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THE VILLAHANONS’
ANNUAL HOMAGE TO THE PERUVIAN SAINT ~ The Santa Rosa de Lima
Blazing
a Trail, Showing the Way…
By CESAR TORRES* September 14, 2005
There is so
much that the Villahanons could claim that would set them apart from
the broader Samarnon society. This fiesta celebration for instance
in Metro Manila is one of them. Originally, only a single hermano or
hermana would be responsible for the fiesta celebration. Then, it
became two, then, three, then four, and now, there are a whole lot
of them. And there is no lack of volunteers.
Originally,
only Villahanons residing in Metro Manila would be the hermanos or
hermanas. Then Villahanons from the hometown joined in. Soon with
our Diaspora, when we started roaming the world, Villahanons from
other parts of the globe became hermanos and hermanas. Somehow,
there was a feeling that if one had not become an hermano or hermana
in the Feast of the Sta. Rosa in Metro Manila, one had not yet
completed the process of total social acceptance and the sense of
belonging to a community of courageous innovators and trailblazers
with an intense sense of social commitment.
Originally,
anyone could join in the festivities and partake of the food, the
camaraderie, and the dancing, even gatecrashers. It was a fiesta
after all. The celebrations were never held in ornate, and exclusive
5-star hotels unlike other Samarnon fiesta celebrations with their
hilarious claims to social elitism and irrelevance reminiscent of
the Spanish Frayles and the Guardia Civiles. The Villahanon fiesta
celebrations in Metro Manila were very egalitarian and democratic,
in the spirit of the early Christians when they were being
persecuted and hiding in the catacombs of Rome.
Fleshing out
the social significance of Catholicism and its religious
celebrations was originally not of paramount importance. We were
just concerned with going to heaven, pleasing the Church and the
believers of the first saint in the Americas. But then, eating,
drinking, dancing, saying the novena, taking communion, and making
the sign of the cross were becoming less compelling when viewed
within the context of the needs of the Villareal community. There
had to be other socially-redeeming activities revolving around the
fiesta.
Consequently,
the gala generated through the curachas were funneled to the Parish
and to other projects for the community. Indeed, they may not have
been aware of it, but they were living Pope Paul VI’s Encyclical, "Populorum
Progressio" and the pronouncements of Vatican II, the reasons why
Fr. Rudy Romano was abducted, tortured, brutalized and rumored to
have been drowned somewhere in Maripipi, between Cebu and Leyte.
But the most
dramatic achievement of the Villahanons in Metro Manila was the
decision to undertake a project which has never been done
voluntarily in the history of the Philippines. This was to repair
and cement an 8-kilometer public road connecting the town to the Pan
Philippine Highway. It was going to be done through Tiklos or
Bayanihan. This was going to be done without waiting for the
imprimatur of two levels of Government which are generally perceived
to be incompetent and corrupt — the Provincial Government of Samar
and the National Government.
Spearheaded by
the Villahanon Association of Metro Manila (VAMM) whose leaders and
mobilizers include its President, Jun Dasmariñas, Alice Rapanan-Murillo,
Elizabeth Gelera-Latoja, Yolanda Go, Maribel Sacendoncillo, Cayo
Romano, Buff Seludo, Douglas Seludo, Tito Go, Boogie Zabala, Nalding
Seludo, Anito R. Japson, Santi Dasmariñas, Evelyn Manalang, Ding
Latoja, Bubbles Zabala, Atty. Lope R. Torres, Fr. Antonio O. Gerente,
Pascual L. Seludo Jr., Anito Japson, Tarcela Simbul, Ernesto Tan,
Capt. Arturo F. Varela, especially, Engr. Tim Murillo, and many,
many others, they were linked to many other Villahanons through the
Internet such as Ruben Gerardo in Norway who created a website just
for this purpose, Jimmy and Inday Romano-Haw in Sacramento,
California who have donated thousands of dollars, Victor and Dr.
