DEJA VU ALL
OVER AGAIN
(May
2006)
April is the cruelest month, especially way back in 1973, the
4th of the month to be precise, when Liliosa Hilao was murdered
in the makeshift detention quarters of the (Philippine) Constabulary
Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU). In the wake of Presidential Proclamation
1081, which imposed martial rule on the Philippines, CANU had
abruptly given dope dealers, dope pushers and narcotics traffickers
a unilateral truce, electing instead to go after activists,
leftists, dissenters and a vast array of people
who did not want Mr. Marcos to change the Constitution so he,
his clan and cronies could rule forever.
Liliosa was 23 years old, a scholar at the City University of
Manila and editor of Hasik, the schools student newspaper.
Later testimonies revealed she had been tortured, gang-raped,
injected with truth serum. Then, because she wouldnt be
cowed and vowed to go after her brutalizers, they poured muriatic
acid down her throat and killed her. Hers was the first death
in the urban detention centers of the Marcos regime.
When her family tried to obtain justice, the military used all
manner of harassment and threats, including raids, beatings
and detention, to discourage her parents, her brothers and her
sisters.
I never met her but she remains vivid to my mind. She was killed
the night before my release and whenever April comes, I hear
the whisper of a co-detainee, talking about her murder. She
was killed there, my co-detainee said, in a hushed voice,
pointing to the building across the street from where we were
being held inside Camp Crame. My eyes slid away from the building,
kept sliding away from it, as my mind repeatedly said, it
didnt happen here; it happened in another city, in another
province, in another island, in another country far, far away.
Liliosas murder came at the end of a week of severe diarrhea
and gastroenteritis in our own detention quarters. For two weeks
in March, water had disappeared from our quarters (such a nice
neutral word); eventually, despite our efforts, the place began
to stink and we were ripe as well. One morning, the military
parked a fire truck outside, stuck a hose through a window and
poured water into a gasoline drum in the bathroom. Our relief
was short-lived; the water was contaminated, probably deliberately
to punish the women for complaining.
Water and Liliosa would be linked in my mind forever, a presage
of murderous things to come, perverting Aquariuss symbolism
so much that to this day, I barely drink water. In the mid-1970s,
when so many women (and men, though hardly anyone talks about
this) were being sexually assaulted in military detention camps,
I voiced my worries to a friend. His reply: if you were
picked up again, rape would be the least of your worries.
I understood. Liliosa was the tidewater mark. After her, everyone
and anyone picked up was tortured, some murdered,
because the military establishment got away with the first.
This was how we learned the word impunity
from Liliosas fate and her familys experience.
And now theres PP 1017 by Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, so
low a number among presidential proclamations. Marcos at least
waited until he got to 1081, being a superstitious nitwit who
embedded in the number the year he would lift martial
-- but not his -- rule, 1981. Does this mean Gloria will step
down in 2017? As Charlie Brown would say, aaargh!
But then again, there is this so-called peoples initiative
(who are these people?) to change the current Constitution.
Then there are all these women and men charged with rebellion,
five of them congress people whove had to accept congressional
protective custody to avoid being arrested without warrants.
And US troops are debasing Filipinas again, protected by government
itself. Then there are the 556 assassinated activists, leaders
and critics, the body count inching upwards to the 14 killed
per day in the last years of Marcoss rule.
Time seems to have looped upon itself, things devolving, the
descent into darkness accompanied by the gloating chortles of
fundamentalists, military men, warlords and landlords, corporate
men and a host of women glorying in their own abjectness. Time
has loop and is eating itself up.
I hear myself responding over and over again, to questions trite
and significant, that I dont have time; there is no time;
no time at all, because the cloud in the crystal ball has cleared
and forever is visible and there is no time left.
Another generation will drop out of school; take to the hills
and risk life and liberty to make democracy more than just a
word. Physicists, engineers, poets, young peasants, the tribal
braves, workers, women, men and even children will forgo the
amiable pleasures of an ordinary life to do something which
shouldnt be extraordinary but is assert peoples
rights and freedoms.
Another generation will leave their parents homes and
take to the hills and risk life and liberty to make democracy
more than just a word. Abandoning all that is familiar, they
will learn the unfamiliar heart of poverty among 70% of the
population and by so doing, become themselves ordinary, usual
and familiar, transformed, as the village folks used to say,
into nice people around.
Sometime in the future, a woman grown old in this never-ending
enterprise to create a true nation will look at the sky with
horror-stricken eyes and think: a third of my generation
was killed young; a third went to prison, went to the hills
or both, and a third is scattered the world over in exile.
And remember again, the words of a woman who joined the Tupamaros
of Uruguay at the age of 15, spent two years in prison where
the military destroyed her right arm, and the rest of her life
in exile in Sweden: there are things I regret having done,
but never being there, at the moment of historic juncture, when
everyone was engaged in a magnificent undertaking.
It is said that the poet, Pablo Neruda died of a broken heart
when the Allende government was destroyed by a CIA-supported
military coup and replaced with a military dictatorship. But
one remembers a childhood fairytale, where an honorable man
looped iron bands around his heart, to stop its shattering at
injustice, thus enabling himself to act.
Go and do likewise. There is no time anymore. ###
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LILY
PAD
2006