroit, where he had grown up in a large Mexican-American family. He worked construction and res- torationjobs and raised three daugh- ters (quite well, by all indications— -they are a compelling part of this account). He maintained an interest in music ( I attend the shows," he says mildly) and in poetry and art, appreciations he cultivated in his daughters. He also maintained an course — but for me, it is more than that. Rodriguez is a truly remarkable musician with a prophetic gift, who went almost completely unnoticed until his mid-50s, and might well have spent his whole life that way This happens all the time, particu- larly to people who are poor and come from underrepresented cul- tures. It is worth reflecting on how easy it is for a dominant culture to miss outsider voices who cany deep and prophetic wisdom. Second, Rodriguez himself is a profoundly inspiring example of a person who lives consistently out of his deep core. The story has an odd, tim e-capsule quality to it- Rodriguez writes and performs a good quantity of inspiring and thoughtful music and then, when it seems no one is listening, weathers his disappointment and simply goes on living his life. He lives it well. And A once-skeptical reporter comments on how this story won him over in part because it embodies the deep hope that every person has - that one day the rest of the world will discover and applaud one's truth worth. jj X interest in philosophy (which he when his fans find him 27 years later studied) and in politics, making an they find a good and decent man unsuccessful run for Detroit mayor He is not bitter; he has not (more evidence of idealism gone stopped thinking and striving and unnoticed). The passions that fu- taking chances. He has passed on eled his music, which speaks to the to his three daughters a good way of experience of dispossessed, per- living, and it shows in how they sis*ed - describe walking through the expe- Eventually, as the film recounts, rience of newfound fame with him the combination of dogged detec- He is gracious and does not waste five work and the emergence of the time wondering what happened to internet enabled Rodriguez's South the royalties for all those albums African fans to find him. His daugh- sold in South Africa (although I ters recollect the surprise and deep certainly wonder about that) One pleasure of traveling to South Af- of his laborer friends likens him to a nca with him and watching their silk worm, noticing that Rodriguez father step on stage to the deafen- transformed his pain into something ing cheers of a sold-out crowd. beautiful. As the friend marvels, who atching the footage (much of it among us can say that we have captured by his oldest daughter) is done such a thing? profoundly moving. His youngest Here is rich inspiration for all aughter recalls a strange sense those who toil in obscurity, with no that they were watching him do what expectation of ever being heard. The he was always meant to do, yet inspiration is not simply the hope never imagined: he went "from be- that one will be discovered; it is the ing the outcast to being who he was hope that one could live one's life so - a musician playing to his fans on well that in some sense whether one stage. It is hard to describe the is discovered is not the pivotal is- ease with which he accepts it all, as sue. Rodriguez responds to his ne w- t ough he has been dealing with found notoriety warmly, but he does such crowds all his life, and yet also not appear to be much affected by it. with unmistakable humility. One might search a long time to find Which brings me to the two les- someone like that, sons that struck me most in this D arken Ortega is a judge on the story. A once-skeptical reporter Oregon Court of Appeals and the comments on how this story won first woman of color to serve in that him over in part because it embodies capacity. Her movie review column the deep hope that every person Opinionated Judge appears regu- has - that one day the rest of the larly in the Portland Observer You world will discover and applaud can find her m ovie blog at ones truth worth. He is right, of opinionatedjudge.blogspot.com. Page 17 FNTED1 ENTERTAINMENT L ove, S elf- D isc o v e ry an d H u m an T riu m p h ery and human triumph. Despite having only television characters for professional role models when she was a child, Sotomayor resolved to become a lawyer. That dream took her from valedictorian of her high school class to the highest honors at Princeton, Yale Law School, the New York County District Attorney’s office, private practice and appointment to the Federal District Court by the age of 40. The book debuted at the top of the New York Times Bestseller List for Hardcover Nonfiction in early 2013 and remained there for several weeks. A Christian Science Monitor review notes “a surpris­ ing wealth of candor, wit, and affection. No topic is off-limits, not her diabetes, her father’s death, her I divorce, her cousin’s death from AIDS.” According to The Washington Post, “Anyone wondering how a child raised in public housing, without speaking English, by an alcoholic father and a largely absent mother could become the first Latina on the Supreme Court will find the answer in these pages.” Extra copies of the book will be available at all neighborhood libraries in early January. Readers are Multnomah County Library has selected Supreme encouraged to share these extra copies with friends, Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s “My Beloved World” coworkers and neighbors. for its 12th annual community reading project, Eveiy- Beginning in February, you’re invited to share body Reads 2014. your thoughts at a book discussion at your neigh­ The first Hispanic and third woman appointed to borhood library, local bookstore or elsewhere in the the Supreme Court, Sotomayor has become an Ameri­ community. can icon. In this autobiography, she details her jour­ Justice Sotomayor will come to Portland to speak ney from a Bronx housing project to the federal bench. on Tuesday, March 11 at the Arlene Schnitzer Con­ “My Beloved World” is a story of love, self-discov- cert Hall. Tickets are now on sale at PCPA.com. Justice’s memoir selected for Everybody Reads Family Law Bankruptcy Criminal Law Expungements Animal Law Real Estate Matters Wills & Trusts Probate PC ATTORNEYS "7f\ Local Lawyers fo r Your Legal Needs (503) 288-5522 3537 N. Williams Avenue, Suite 101 www.petersonlevine.com To Place Your Classified Advertisement Phone: 503-288-0033 Fax: 503-288-0015 e-mail: classifieds@portlandobserver.com