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Showing posts with label Personal Reflections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Personal Reflections. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Lintik Lang ang Walang Ganti

I would admit that I’m not a fan of Ted Failon and his radio partner Korina.  In the few times that I get to listen to them at DZMM, I have the impression that they are arrogant and self-righteous.  Regardless of this personal perception, however, all my sympathy goes to Ted Failon on the shocking incident last week involving the shooting and eventual death of his wife Trina, and the arrest of Trina’s siblings and the family’s housemates.  What we saw on TV exposed the arrogance, insensitivity, vindictiveness , and brutality of the QCPD officers and men.  The whole thing was repulsive.  How could the police do such actions, which are legally questionable, morally inappropriate and violative of the culture of the Filipinos (not wanting to leave a dying relative) – in full glare of the tv cameras.  It’s as if they were saying “Lintik lang ang walang ganti” to get even to Ted.

 

But it shouldn’t only be the QCPD police that should be denounced, investigated and punished.  The Secretary of Justice, himself, should be reprimanded for dignifying unverified rumors and insinuating that it could be a case of parricide.  Well, what can we expect from the Sec of Injustice. (matagal ng pakawala iyan).

 What about Percida Acosta, of the PAO?  Surprise! I agree  with Gonzales.  KSP is the kindest words I can say, although a few months back when she issued a pronouncement that the MIA-road incident was a shoot-out and not a rub-out and even challenged Human Rights Commissioner Leila de Lima to prove that it was a rub-out, I already said that she was C _ _ _ Y.

 Obstruction of justice is conveniently invoked in the Trina Etong-incident.  Such hypocrisy and double standard!  Isn’t obstruction of justice being committed with great abandon by this administration in order to hide the TRUTH? What do you call USec Manny Gaete (now SEC commissioner) facilitating the flight out of the country of Jun Lozada when the Senate was about to invite him to the NBN-ZTE investigation; the administration’s efforts to block cabinet members from testifying in Senate/Congressional investigations, the abduction/rescue (?) of Vidal Doble, a witness to the Hello Garci wire-tapping incident, and many, many more.

 By the way, there were shooting incidents in the past which were accepted to be suicide cases and were not investigated, even if there were “rumors” in cafĂ© shops regarding the circumstances surrounding those cases - (the law-student son of a popular politician, and the former Regal star Alfie Anido, then rumoured to be the boy-friend of the daughter of another politician).  Why such an interest in the Etong case? The reason is obvious.  It’s a warning to all of us.  So, who will protect us from the police, and higher than them - the powers that be?  Let us voice out our outrage even only here in the internet.

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Thursday, April 16, 2009

April Fools on Easter Sunday

“In our lives as Christians, we … must prove our love for the TRUTH in [Christ’s] life and teachings. We must love each other and risk our all for the TRUTH, because God commands us so and Christ did no less for us and expected no less from us.”

That was the Easter message of the GLORIETTA.

TRUTH? HA?

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

HA?HUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHUHU!

AGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Happy Easter



(Thanks to the owner of the picture. I can't recall if I got this from Flicker or from Skyscraper.)

Happy Easter to all!

After the long holiday I hope you have been re-charged physically and spiritually.  Where did you and your family spend your vacation?

Me, I just stayed  in Manila.  I still reported for work until Wednesday.  On Thursday, I couldn’t get myself to move and take the trip to Calamba.  I simply felt lazy.  I decided to stay put.  I thought I could in fact do some reflections alone at home, go to church, and be able to go over my files to dispose of tons of garbage that I have accumulated. (You attend a conference bringing only your report but you go home with a bagful of handouts – or ‘basurs’, many of which you never get to read seriously. This is especially true in many government conferences.  Bako baga Ate Marynat? It’s a good thing that we can now just bring memory sticks/CDs or DVDs.)

When I was a child, when Holy Week comes, nanay would prevent us from playing and reading our favorite serye in Pilipino Komiks, Espesyal, Hiwaga, and Tagalog Klasiks.  Even laughing out loud was not allowed because Jesus was suffering.  Bawal mag-enjoy.

Penance and abstinence take a different form in today’s technological age.  The Vatican issued a directive to the faithful to refrain from using the internet and cellphone at least for one day.  I must have complied because I used both sparingly.  I didn’t even watch the TV or played loud music…..

But I decided to watch movies while sorting out my documents.  I watched not just one, or two but five! but I chose those that would lift my spirits. (If your fond of movies I recommend that you see the following films, if you still haven’t.)

