The Rebirth of Freedom PDF Free
The Rebirth of Freedom PDF Free
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Historical Background
The Americans returned in 1945. Filipinos rejoiced and guerillas who
fled to the mountain joined the liberating American Army.
Some Filipino writers who had gone abroad and had written during the
interims came back to publish their works.
Not all the books published during the period reflected the war year;
some were compilations or second editions of what have been written
before.
THE VOICE OF THE VETERAN – a compilation of the best works of some Ex-
USAFFE men like Amante Bigornia, Roman de la Cruz, Ramon de Jesus and
J.F. Rodriguez.
TWILIGHT IN TOKYO and PASSION and DEATH OF THE USAFFE by Leon Ma.
Guerrero
FOR FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY – by S.P. Lopez
For the first twenty years, many books were published…both in Filipino
and in English. Among the writers during this time were: Fred Ruiz Castro,
Dominador I. Ilio, and C.B. Rigor. Some notable works of the period include
the following:
The themes of most poems dealt with the usual love of nature, and of
social and political problems. Toribia Maño’s poems showed deep emotional
intensity.
9. Other poets were Toribia Maño and Edith L. Tiempo Jose Garcia Villa’s
HAVE COME, AM HERE won acclaim both here and abroad.
Longer and longer pieces were being written by writers of the period.
Stevan Javellana’s WITHOUT SEEING THE DAWN tells of the gri m
experiences of war during the Japanese Occupation.
In 1946, the Barangay Writer’s Project whose aim was to publish works
in English by Filipinos was established.
In 1961, Kerima Polotan’s novel THE HAND O F THE ENEMY won the
Stonehi ll Award for the Filipino novel in English.
In 1968, Luis V. Teodoro Jr.’s short story THE ADVERSARY won the
Philippines Free Press short story award; in 1969, his story THE TRAIL OF
PROFESSOR RIEGO won second prize in the Palanca Memorial Awards for
Literature and in 1970, his short story THE DISTANT CITY won the GRAPHIC
short story award.
The people’s love for listening to poetic jousts increased more than
before and people started to flock to places to hear poetic debates.
Many books were published during this time, among which were:
10. Makata (1967) first cooperative effort to publish the poems of 16 poets
in Pilipino
12. Manunulat: Mga Piling Akdang Pilipino (1970) by Efren Abueg. In this
book, Abueg proved that it is possible to have a national integration of ethnic
culture in our country.
13. Mga Aklat ni Rizal: Many books about Rizal came out during this period.
The law ordering the additional study of the life of Rizal helped a lot in
activating our writers to write books about Rizal.
PALANCA AWARDS
The first awardees in its first year, 1950-51 in the field of the short
story were the following:
PNoy asked: What kind of President would stand in the way of the serving of a
warrant, especially given that the fugitive has embarrassingly found safe
haven in our own territory, if within a recognized enclave of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF)?
As if anybody had argued for that. In truth, with regard to the matter of the
greenlighting of Mamasapano, the most important question put to President
Aquino was not “Why?” but “Who?” As in: Who gave the go-ahead for this
fatally flawed mission? More pointedly, PNoy was asked: Was it not you?
The President was glib. He said that permission was never sought and,
frankly, was never needed. In any case, he said: “Isn’t the question
rhetorical?” Marwan is a terrorist, there is a warrant for his arrest, and such
serving of warrants, and such effecting of arrests, is the job of the police. So
why should anyone even bother the President with a by-your-leave just to do
his job?
Here’s one reason: To cover one’s ass. Which is not always a bad nor
inappropriate motive. In this case, it is the practical and responsible move.
SAF was smart enough to acknowledge that maybe there is a larger picture to
consider. This was after all a mission that could potentially derail an ongoing
peace process. Negotiations with the MILF had in fact entered a crucial and
fragile phase. Congress, under time pressure, is deliberating the passage of a
contentious Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL), the promulgation of which could
set Mindanao on a path to sustainable peace and progress – if it doesn’t
undermine Philippine sovereignty first.
Why ask permission to carry out a lawful mandate? It is because in this case,
there is shit, and up there is a fan, and should the twain meet…
The SAF commander who was sacked in the aftermath of the Mamasapano
massacre, Director Getulio Napenas, needed to brief the President. More than
once, on every occasion prior to the launch of the mission. Nobody, it seems,
other than PNoy was consulted – not the DILG secretary, not the acting chief
of the Philippine National Police, not anybody in the military (the Armed
Forces chief and the relevant units near the area were told when the police
commandos were already on the ground, and firing had by then begun), not
the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process. Napenas has
more than owned up. He has owned it all. But clearly, responsibility for the
debacle falls on all who knew and chose to keep it between the two of them.
President Aquino says he told Napenas to coordinate as necessary. (As in: “O,
ikaw na bahala.”) The commander of SAF said: “K.” And that was supposedly
that. The Commander-in-Chief presumed that implicit in his reminder was the
presumption that the PNP and AFP and DILG would indeed be informed,
though it never struck him as strange that none of them were ever in the
room, nor ever cc’d in the invitations to the briefings.
Never mind the MILF’s own plea that nobody coordinated with them either.
The one point that the public is willing to allow government in this tragic
mission is that the MILF, too, has a lot to explain, and is in no position to
demand anything of anyone. Certified terrorists were coddled in an area under
MILF control. Either the MILF was complicit and conniving, or it was ignorant
and impotent. Either way, Filipinos ask, how in Allah’s name could the MILF be
trusted to run even an autonomous barangay?
President Aquino tries to frame the people’s resulting dismay and distrust, and
their demand for such accountability – from government and from the rebels –
as baying for war, and then raises the straw man with its fist in the air, just
long enough to call for the sobriety that nobody has actually lost. As upset as
Filipinos are, it would be a stretch to say that any significant portion of the
population has called for the peace process to be abandoned.
Said PNoy: “Let us also consider: The members of the SAF perished in the
course of pursuing their duty to maintain security. If the peace process does
not succeed, if we were to return to the status quo, or if violence were to
worsen, wouldn’t this be the very opposite of what they died for?”
Let us now be the ones to remind: SAF was not sent to Mamasapano in the
name of peace. They were ordered to arrest a fugitive. By higher-ups who
knew or should have kept in mind the full context and larger objectives in
Maguindanao, Mindanao, the BBL, the peace process, but who trumped it all
with a mission to satisfy… whom, Mr. President?
Let us now be the ones to clarify: There are two contexts here, not one, and
they are separate. The global war on terror is not necessarily intertwined with
the quest for peace in Mindanao. They complicate each other, but not to the
point of interdependency.
Filipinos will grant that mistakes were made. They will even grant good faith.
And, for all their anger and the furious questions in their minds, they will await
the report of the board of inquiry. But in exchange they demand at least
sensitivity, transparency, and accountability.