Mansueta Hilvano in Los Angeles, Rino and Ding Ragub and Nora Chawla
in Canada, Lotlot Fallorina in South Carolina, and Paolo Lean Torres
Pimentel and his brother, Anton Diego Torres Pimentel, in San
Francisco, California.
The donors as
well as those who have made pledges but have not been able to redeem
their pledges so far are listed in the website that Ruben Gerardo
has created (http://www.villa.gitsrc.net/).
The list and other information concerning this enterprise are there
for everyone in the world to see.
At the home
front, there is of course Mayor Renato "Boy" Latorre, and Vice Mayor
Babam Cabueños, and the entire municipal government. In addition,
the town civic leaders and gatekeepers, even those who might make
the sign of the cross and mutter a prayer once the names of Boy
Latorre and Babam are mentioned, hopped on this once-in-a-century
collective process. Even the very young school children are helping.
And those Villahanons coming from the island barangays.
Unfortunately,
these two are associated with Bayan Muna, a political movement whose
members, because of their unquestionable patriotism, pro-poor,
total, and unswerving belief in serving the oppressed Filipino
people first are being killed one by one by shadowy figures whose
naiveté and ignorance of the challenges of contemporary Third World
societies are so pathetic and beyond belief. Consequently, the
novelty, the profound implication, and the impact of this Villahanon
social experiment on Philippine society are beyond the understanding
of the ordinary bureaucrats and the incompetent TRAPOS and their
minions in the military.
In any case,
this collective, voluntary, Internet-driven social innovation sent
shock waves throughout the Philippines and perhaps in the Third
World.
Villahanons
and their friends all over the world, such as the eloquent Basaynon,
Adelbert Batica — through a massive use of the Internet, we have two
websites anyway, with three electronic groups — donated money,
cement, and labor. Where P10 million was needed to cement one
kilometer of road if undertaken by a corrupt and incompetent
government functionaries, the Villahanons were doing this at a cost
of P1.8 million per kilometer! An earth-shaking difference in cost,
indeed!
The benefit
was not only in terms of saving some scarce funds and the public
good that a first class road could redound to the community. There
was the most vital element of all — the pride in being part of a
historical process, a process that could pave the way for similar
undertakings not only in road building, but also in other aspects of
the Villareal community, especially livelihood projects. For once,
we were showing the world that poor as we are, we are not
shamelessly extending our hand begging for dole outs from a corrupt
and incompetent political and governmental leadership with the
inevitable corrupted portion of the public funds going to corrupt
officials and their fellow conspirators. We were proud, dignified,
and felt respectable.
But as we are
laboring on this piece, several events in recent weeks have
transpired which have an impact on the Villahanons, the Samarnons,
and the rest of the 87 million Filipinos, of whom 8 million are in
Diaspora all over the world.
First, there
was the decision of the House of Representatives of the Philippine
Congress by a vote of 158 to 51 with 6 abstentions, not to elevate
the impeachment of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to the Senate.
This congressional action does not mean that everything is
lovey-dovey with everyone. Whatever happened, this embattled
President will be limping along towards I know not what. The crystal
ball is murky on her fate and that of the Filipino people. And we
wonder if this Government can ever contribute in finishing the
cementing of the road. After all, this President has danced the
curacha in the municipal plaza when reputedly her closest friend at
that time was Dr. Maruja Seludo, a member of Villa’s elite families.
Secondly, for
the entire Philippines, but specifically with respect to us
Villahanons and our people from the Samar-Leyte-Biliran region,
there is the transfer of Gen. Jovito Palparan to Central Luzon.
Dubbed the butcher of Mindanao, Mindoro, and the Eastern Visayas
because of his misguided obsession to eliminate everyone whom he
might consider as "enemies" of the state and its government, based
on his own criteria — which obviously include the incompetents, the
plunderers, the thieves, and the bloodsuckers in the government —
this man whose studies and training might have been made possible by
the suffering Filipino masses at the Philippine Military Academy,
symbolizes the gut-wrenching dilemma confronting poor societies in
contemporary times, especially the Philippines. How to deal with the
poor, the oppressed, the ignorant, and the exploited in our country.
