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By Alfred A. Yuson


     nother glittering occasion on the First of September: over 400 people congregate at the
       Rigodon Ballroom of the Manila Peninsula Hotel in Makati. More than half of the assembly is made up of writers, while the rest are the guests of the Palanca clan: their relations and friends. At the central table, with Sylvia Palanca-Quirino, head of the Carlos Palanca Foundation, are the night�s guest speaker, Dr. Emerlinda Roman, the first female President of the University of the Philippines, together with Dr. Lourdes Montinola, Chair of the Far Eastern University and
                                   herself a distinguished writer. Behind them are other round tables with a
                                   dozen guests each. The tables are marked Winners, Judges, or Guests.
                                  
It�s Palanca Night!

                                   Last Thursday marked the 55th edition of the most prestigious annual
                                   literary award for Filipino writers. Most elated on this night of course
                                   were the first-timers, although a number of relative veterans were also
                                   on hand to receive prizes. We were surprised, for instance, to note that
                                   the esteemed Domingo Landicho was still joining the contest. He did win
                                   Second prize in Short Story in Filipino, between Agustin �Don�
                                   Pagusara Jr. of Davao City who bagged First, and John Iremil Teodoro
                                   of Iloilo City at Third.

                                   Now that�s a good development, having our Southern writers trying
                                   their hands, and pens, in Filipino, rather than restrict themselves to
                                   Cebuano or Hiligaynon.

                                   By the by, by �we� I meant our table of judges in various genres, which
                                   included the board chairmen Gemino Abad for Poetry in English, Cirilo
                                   Bautista for the Novel in English, Isagani Cruz for Full-Act Play in
                                   Filipino, and Butch Dalisay for Futuristic Fiction in English. Also seated
                                   with us were fellow judge Antonio Hidalgo, for Novel in English, and
                                   our guests Shirley Lua of DLSU and UP-Mindanao Chancellor Ricky de
                                   Ungria (no, they weren�t out on a date), plus Mesdames Bautista, Cruz,
                                   Hidalgo and Yuson.

                                   Oh, and for a while there, Anvil Publishing director Karina Bolasco also
                                   sat with us. Latecomers Marne Kilates and RayVi Sunico, chairman of
                                   judges for Short Story for Children in English, also tried to horn in on
                                   our table, maybe because right behind us was the desserts buffet, and
                                   beyond that the smoking area. But we shooed them away, since they
                                   appeared to be prematurely inebriated, while dinner had yet to be
                                   announced.  

                                   A big winner was Dean Francis Alfar who earned the Grand Prize for
                                   the Novel in English, which is only given every three years. We felt
                                   doubly happy for Dean when we found out that the lady from whom he
                                   borrowed his colorful tapis for the night, his wife Nikki Alfar, had also
                                   won a Palanca � Third prize for Short story for Children in English.
                                   Talk about a conjugal victory. Hmmm. Must be the lucky tapis.  

                                   Counterpart big winner for the Novel in Filipino was Ellen Sicat, who
                                   had her daughter Luna ready to proxy for her, except that she made it in
                                   time for her big moment on the Palanca awarding stage.

                                   The biggest winners were the latest Hall of Famers in the persons of
                                   Manuel Buising and Luis Gatmaitan. Buising copped his fifth First prize
                                   in the Teleplay in Filipino, while Gatmaitan got his in the Essay in
                                   Filipino. They brought the number of Hall of Famers to 18, since the
                                   honor was started in 1995.   

                                   I was also happy to see a strong Visayan contingent that managed to
                                   secure a table right beside the dinner buffet. Stalwarts of that boisterous
                                   group included chairman of judges for the Short Story in Cebuano, our
                                   compleat diplomat Vicente Vivencio �Butch� Bandillo, who leaves
                                   shortly for Dubai, as he informed us.