“Shawshank Redemption” (about a banker who was unjustly sentenced to two life-terms in prison for crimes he did not commit – the murder of his wife and her lover.  He spent 19 years in prison before he was able to escape.  The inhuman condition in prison did not crush his spirit and he remained steadfast in his hope for freedom.  I don’t think I’d be able to last that long if I were innocent.  It stars Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman). 

“Into the Wild” (about a young college graduate from a dysfunctional family who donated all his savings to Oxfam America (an NGO), burned all his ID cards and remaining dollars and went hitchhiking across America with the goal of reaching Alaska to escape society and commune with nature.  Along the way he had to work to earn money for food and supplies, camped out with hippies, and became friends with an old widower.  He did reach Alaska but eventually ran out of supplies and died of hunger.  He had a short but fascinating life.  This is based on a true story.  What attracted me first to this movie is that it was directed by Sean Penn, my favourite actor (Mystic River, Milk, Carlito’s Way, I am Sam).

“Sometimes in April” (an HBO movie about the genocide in Rwanda (a small country in Africa) in 1994, when the Hutus’ killed more than 800,000 Tutsis, who were their own countrymen.  Violence was sparked when the Rwandan President, a Tutsi was killed when his plane was shot on April 6 by rebels believed to be Tutsis.  It took a long time before the UN was able to act.  By the way, I’ve learned from the internet that Rwanda has now recovered and is in fact one of the leading countries in IT in Africa.  This movie is better than a similar commercial movie – Hotel Rwanda.

“The Visitor” (about a middle-aged, widowed Connecticut economics professor who has lost his passion for teaching and writing having taught the same subject for about 20 years.  He tries to fill the vacuum by taking classical piano lessons, unsuccessfully.  Life changed when he was sent by his university to Manhattan to deliver/read a paper (written by another professor).  He owned an apartment there and he was surprised to find a Syrian and his Senegalese girlfriend living there.  They were victimized by a real estate broker.  He allowed them to stay.  The Syrian, who was a talented musician taught him to play the African drum and brought him to jazz clubs. (I too, loved the music.) He was beginning to be “re-awakened” when the Syrian was arrested as undocumented alien.  The professor committed himself to help the Syrian.  Unexpectedly, the Syrian’s beautiful mother came to visit his son, and a romance developed between the prof and the mother.  The Syrian was deported and the mother had to follow him to Syria.  Although the prof was again left alone, he had already been awakened to a new world, and a new life.  The movie ended with the professor playing the African drum in wild abandon……. In a subway!)

“A Beautiful Mind” (true story of Prof. John Nash, a Nobel prize winner who almost lost his sanity.  He was a genius suffering from schizophrenia but was able to overcome his mental illness due to the nurturing love and care of his wife.  This won the Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director for Ron Howard of the Da Vinci Code,

Rituals.  I went to Church on Thursday.  This was supposed to be a happy occasion because we commemorate the first celebration of the Eucharist.  The church was already full, so I just stood outside.  The crowd seemed to be smaller compared to previous years.  Perhaps, more people went out of town.   During the washing of the apostles’ feet, I remembered what I used to wonder when I was a child.  What if the apostoles did not wash their feet before the priest did the ceremonial washing? I can visualize one of the regular apostoles, whom we called “Angel sa Lupa”. I wonder if he’s still alive today.

After the mass, there was a procession of the blessed sacrament inside the church.  I liked the smell of the burning incense.  Tantum Ergo was sang.  I can remember the hymn but not the Latin lyrics.  This brought memories of the benediction during first Fridays when we were in high school.  We had to genuflect with both knees then bow our heads.

It was difficult to pray, to concentrate, to commune with the Lord.  There were many distractions.  Teenagers chatting, reading text messages and giggling.  After the mass, I was able to enter the church, but it was like a market place as the lay ministers took their time for the chikahan. 

There was a pabasa/pasyon near the church and near the house of the former KOMISYONer of NBN-ZTE.  You know who he is of course. Yung may sariling burjeer na masarap daw.  The tolda used by the pasyon(istas?) bore the big picture and name of a mandaluyong councillor (kaapilyido ni KOMISYONer.  Of course, that's already a campaign paraphernalia.   I would have wanted to join the “rappers” so I could partake of the dinner.  On the roadside, they were cooking ginataang langka in a big kawa, and pritong galunggong in another big kawali.  

