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Author Topic: "The Philippines Through the Eyes of a Foreigner"  (Read 779 times)

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"The Philippines Through the Eyes of a Foreigner"
« on: June 30, 2007, 02:00:44 AM »
Sent to Tubag Bohol News Team from Edie Managaytay

"The Philippines Through the Eyes of a Foreigner"

By Barth Suretsky
Atin Ito Philippine News Feature
April 2007

My decision to move to Manila was not a precipitous one. I used to work in New York as an outside agent of Philippines Air Lines, and have been  coming to the Philippines since August 1982. I was so impressed with the country and with the interesting people that I met, some of whom have become very close friends to this day, that I asked for, and was granted, a  year's sabbatical from my teaching job in order to live in the Philippines.

I arrived here on August 21, 1983, several hours after Ninoy Aquino was  shot, and remained here until June of 1984. During that year I visited  many parts of the country, from as far north as Laoag to as far
south as  Zamboanga, and including Palawan. I became deeply immersed in the history  and culture of the archipelago, and an avid collector of tribal antiquities  from both northern Luzon and Mindanao.

In subsequent years I visited the Philippines in 1985, 1987, and 1991,  before deciding to move here permanently in 1998. I love this country, but  not uncritically, and that is the purpose of this article.
First, however,  I will say that I would not consider living anywhere else in Asia, no  matter how attractive certain aspects of other neighboring countries may  be.

To begin with, and this is most important, with all its faults, the  Philippines is still a democracy, more so than any other nation in  Southeast Asia . Despite gross corruption, the legal system generally works, and if ever confronted with having to employ it, I would feel much  more safe trusting the courts here than in any other place in the surrounding countries. The press here is unquestionably the most unfettered and freewheeling in  Asia , and I do not believe that is hyperbole in any way!

And if any one thing can be used as a yardstick to measure the extent of the democratic process in any given country in the world, it is the extent to which the  press is free.  Nevertheless, the Philippines is a flawed democracy, and the flaws are deeply rooted in the Philippine psyche. I will elaborate. The
basic  problem seems to me, after many years of observation, to be national inferiority complex, a disturbing lack of pride in being Filipino.

Toward the end of April I spent eight days in Vietnam , visiting Hanoi ,  Hue, and Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC). I am certainly no expert on Vietnam ,   but what I saw could not be denied: I saw a country ravaged as no other  country has been in this century by thirty years of continuous and incredibly barbaric warfare.  When the Vietnam War ended in April 1975, the country was totally  devastated. Yet in the past 25 years the nation has healed and rebuilt  itself almost miraculously! The countryside has been replanted and reforested. Hanoi and HCMC have been beautifully restored.

The opera house in Hanoi is a splendid restoration of the original, modeled  after the Opera in Paris, and the gorgeous Second Empire Theatre, on the  main square of HCMC is as it was when built by the French a century ago.  The streets are tree-lined, clean, and conducive for strolling.

Cafes in the French style proliferate on the wide boulevards of HCMC. I am not  praising the government of Vietnam, which still has a long way to travel on  the road to democracy, but I do praise, and praise unstintingly, the pride of the Vietnamese people.  It is due to this pride in being Vietnamese that has enabled its citizenry  to undertake the miracle of restoration that I describe above.

When I returned to Manila, I became so depressed that I was actually  physically ill for days thereafter. Why? Well, let's go back to a  period when the Philippines resembled the Vietnam of 1975. It was 1945,
the end of World War II, and Manila, as well as many other cities, lay n ruins.  As a matter of fact, it may not be generally known, but Manila was the  second most destroyed city in the entire war; only Warsaw was more  demolished. 

But to compare Manila in 1970, twenty five years after the end of the war,  with HCMC, 25 years after the end of its war, is a sad exercise indeed. Far from restoring the city to its former glory, by 1970 Manila was well on  its way to being the most tawdry city in Southeast Asia.

And since that  time the situation has deteriorated alarmingly. We have a city full of street people, beggars, and squatters. We have a city that floods sections whenever there is a rainstorm, and that loses electricity with every clap of thunder. We have a city full of potholes,  and on these unrepaired roads we have traffic situation second to none in  the world for sheer unmanageability.

We have rude drivers, taxis that routinely refuse to take passengers  because of "many traffic!". The roads are also cursed with pollution  spewing buses in disreputable states of repair, and that
ultimate anachronism, the jeepney! We have an educational system that allows children to attend
schools  without desks or books to accommodate them.

Teachers, even college  professors, are paid salaries so disgracefully low that it's a wonder that  anyone would want to go into the teaching profession in the first place. We have a war in Mindanao that nobody seems to have a clue how to settle. The only policy to deal with the war seems to be to react to what happens  daily, with no long range plan whatever.

I could go on and on, but it is  an endeavor so filled with futility that it hurts me to go on. It hurts me  because, in spite of everything, I love the Philippines.  Maybe it will sound simplistic, but to go back to what I said above, it is  my unshakable belief that the fundamental thing wrong with this country is a lack of pride in being Filipino.  A friend once remarked to me, laconically: "All Filipinos want to be  something else. The poor ones want to be American, and the rich ones all  want to be Spaniards. Nobody wants to be Filipino." That statement would appear to be a rather simplistic one, and perhaps it is.

