After fleeing civil war as a child, the 'mayor of the rail trail' in Hamilton uses rock art to help him heal - Action News
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Hamilton

After fleeing civil war as a child, the 'mayor of the rail trail' in Hamilton uses rock art to help him heal

If its a nice day in Hamilton, chances are good that Antonio Merino will be sitting at his special spot alongside the Escarpment Rail Trail.

With his sculptures and painted rocks, Antonio Merino has become a familiar face on the Escarpment trail

How the 'mayor of the rail trail' in Hamilton uses rock art to heal after fleeing El Salvador's civil war as a child

2 years ago
Duration 2:27
With his sculptures and painted rocks, Antonio Merino has become a familiar face on the Escarpment trail in Hamilton. He uses rock art to help him heal after fleeing El Salvador's civil war as a child.

If it's a nice day in Hamilton, chances are good that Antonio Merino will be sitting at his special spot alongside the Escarpment Rail Trail.

His nook on the Mountain side of the trail, near the foot of the Margate Stairs, can't be missed it's a solid 15 metres of sculptures and artwork made from painted rocks, fallen branches and other found objects.

A curvy branch juts from a log, evoking the head and body of a swan. Painted rocks are everywhere, bearing messages supporting essential workers or in remembrance of people who have died. There's a row of sticks that have been painted blue to look like a pond, with wooden birds and alligators looking over it and a fish trapped on a line inside.

"It's just a passion for me," said Merino, enjoying his home-away-from-home on a recent, hot-as-an-oven summer day. "It's a way to express without words. I did this all because I like to see a better world."

Tall wooden stakes hold up a tarp with two seats underneath it one for Merino and one for the litany of guests who stop by for a visit each day. The densely treed area of the Niagara Escarpment provides plenty of canopy shade as well, with the little sun that is able to peek through the trees forming a speckled, cheetah-print of light on the forest floor.

Nearly everyone who walks by says hi to Merino, who has become a central part ofthecommunity that has developed among regular trail users. "He's the mayor of the trail," saidone passerby.

A man sits under a tarp along a path in the forest, surrounded by painted rocks on the ground among the trees.
Antonio Merino sits among his creations on a hot day in Hamilton, in June 2022. (Saira Peesker/CBC)

"It's really great to see somebody utilize the space, utilize found objects and just make it their own," said Laura Heaney, who stopped to visit while walking past with her dog. "My first impressions were that somebody had a creative streak in them and wanted to put it out there in the world."

Sandra France, who hikes past twice a day, says the spot has become a focal point for trail users.

"It's like a little community down here and this is the hub," she says. "Sometimes you've got to take a number if you want to be able to say hello to him because he's very popular and keeps everyone going around here."

'This is helping me to releasepain, sorrow'

Merino is 53,with a slight frame and gentlesmile. His ever-present dark sunglasses are held on with a cord, and his dark hair is thick and cut short.

He takes pride in the fact that the space he's created brings joy to the people who go by, but he's also made pieces that hint at what is beneath his positive countenance.

"A man from nowhere, just giving hope," reads one. "Lost soul," says another.

"This is helping me to release my pain, my sorrow, and the horror that I lived in the past," he told CBC Hamilton. "When people say, 'The past is gone, yesterday is gone,' it all depends. Yesterday can be gone, but the horror stays. There are two choices: do you live in hell or learn how to live with the hell inside you?"

Merino was born in El Salvador, raised by his grandmother after his mother abandoned him when he wasthree months old, he says. The brutality and chaos of the civil war took over his life at age 10, its atrocities echoing in his head to this day.

The war would go on to kill more than 75,000 people between 1979 and 1992, and about 8,000 more would disappear, according to the United Nations. Some of those were Merino's family members, neighbours and friends including his grandmother, which left him on his own at age 11.

The pain brought me here, but that pain made my heart soften.- Rail trail artist Antonio Merino

Later, the threat of being forced to join the army made him flee the country. He moved through Costa Rica and Mexico while waiting for a Canadian visa, finally moving to this country on Aug. 16, 1989.

"The pain brought me here, but that pain made my heart soften and I learned how to be more kindful," says Merino, who lives with post-traumatic stress disorder and receives disability support payments as a result. "All the people I saw get killed, I believe their spirits came to me to protect me."

He lived in Belleville and Cambridge before eventually settling in Hamilton many years ago.

When COVID-19 hit, Merino was in the process of trying to get his high school diploma through an adult education school, which he says shut down with the pandemic. The isolation of that period combined with his existing mental health struggles left him in a dark place, until the day he discovered the rail trail.

A woman stands on a forested path with her hand on her hip, her other hand holding a leash the leads to her dog.
My first impressions were that somebody had a creative streak in them and wanted to put it out there in the world," says Laura Heaney, standing along the trail, June 21, 2022. (Saira Peesker/CBC)

"I actually live by the trail, a half a block, and did not know the trail was here," he says, noting he's been in the same Wentworth Street apartment for 16 years.

That firstday on the trail, he found a lost photo album, an interesting rock, an emerald, and another rock painted with the words, "you are loved" which he saw right at the spot where he now sits daily.

"I got this crazy feeling that something was going on," he said. "Then I came back the next day and started collecting rocks."

'2years ago, I was just a masked man in a ghost town'

Now Merino spends six to 10hours a day near the spot, sanding, painting and arranging the rocks and other natural items he finds. He attributes almost a mystical power to some of his most special finds.

"I have some rocks I won't sell because I believe I will be cursed if I sell them. I believe Mother Nature brought them to me," he says.

His friends along the trail also bring him rocks sometimes, as well as money he has a donation box, but says things have dried up lately with the hard times people are facing. Some people ask him to make rock art to honour deceased loved ones. One woman even begged him to let her kiss his hand, after sensing he was a special person.

"It feels very strange," Merino said. "I said to this lady, 'I am a normal person. I am not an angel.I am nobody.'" Helet her kiss it anyway.

He also gets plenty of attention from local children; a "blessing," he says.

"I have maybe 50 letters and rocks that kids made for me Parents come here and lend me the kids and I babysit them. I teach them art.

"Two years ago I was just a masked man in a ghost town. Nobody knew me. [Now] sometimes when I am downtown, police officers put the siren on and say, 'Antonio!' People downtown say, 'Hey, I know you!'"

He says feeling like he's part of something has changed his outlook, and he hopes to provide a piece of that to others.

"I always want to be a humble person and bring positive energy to everyone who goes by here. That's my main goal."
A man in sunglasses stands smiling in the forest.
Antonio Merino decorates a section of the rail trial with artwork made from painted rocks, fallen branches and other found objects. (Saira Peesker/CBC)