Throughout the 70s and on to the mid-80s, I would occasionally hear of the skirmishes between the Pulahans or NPAs (New People’s Army), the MNLF (Moro National Liberation Front – when its ideals and intentions were still somehow noble) and the Ilagas (Rats), the much-dreaded ear-chopping vigilante group. And who could forget Norberto Manero, alias Kumander Bucay, who sowed terror in Southern Mindanao, including his infamous murder of Italian priest, Fr. Tulio Favalli? He would later reveal that it was his brother Edilberto who pulled the trigger.
Growing up in an apolitical household meant that political
issues were only furtively discussed in whispers, so that we could ‘go on with
our lives’. Yes, we had to deal with the inconveniences of military checkpoints
and curfews, but as a kid, I was totally incognizant of the grave social and political
repercussions of Martial Law. During those times, we would hear of frequent
encounters between the military, which was supported by para-military forces,
i.e., the infamous CHDF (Civilian Home Defense Force) and its later incarnation,
the CAFGU (Civilian Armed Forces Geographical Unit) with the underground left/communist
movement.
It would be a decade later before I realized the full extent of
the so-named conjugal dictatorship, and that was only when I came face to face
with friends (and friends of friends) who were forcibly silenced, incarcerated,
tortured and sexually abused. Some of them had joined the underground movement
or were forced to a life of exile outside the country.
Four decades later, the Marcoses are back in politics as if
they never left. As if the reign of terror did not exist. As if the Philippine
treasury was never raided and as if the existence of the Swiss bank accounts,
the staggering amounts of jewelry and cash and the lavish mansions were woven
from urban legends and imaginary tales. They say you cannot bestow the sins of
the father upon the son (in this case the Marcos children). But for them to disregard
and rewrite the past, as if the Marcos era was the Golden Age of Philippine
history, insults my sensibilities to the very core. Which is the same sentiment
I have for Johnny Enrile (Martial Law executor) who has deftly evaded justice all
these years and Kit Tatad (Marcos’s Information Minister) – both rabidly and
fanatically anti-RH spokespersons. What makes the situation worse is that many
young people, especially those born from the 90s onwards, have absolutely no
idea or no clue about those dark days of the dictatorship. Hey, it’s not like
this happened in the 18th or 19th century, no?
I am writing this to honor and pay homage to those who lived to tell their
stories and to give respect to those who continue to lend their names, faces and
voices to counter the lies and falsehood of those who benefitted and profited
from that regime. I join them in exclaiming, ‘Never again!’
P.S. And this is also why I will never vote for any Marcos into
political office.
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