However, I know one Filipino who refuses to enter a theater until the  national anthem has stopped being played because he doesn't want to honor  his own country, and I know another one who thinks that history stopped  dead in 1898 when the Spaniards departed. While it is certainly true that  these represent extreme examples of national denial, the truth is not a  pretty picture. Filipinos tend to worship, almost slavishly, everything foreign.

If it comes from Italy or France it has to be better than anything made here. If  the idea is American or German it has to be superior to anything that Filipinos can think up for themselves. Foreigners are looked up to and idolized. Foreigners can go anywhere without question. In my own personal experience, I remember attending recently an affair at a major museum here. I had  forgotten to bring my invitation. But while Filipinos entering  the museum  were checked for invitations, I was simply waived through. This sort of  thing happens so often here that it's just accepted as routine.

All of these things, the illogical respect given to foreigners simply  because they are not Filipinos, the distrust and even disrespect shown to  any homegrown merchandise, the neglect of anything Philippine,
the rudeness  of taxi drivers, the ill manners shown by many Filipinos are all  symptomatic of a lack of self-love, of respect for and love of the country  in which they were born, and worst of all, a static mind-set in regard to  finding ways to improve the situation.  Most Filipinos, when confronted with evidence of governmental corruption,  political chicanery, or gross exploitation on the part of the business  community, simply shrug their shoulders, muttering "bahala na," and let it  go at that.

It is an oversimplification to say this, but it is not without a grain of  truth to say that Filipinos feel downtrodden because they allow themselves to feel downtrodden. No pride.  One of the most egregious examples of this lack of pride, this uncaring  attitude to their own past, is the wretched state of surviving architectural landmarks in Manila and elsewhere. During the American  period, many beautiful and imposing buildings were built, in what we now  call the "art deco" style (although incidentally, that was not contemporary term; it was coined only in the 1960s).

These were beautiful edifices, mostly erected during, or just before, the Commonwealth period.  Three, which are still standing, are the Jai Alai Building, the Metropolitan Theater, and the Rizal Stadium. Fortunately, due to the truly  noble efforts of my friend John Silva, the Jai Alai Building will now be  saved. But unless something is done to the most beautiful and original of  these three masterpieces of pre-war Philippine architecture, the  Metropolitan Theater, it will disintegrate.

The Rizal Stadium is in equally  wretched shape.  When the wreckers' ball destroyed Frank Lloyd Wright's Imperial Hotel in  Tokyo, and New York City's most magnificent building, Pennsylvania Station, both in 1963, Ada Louise Huxtable, then the architectural critic of The New  York Times, wrote: "A disposable culture loses the right to call itself a  civilization at all!" How right she was! (Fortunately, the destruction of  Pennsylvania Station proved to the sacrificial catalyst that resulted in  the creation of New York's Landmark Commission. Would there be such a  commission created for Manila ... ?)  Are there historical reasons for this lack of national pride? We can say  that until the arrival of the Spaniards there was no sense of a unified archipelago constituted as one country.

True. We can also say that the high cultures of the nations in the region seemed, unfortunately, to have  bypassed the Philippines; there are no Angkors, no Ayuttayas, no  Borobudurs. True. Centuries of contact with the high cultures of the  Khmers and the Chinese, had, except for the proliferation of the Sung  dynasty pottery found throughout the archipelago, no noticeable effect.  True. But all that aside, what was here?

To begin with, the ancient rice  terraces, now threatened with disintegration, incidentally, was an  incredible feat of engineering for so-called "primitive" people.  As a matter of fact, when I first saw them in 1984, I was almost as  awe-stricken as I was when I first laid eyes on the astonishing Inca city of Machu Picchu, high in the Peruvian Andes.

The degree of artistry  exhibited by the various tribes of the Cordillera of Luzon is testimony to a remarkable culture, second to none in the Southeast Asian region. As for  Mindanao, at the other end of the archipelago, an equally high degree of artistry has been manifest for centuries in woodcarving, weaving and  metalwork. However, the most shocking aspect of this lack of national pride, even identity, endemic in the average Filipino, is the appalling  ignorance of the history of the archipelago since unified by Spain and named Filipinas.

The remarkable stories concerning the courageous  repulsion of Dutch and British invaders from the 16th through the 18th centuries, even the origins of the Independence of the late 19th century,  are hardly known by the average Filipino in any meaningful way. And thanks  to fifty years of American brainwashing, it is few and far-between the  number of Filipinos who really know -- or even care -- about the duplicity  employed by the Americans and Spaniards to sell out and make meaningless  the very independent state that Aguinaldo declared on June 12, 1898.  A people without a sense of history is a people doomed to be unaware of  their own identity. It is sad to say, but true, that the vast majority of  Filipinos fall into this category.

Without a sense of who you are, how can  you possibly take any pride in who you are? These are not oversimplifications.

On the contrary, these are the root problems of the Philippine inferiority complex referred to above. Until the Filipinos take pride in being  Filipino these ills of the soul will never be cured. If what I have written here can help, even in the smallest way, to make the Filipino aware  of just who he is, who he was, and who he can be, I will be one happy expat.

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Romans 10:9
"That if you shall confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and shall believe in your heart that God has raised him from the dead, you shall be saved."
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