                                   With him were his fellow judges Marjorie Evasco and Grace Monte de
                                   Ramos-Arcellana, Macario Tiu who won First in Short Story in
                                   Cebuano, and Don Pagusara who got Second in the same category, for
                                   a double-win. Later in the evening, the Port Area habitu� Juaniyo
                                   Arcellana was seen joining that table, thence humming along to Poetry in
                                   Filipino judge Michael Coroza�s operatic interpretation of �Usahay� �
                                   this during the post-photo-ops, drag-down hour when all teetotalers had
                                   departed.

                                   But of course my delight became complete in seeing three young people
                                   go onstage to claim their prizes in Poetry in English, which I had helped
                                   judge.

                                   Ana Maria �Mookie� Katigbak�s �The Proxy Eros� won Third Prize,
                                   from which here�s a sample, her poem titled �Clenched�: �Because she
                                   holds herself reined in, chained/ In, because her body rolls itself into
                                   itself,/ torso to elbow, rib cleaved to bone, her/ body the origami for
                                   stone because stones/ hurt when hurled against world, but world/ is
                                   world, so hurl. Be stone. What�s stone but fist/ the body folds into, and
                                   what�s body but folded/ wings. Flight imminent where shoulder draws
                                   bone./ Not stone, I am clenched. I am shielding.�

                                   Yavanna �Naya� Valdellon�s �Evasions� won Second. Here�s her poem
                                   �Lost and Found�: �For the hundreds that are lost within its reach/ every
                                   day, the city returns double, tells us/ to keep the change. The street
                                   sweeper/ on her hourly rounds knows this, as her broom/ harvests
                                   shards and wrappers, more of the same/ with the same destination. The
                                   garbage collector/ with his loot of green and black bags knows it,/ as
                                   does the scavenger who ekes out a living/ by looking down a junk heap,
                                   scrabbling/ for the salvageable. We who have the luxury/ of moaning for
                                   what and whom we�ve lost/ never had to go through someone else�s
                                   trash./ When we find something we call it chance,/ not currency.
                                   Consider the dull five-peso coin/ picked up and pronounced lucky by the
                                   only man/ all day who stooped over the sidewalk for it,/ whose lips arte
                                   swollen from too many goodbyes.�

                                   And Joel Toledo�s �What Little I Know of Luminosity� won First.
                                   Here�s his poem �Everything�s in Place�: �The dark vein of the pen, the
                                   petrified hand.// Strand after strand of impeding light./ The paper sitting
                                   in its secrecy./ There must be something more// to these objects
                                   straining for movement,/ solid and heavy, caught in the light./ The night
                                   keeps such cruel arrangements.// But how you can easily break// this
                                   symmetry. Now you are here,/ pursing your lips, blowing strokes of
                                   smoke./ The air shimmers in your white noise.// The room is hung with
                                   the smell of wine,/ tipping the bottles, rearranging the furniture./ I gather
                                   the punctuations, the shards// your breathing cuts into every corner./
                                   The labor of speaking, lonely/ as stones. I will leave, you will leave,//
                                   someone will write a poem.�

                                   Jimmy Abad, Danton Remoto and I had a difficult time selecting these
                                   winners from a very competitive field, from which any of the entries
                                   among our final seven to eight choices could have landed among the top
                                   three. But we settled unanimously for a reversal of last year�s top two,
                                   when Naya had placed First and Joel Second. Theirs are very mature
                                   and conscientiously crafted poetry all right. And Joel, who teaches at
                                   Miriam College, is only hitting his third decade, while Naya, who
                                   teaches in Ateneo, is in her early 20s. 

                                   For her part, Katigbak�s poetry has toughened up and gained much in
                                   quality of edgework, so I will presume that this was the result of further
                                   honing at The New School in New York, where the young AdMU
                                   Dean�s Lister took an MFA in Creative Writing. Well, I�m still proud to
                                   say that both Naya and Mookie had been in my AdMU Poetry class
                                   years ago, and had also been fellows at the National Writers Workshop
                                   in Dumaguete � same with Joel, and Dean Alfar, and Maryanne Moll
                                   and Pearlsha Abubakar who won their first Palancas (in Futuristic
                                   Fiction and Short Story in English, respectively), and Joseph Rosmon
                                   M. Tuazon who won First in Poetry in Filipino.