Friday, I watched the siete palabras on TV, both Channel 2 and 7 had their own coverage.  I decided to watch the one at the UST chapel, with the Dominicans covered by Kapuso.  One priest tried to connect with the audience by citing contemporary examples. He was assigned the words “Ngayon din, isasama kita sa Paraiso”.  … hindi kahapon, hindi bukas… kundi ngayon. Hindi gaya ni Santino, na May Bukas Pa”  ….. he probably wasn’t conscious that it was a GMA7 excusive coverage while May Bukas Pa is the top rating teleserye of its fierce competitor, Kapamilya 2.   More than the priests’ sermons, I liked the reflections shared by Boots Anson Roa about her family’s triple whammy – the death of her father, husband, and the illness of her son, and how they have accepted them as God’s will.

I did not join the procession.  In Daet, this was supposed to be the time when the bakasyonistas from Manila make their appearance.  Kabali kamo digdi.  Sabi pa kan iba, ogwa daang “Tagalig” na ang taram pagkalipas nin pirang bulan na pagklase sa Manila. Of course, exempted sina Alot and Rey.  Tagalog talaga sinda, tagalog-Vinzons nga lang.  Dasig-dasig naman dyan.  Maya-maya palingin mo ang kandila ha.

Of course, Holy Week will be without meaning without the Easter Sunday.  More than the passion of Christ, our focus should be on the Resurrection because this is what gives us Hope in the midst of all the present difficulties.

Happy Easter!

 

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Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Anniversaries - Remembering People and Events

 Quezon National Park (photo taken from Flicker)


Advisory:  THIS IS A PURELY PERSONAL ACCOUNT.

Do you know that today, April 7, the second day of the Holy Week is also the 31st anniversary of the first Batasang Pambansa elections? Yes, in 1978 Ninoy Aquino ran as assemblyman and headed the Laban Party  while he was under detention.  Directly pitted against him was Imelda Marcos who was the standard bearer of the Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL).  I also remember Kris Aquino, still a cute be-spectacled little girl standing on a stool campaigning for her father.  She won the hearts of many.  On the eve of the elections, many people (including me) spontaneously came out to the streets and joined the noise barrage to express their support for Laban.  Even those inside their homes were flashing the "L" sign and were also making all sorts of noises.  It was more than a New Year revelry in the streets of Manila.  Yet on election day, Imelda and the entire KBL team won by a landslide while Ninoy and all the Laban candidates lost! There was no mention at all of the noise barrage in the newspapers.

Aside from this political event, today is significant to me personally because it is also the 31st anniversary of my mother’s death. That of my brother is four days from now on April 11.  (By the way, by coincidence, both of my parents’ deaths coincide with major political events.  My father died on Sept 21 and was buried on Sept 23, when the declaration of martial law was announced).

April 7, 1978 was a tragic date for our family.  The day before, I called up my brother in Daet to inform him that our elder brother had his third operation on his prostate cancer.  Hence, the next day, after voting, six members of the family proceeded to Manila on board an owner-type jeep driven by my brother.  Others in the vehicle were nanay, two sisters, a brother-in-law, and a cousin. 

Past 5 pm, I got a message that I had a long distance call at home in Sta. Cruz, Manila (there were no cell phones yet at that time).  I was inside the polling precinct at that time since I was a Laban poll watcher.  When I wouldn’t budge from my place of assignment, I was informed that it was my brod-in-law on the phone, calling from Lucena City.  The group met an accident – the jeep fell in a ravine at the “Eme” – Quezon National Park.

Past 7 pm, together with another brother who was also in Manila to visit our cancer-stricken brother,  we boarded a bus for Lucena.  My mother was already at the morgue of the Lucena Medical City.  Except for a slight bruise on the forehead, her face was clean.  The fatal injury was at the back of her head.  The others were in the hospital rooms.  My brother, who drove the jeep, could hardly open his eyes, I could only see the white part of his eyes but not the eyeballs.  But he could speak.  He told me it was an accident and asked me to have my mother embalmed (itong pwedeng maghaloy daa) because they would  join the funeral as soon as they got well. He had broken ribs and hip bone because he held on to the steering wheel as the jeep turned turtle several times.  My sister and cousin suffered injuries on the neck and chest.  Fortunately, my other sister did not have any major injury except for bruises (nabugbog lang), while my brod-in-law suffered minor injury but could talk and move around on a wheel chair.

