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Magsaysay Awards: Honoring Filipinos

By Jose Ma. Montelibano

August 10, 2006

I make it no secret that I am a totally committed worker for the Gawad
Kalinga movement. It is by far the most substantial promise of the kind of
change that many Filipinos have dreamed of. When I witness the political
dynamics of the land, whether it is about Hello Garci, *coup de etat* or
charter change, I slowly shake my head in amazement that leaders of this
fledgling nation can preoccupy themselves with controversy when all
Filipinos tiptoe at the edge of a precipice.

The history of Filipinos in the last few centuries has been particularly
devastating to a culture that was promising to be one of the most creative
and festive. Though natives of the motherland were no exception to
hierarchical and feudalistic structures of governance, any pre-Hispanic *datu
*system that was in place could not have been as harsh as its counterparts
in the world. Understandably, the creative and festive traits of our culture
preempted the worst of behavior from societal leaders.

But massive exploitation is the mark of colonization here and elsewhere.
There must have been greedy leaders among our ancestors in pre-Hispanic
times, but colonization is institutionalized corruption, the worst of its
kind. There is nothing sophisticated about subjugating a people through
force, and then raping their land for what it contained that was of value to
the foreign masters.

While exploitation can be as physical as it can get, it is also an attitude
and perspective that can linger long after the first exploiters are gone. It
is the curse of Filipinos that many among the local elite were prot�g�s of
exploiters and continued what they learned from their foreign mentors. When
institutionalized exploitation was terminated by political decrees, such as
the awarding of independence by the Americans, the exploitative habit
refused to die and easily found itself as the operating system of the new,
albeit, local masters.

Colonization cannot be justified. The use of force to subjugate and dominate
another people, another country, who had not in any way provoked aggression
from greedy bullies is beyond justification. Colonization was a wholesale
anomaly that our people still reel from today. But selectively, good also
happened in many ways and in many forms. Even in an atmosphere of evil,
goodness in people cannot be easily eliminated or prevented from
manifesting.

Thus, just as there are endless examples of why the use of superior force to
take over the lives of other peoples and nations is barbaric in nature,
kindness, heroism, and generosity abounded in Philippine soil � both from
foreigners and natives. The introduction of Christianity is a boon even if
its spotty practice makes hypocrites of many. And the tradition of honor
that defined the best among generations who are now long gone is a haunting
angst that flickers still in the hearts of a people living in shame.

Our shame does not come from centuries of colonization, centuries of being
defeated by wave after wave of foreign masters. While we lost, we fought.
And while we suffered for so long, we finally won all the wars to rid
ourselves of the Spain, Japan and America. We can look back with sadness at
what happened to us, but we do not need to look back in shame.

Our shame comes from the poverty we tolerate, the corruption new tolerate,
the violence we tolerate. Our shame comes from the exodus of Filipinos who
have to look for security and promise in foreign shores because they cannot
find it here. Our shame comes from the hunger of millions who have been
hungry survey after survey, year after year, decade after decade. Our shame
comes from our inability to help one another when it is easier to take
advantage of the other. Our shame comes from being fearful that a most
fertile and abundant land cannot support its own children.

We are a people of faith, whether that is Christianity or Islam, or a native
belief in a cosmology where divinity and humanity merge. Our shame comes
because all our faiths cannot reconcile with a spiritual failure so horrible
that our pretension of loving God is exposed by our refusal to love our
neighbor. We insult not only ourselves as human beings and our value as the
crown jewels of creation; we insult our religious beliefs as well by not
practicing what we preach.

Now, almost from nowhere, a shaft of bright light, a burning bush in the
aridity of a shamed society, a bearer of hope emerges. Gawad Kalinga and
Tony Meloto are like lotus flowers negating the ugliness of muddy ponds, and
showing that good, indeed, can defeat evil even in its favorite lair.

What is majestic about Gawad Kalinga and Tony Meloto winning the Ramon
Magsaysay award for Community Leadership is that tens of thousands of
Filipinos here and abroad are honored through them. Gawad Kalinga is less an
organization than it is a work, a work of faith expressed in good works.
Gawad Kalinga builds beautiful churches, chapels and mosques by making its
more than 850 villages living expressions of different but harmonious
faiths. Gawad Kalinga has used what can be a point of division - the
building of the Filipino nation - as a core and powerful bond among
Filipinos of different persuasions.

Take a bow, Filipinos, there are among us men and women who refuse to live
in shame, and who refuse to let those in shame be comfortable in their lowly
choice of environment. Among the rich, among the powerful, are a growing
number who are turning their backs on exploitation and advocating generosity
by example. Among the poor are a growing number who are turning their backs
on mendicancy and striving to be productive and contributory to the
well-being of their communities. And among the most ordinary are a growing
number of extraordinary heroes, those who think of others ahead of
themselves.

The Ramon Magsaysay awards to Gawad Kalinga and Tony Meloto honor all that
is noble in us, for reaching out in care and friendship to the poor, the
weak, the old and the young, for promising never again to leave them behind.
And to think that the recognition and honoring are done at a time when the
work of nation building has just begun can only make us wonder in awe at
what more we, as a people in solidarity, can do to lift all our poor out of
poverty and recover our honor. ***

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