                                   Congrats too to our UMPIL Secretary Becky A�onuevo who won
                                   Second in Poetry in Filipino; our man in London Edgar B. Maranan for
                                   placing Second in Short Story in Filipino; occasional drinking buddy
                                   Reuel Aguila for bagging First in Full-Act Play in Filipino, Alexis �Exie�
                                   Abola of our AdMU EngDept for his First in Short story in English;
                                   Lakambini �Bing� Sitoy who�s currently criss-crossing Europe, for her
                                   First in the Essay and Second in Short Story in English; and Glenn
                                   Sevilla Mas who joined the double-winners with a First in Full-Length
                                   Play and Second in One-Act Play in English. These were the 55th
                                   Palanca Awards winners we�re familiar with. Kudos too of course to all
                                   the other winners, and to Vim Nadera and Teo Antonio for simply being
                                   there, to account for half of the beer consumption.

                                   Top prize as Entertainer of the Night must be shared by Michael V. who
                                   conducted a superb, hilarious monologue that was Christopher
                                   Martinez�s winning One-Act Play �Welcome to Intelstar,� Pete Lacaba
                                   who read poems from the top two winners in Filipino, �Isha� a.k.a.
                                   Pearsha Abubakar who sang some of her Candid record numbers, and
                                   piano accompanist (for Coroza, Kilates and Dalisay as the Three
                                   Tenors) AIM Prof. Federico Macaranas, chairman of judges for the
                                   Essay in English.  

                                   Finally, here�s sharing excerpts from the eloquent address of Guest of
                                   Honor Dr. Emerlinda Roman, who also received the Gawad Dangal ng
                                    Lahi from Mrs. Sylvia Palanca-Qurino and her daughter Atty. Christine
                                   Q. Pacheco.

�I am aware that for our writers, receiving a first Palanca award represents much more than the cash reward, although, of course, the cash is much appreciated. I believe they see it as a signal from their peers that they have earned their spurs, that they have, in a sense, arrived. If before this they may have had their doubts, this is confirmation and encouragement for them to continue along that path. And I know that for the older writers, this yearly event, the Palanca Awards night, is more than just a social gathering, more than just a celebration. It is an expression of solidarity with each other, perhaps even a declaration of faith.

�For, at a time when so many of our institutions are being exposed as dismayingly � perhaps even fatally � flawed, no shadow, no taint, has ever fallen on the Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature. No one has ever questioned the integrity of the Carlos Palanca Foundation. And I have been assured that � though the judges may have been on occasion criticized for eccentricity, capriciousness, bad temper, gluttony and inebriation � they have never been accused of dishonesty. So I think we would be justified in saying that, tonight especially, the Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards are one clear spot of light in the creeping darkness that threatens to engulf us all�.

�� I do believe, that at times like this, we could do worse than turn to the writer, to artists in general � for guidance, more perhaps even than to priests, certainly more than to politicians. It is the artists who remember the past and can recite for us again those lessons we seem unable or unwilling to learn. It is also the artists who can imagine the future, a future less bleak, less tormented; a future tranquil, hopeful, even joyous. It is artists who can give shape to our dreams, fashion the myths that will bind us together rather than rip us apart; enable us to see ourselves steadily, and see ourselves whole. We do ourselves and our country a disservice in not taking advantage of this precious human resource, and in not giving it its due.�

Bravo! And again, to the Palanca Foundation, for this joyous night of hope, Salamuch!



Photos courtesy of Alfred A. Yuson




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Nikki and Dean Alfar
Naya Valdellon flanked by judges RayVi Sunico, Federico Macaranas, and Jimmy Abad with Palanca Foundation coordinator
Nemie Bermejo
Rosmon Tuazon and Natasha Gamalinda
April and Joel Toledo
Mookie Katigbak with her proud family
UP President Dr. Emerlinda Roman and FEU Chair Dr. Lourdes Montinola
Pearlsha Abubakar or Isha, poet, writer and jazz artist, with Prof. Federico Macaranas
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