As if it were planned, my brod’s wife, a doctor who had already migrated to the US arrived that week for a vacation when the accident occurred.  She arranged for an ambulance to bring my brother to the De Los Santos Hospital in Quezon City.  My sister and her husband, and my cousin were brought to UERM in Sta. Mesa, while my other sister was taken to the Cam Norte Provincial Hospital. (My brother who had cancer and whom they intended to visit was confined at the then GSIS General Hospital, now East Avenue Hospital). So we had patients in several hospitals at the same time.

I was left in Lucena with my other brother to settle the bill and get the necessary permits to transport my mother’s body.  I also had her embalmed in Lucena as it was already nearing afternoon and I was afraid the body would start to decompose.  The funeral car came late in the afternoon.  It was already getting dark when we started our long and slow trip.  We had to stop twice in the middle of nowhere to change tires.  It was past midnight when we reached Daet.

The wake was held at my brother’s residence inside the provincial hospital compound. Relatives and friends came.  Deaths are an opportunity for reunions. They bring together relatives who have not seen each other for a long, long time.  In my case, since I started working in Manila in 1973 until that incident in 1978, I have gone home for a vacation only twice and only for two days each time.  Honestly, with apologies to our class, I guess I don’t have much fond memories of the place but I won’t dwell on that.

On the fourth day, after three nights of wake, we received the news that my brother died in the hospital while preparing to undergo an operation.  He was 35 years old at that time and had three kids.  My mother was 71. 

My sister-in-law made the arrangements to transport his body to Daet.  On the fifth night, there were already two coffins in the wake.  My mother and brother were buried at the same time, on the same plot in the Daet public cemetery where my father’s body also lie.

After the burial, I had to go back to Manila to check on the other patients at the UERM and at the GSIS Hospital.  My brother who had cancer already knew about the tragedy.  My sister-in-law waited for a few days for him to recover from the operation before informing him.  She had to do it because he was already wondering and was feeling bad that no other member of the family was visiting him.   

I did not immediately inform my sister about my brother’s death when I visited her at the UERM. (She only knew that nanay was dead).   She had a cast on her neck and chest, and she also had a heart condition.  It would be bad if she gets too emotionally disturbed, which we expected especially since it was my brod who sent her to college.  It was not only my sister though who owed him a lot.  The whole family did because my brod was the one who helped my father support us, ever since he started working.    He had to quit schooling after his third year of engineering in order to work.  It was us, his three younger siblings who got to finish college.

I had to go back to Daet after visiting the patients to attend to many other things, among them was the pa-siyam.  On the first night after the burial, and for the next eight nights, relatives and friends gathered to pray for the dead.  There is food – handaan - on the last day.  That is part of our culture.  We pay a “paradasal” to lead the prayers.   Halawig ang dasal.  According to the paradasal, dai daa pwedeng one prayer lang for the two dead persons. Dapat, duwang dasal daa.  So after finishing one set, there is a re-play. I do not know why it is not acceptable to god to mention both names in one set of prayer. (Alang-alang sa pagpapakasakit ni Hesus…. Kaawaan at patawarin ang kaluluwa ni ______ at ni ________).  So, two sets of prayer, doble din ang bayad.

There are many “pamahiin” involving the dead.  When news about my brother’s death came, immediately some relatives checked on my mother’s coffin.  They had it opened because dai palan daa pinatud itong rosaryong kapot ni nanay.  (Kung pinatud kaya, would my brother not have died?).  On the day of the funeral, while assigning those who would carry the caskets, older relatives told us, bawal daa kaming three brothers na mag-alsa nin kabaong.  When my uncle (the only surviving sibling of my mother, he is more than 80 years old now) learned about this, he got angry.  “Huring serbisyo mi na daa ito, dai mi pa gigibuhon!”  I cannot recall now, whom among the elders we obeyed.

Going back to the significance of 1978 to our family, it was really a tragic year for us.  My brother was diagnosed to have prostate cancer and unexpectedly, we lost our mother and brother, even ahead of him.  (My brother who had cancer, died three years later in 1981).  My grief was not really for them – na “hirak man sinda”.  Even then, I knew that it was God’s will and it was best for them because they were re-united with our creator.  The grief was for those who were left behind.  It must have been very difficult for my sister-in-law.  I salute her for successfully raising their children (all three of them are now in New Jersey, two of whom are already married).  It is unfortunate that our family did not have the means to help her.

 I also realized how difficult it is when the family has not prepared for the passing away of loved ones, not only emotionally, but financially. 

I’ll hear mass after work this afternoon in memory of my loving mother who devoted her whole life taking care of us.


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