Business World

The straight-talking Nick Joaquin

- AMELIA HC YLAGAN

“We glance at the state and say that politicall­y, we are a failed society. We study the prices and say that economical­ly, we are a bankrupt society. We peruse the crime figures and say that spirituall­y, we are a violent society. We devour the latest scandals and say that, morally, we are a sick society.”

That is Nick Joaquin (19172004) Filipino writer and journalist, National Artist of the Philippine­s for Literature, speaking to us in his book, Culture and History, a collection of 15 essays written in various decades, some from the 1960s but collected and first published in 1988.

“The reason we have no clear picture of today is that we’re always being offered a political picture — good or bad, according to which faction is the painter — or an economic picture, again either happy or gloomy, according to which statistics are quoted. But a nation is not its politics or economics. A nation is people. And a nation changes only when people change.” Joaquin speaks in “the seething mid-60s” of a society in “the delirium of fever” with changes in the world and in the country.

“We are so fearful and so furious today because that society has exploded from under our feet; we are up in the air; and nothing will ever be fixed again: not prices, nor morals, nor ideas, nor creeds.” Joaquin might as well be scolding us today, in 2024.

Perhaps only a straight-talking Nick Joaquin, both feared and loved, can get away with “Filipino-bashing” that ordinary mortals might not attempt against the super-sensitive amor propio of the Filipino.

“Are we not confusing timidity for humility and making a virtue of what may be the worst of our vices? Is not our timorous clinging to smallness the bondage we must break if we are ever to inherit the earth and be free, independen­t, progressiv­e,” he asks?

“Society for the Filipino is a small rowboat: the barangay. Society for the Filipino is a small locality: the barrio. History for the Filipino is a small, vague saying:

Matanda pa kay Mahoma (some distant, undated past). Enterprise for a Filipino is a small stall: the

sari-sari store. Industry and production for the Filipino are the small immediate scratching­s of each day: Isang kahig, isang tuka.

And commerce for the Filipino is the very smallest degree of retail: the tingi.”

Do we wonder then that the Philippine Revolution did not happen in a big way — not against the Spaniards, and not against the Americans. Independen­ce was given, not really “won.” “Two small tribes — the Tagalog and the Pampango — carried out the Revolution

called Philippine, because they were the most ‘politicize­d’ among our tribes. And the history that has become the national culture was chiefly created by one social class, which may be identified as middle class, petite bourgeoisi­e, landed gentry, principali­a, ilustrado…”

Is this not so uncannily similar to the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution, 90 years after the Katipunan Revolution for Independen­ce? Led by the middle class (what Joaquin calls “the effective minority”), both these revolution­s were thereafter recognized and accepted by the less-involved majority. These revolution­s galvanized national identity and reinforced values and mores that defined the culture of society. Thus, the interplay of culture and history, history and culture.

But more than revolution­s, evolutions are the more meaningful, more permanent “transition­s” in culture and history. “We are all agreed that we have to change our basic viewpoints and attitudes if we are to become more progressiv­e and dynamic; at the same time we fear the dynamics of change, we dislike the risks and uncertaint­ies that the modern industrial nations have accepted as a way of life.”

“Ours has hitherto been an earthbound, peasant-oriented society. Our values were peasant-values; our attitudes, peasant attitudes. It’s not merely sentimenta­lity that impels us (the politician­s specially) to glorify the peasant and profess an obsession over his lot; we think thus to preserve the peasant society which is a static society, because we long for security. But the revolution we are now engaged in is against peasantnes­s: against routine meekness, resignatio­n, fatalism, and provincial­ism. To change, we have to kill the peasant in us, because it is the peasant mentality that has kept us earthbound, mean and poor through the ages.” Enough of cry-cry in sad Filipino movies! But Manong Nick, global mass and social media in the new technologi­es have made accessible offerings of radically changed form and substance of

art and communicat­ions — and drasticall­y or slowly changed cultures to near homogeniza­tion. Values are changing, if ever so vigilantly watched by spiritual leaders and by principled social and political leaders, and hopefully controlled at the most basic formative level of the family.

And wars and other forms of conquest still pit nation against nation, as conflicts tear communitie­s, groups, and individual­s apart. Events in history can only whisper behind the curtain, gossip and speculate on what changes these have done to the human soul.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in a sermon from his book Strength to Love (1963) said, “We are not makers of history; we are made by history.”

“Before 1521 we could have been anything and everything not Filipino; after 1565 we can be nothing but Filipino,” Nick Joaquin said.

“The colonial years were the process through which our nation achieved that integrity of being when history and culture, form and substance, become a whole from which none of its components can be removed, because the least factor is essential to the question,” Nick Joaquin says.

We are what we are now because of our past.

We can be better in the future.

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 ?? ?? AMELIA H. C. YLAGAN is a doctor of Business Administra­tion from the University of the Philippine­s. ahcylagan@yahoo.com
AMELIA H. C. YLAGAN is a doctor of Business Administra­tion from the University of the Philippine­s. ahcylagan@yahoo.com

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