Kill all of them? Like Mayor Latorre, Babam Cabueños, and others who
are critics of an incompetent Philippine government and an
iniquitous political and social order?
Thirdly, there
is the document dated August 27, 2005 issued by the National Council
of the National Democratic Front of the Philippines, entitled "NDFP
PROPOSES CONCISE AGREEMENT TO END CIVIL WAR AND ACHIEVE JUST PEACE
IMMEDIATELY".
Written by the
NDFP leaders who are in voluntary exile in peaceful, rich, respected
European country of the Netherlands, the document has an addendum by
its Consultant, Jose Maria Sison. It states: "The civil war ends and
a just peace begins as soon as the GRP (Government of the Republic
of the Philippines) co-signs this 10-point concise but comprehensive
peace agreement with the NDFP Alliance and truce becomes the modus
vivendi of the GRP and the NDFP."
This document
is probably being discussed now by the flickering light of a
kerosene lamp by the 8,000 members of the New People’s Army or under
an acacia tree when there is a full moon and while their stomachs
are rumbling with hunger, while they are almost fainting with
malnourishment and fever, while the mosquitoes are buzzing around
their ears, while the sick and the wounded are begging for
medications, and while trying to dodge the bullets of the government
soldiers in some remote mountain fastnesses of Samar and the
Philippines.
If there is no
peace in Villa, in Samar, in the entire Philippines because the
leadership of the National Democratic Front and the incompetent and
corrupt TRAPOS and their military minions have to ensure that their
personal prestige and their places in the annals of history or their
economic interests are protected and enhanced, what happens to the
trailblazing and innovative social experiments of the Villahanons?
Will Mayor Boy Latorre and Vice Mayor Babam Cabueños and others in a
rumored military death list continue to be on guard and should be
prepared to die soon?
But with a new
commanding general in the Eastern Visayas Region, there seems to
have been a discernible shift in the mission of the soldiers whose
salaries are being paid by the poor and oppressed Filipino people,
including the poor Villahanons and Samarnons. It seems that during
the fire that gutted the elementary school in Calbiga, Villa’s
sister town, allegedly due to the drunken irresponsibility of school
officials, it was the soldiers who roused the town from their sleep
so that the fire could be put out. Now, they seem to be constructing
schoolrooms so that the school children can continue their studies.
How we wish that the partisans of the National Democratic Front will
work hand in hand with the soldiers to construct not only school
buildings in Calbiga, but also in finishing that 8-kilometer death
road in Villareal, in the spirit of Bayanihan, of Pintakasi, of
Tiklos.
Unhappily,
because they know more, the "civil war" in the Philippines — that
means the beheadings, abductions, summary killings, tortures,
ambushes, roadside bombings, people’s courts, the crying and
lamentations of the orphans and widows in agony — must go on. The
guns of the soldiers and the NPAs have to be fired, the bullets
used, the bombs have to be detonated. There are more of them where
they come from.
So we can only
moan in anguish. And if we are believers, we raise our hands in
fervent supplication to the Santa Rosa, the Patron Saint of the
Villahanons and the impoverished Peruvians who have been rocked by a
revolution similar to what we have in Villa, in Samar, and in the
Philipines: "Ig-ampo kami Santa Rosa, ngadto han Ginoo, nga
kalo-oyan kami nga matagan hin kamorayaw yana ngan han katapus han
kinabuhi han natuod ha imo, labi na an mga kablas ngan guin
tatalumpigos nga mga Villahanon ngan makalolo-oy nga Pilipino."
[*The author is a regular columnist of "The Filipino Insider", a
monthly supplement of the "San Francisco Chronicle", one of the
major newspapers in America with a circulation of 500,000. He also
writes occasionally for the "Manila US Times" which is based in
Southern California. He is one of the founders and moderators of the
"Gugma han Samar Cyberspace Movement". A former Assistant Professor
of Political Science in the University of the Philippines in Diliman,
the author has not lost touch with his native land despite the
pressures of community involvement in California, in Samar, in Villa
and his employment in the State of California. He can be reached at
Cesar1185@aol.com]
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