I found this tribute on the site of Felipe Zapata, 2006:
"We lost a good guy this week. Al
Kinnison died here in Pátzcuaro in his rambling Colonial mansion on Calle
Navarrete. He was 79. Al was a crusty fellow, a Libertarian, a keen intellect
and, most of all, an Arizona cowboy. He believed in guns, self-reliance and
freedom."
"He and his second wife, Jean,
moved to Pátzcuaro, Mexico about seven years ago. Jean died last year of a
heart attack. Al had cancer. A former mining engineer and naval officer who
spoke English, Spanish and a little Japanese, Al did not care for government,
which was one reason he moved to Mexico. He was against the Iraq war, but
before you label him a liberal, know that he was also against government doing
much of anything. Al just did not want to be messed with.
Ultra-polite, Al always stood for
a lady. He did it even if you were not a lady. Opened their doors. He accepted
no crude talk around them either. No, sir.
He often spoke of his desire to
move to Guatemala. Government interference is increasing in Mexico, and it
would be less in Guatemala, he believed. Guatemala was his final dream. His
preferred mode of moving to Guatemala would have been on horseback. A
Winchester would have been bouncing off the horse’s haunches. A Colt .45 would
have been bouncing on his own hip.
Al was like that. Don’t be fooled
by that prissy French beret in the photo. Al almost always sported a cowboy
hat. But that was just one side. Al was a Rachmaninoff man . . . and romantic,
though he would not have admitted it readily. He and Jean were often seen
walking hand-in-hand through the plaza. So Al was a fighter and a lover. He
enjoyed listening to Rachmaninoff quietly in his final weeks.
Al Kinnison was a classic example
of the Gringo oddballs one sometimes finds in Mexico. Al was a great oddball, a
rare one, a wonderful guy, and will be sorely missed."
No comments:
Post a Comment