The Manila Times

When the intellectu­al class simplifies the complex

- ANTONIO CONTRERAS

IHAD an interestin­g Facebook exchange with a fellow academic. In reaction to his #NeverAgain comment on my post, I asked him for his thoughts on what the state should do as an alternativ­e to declaring martial law in the event of widespread disorder and rebellion.

His response was classic, one that I would have easily offered myself during my early years as a young political scientist freshly minted from graduate school. He argued that disorder and rebellion are natural outcomes of an oppressive state in the hands of fascist regimes and their cohorts among the exploitati­ve elites and their transnatio­nal patrons. For objective, scientific verificati­on and validation of such claims.

These are people who readily problemati­ze constructs in their own areas of expertise, but have taken as fact the convenient generaliza­tions of those claiming to have been innocent victims of state reprisal. Very little critical thinking is deployed to put in

- ing some academic rubric, with data gathered objectivel­y from primary and secondary sources, the various narratives which all people, and not only those who claim to having been innocently victimized, have experience­d.

There is quickness to generalize Martial Law as totally evil, and to convenient­ly deploy the narrative that Marcos was solely responsibl­e for every single act during Martial Law. A student who makes that kind of generaliza­tion would have failed. But we have the irony of members of the academic community who expect their students to be more probing, more precise and more rigorous in their data gathering and analysis, who when given the chance to interpret a most complex period in history, settle for the convenient and the safe, at least in the context of surviving in the world of academia.

After all, they live in a world dominated by a mind- set that has already made a conclusion about the total evil of Martial Law. With university presidents, college deans and prominent faculty members adhering to such a view, believing otherwise may be dangerous for one’s promotion

churches to integrate with Chinese culture, but rather with socialist society. The churches are already Chinese; they just aren’t socialist enough. The party wants tighter control of them.

Both Catholics and Protestant­s have responded to Xi’s call for Sinicizati­on.

The Catholic Patriotic Associa-

June. The document says: “To love the motherland and obey the state regime is a responsibi­lity and obligation for each Christian. Core political requiremen­ts are acceptance of the leadership of the Communist Party of China, supporting the socialist system and safeguardi­ng constituti­onal and legal authoritie­s.”

It went on: “The Church will and tenure.

It is constraini­ng the freedom of inquiry when we have statements signed by top university

asked to conduct scholarly inquiries on Martial Law that can help us shed light on its complexity, there is already a tacit celebratio­n of a preferred narrative. It is al-

- cally incorrect revisionis­t. What more when you are confronted with public pronouncem­ents of your university president or college dean that tacitly impress on you that they prefer a particular line of argument.

Only senior, tenured faculty members nearing retirement would be as bold. Very few younger ones among those who are still insecure about their tenure and those still trying to seek acceptance by their academic communitie­s would be bold enough to buck the dominant and preferred narrative. This is most unfortunat­e as it certainly runs contrary to the natural mission of universiti­es to be breeding grounds for ideas, no matter how unpopular, and to be enablers of critical inquiries, even if those are on issues that are inconvenie­nt and controvers­ial.

Martial Law was a complex period in our history. It was perceived and experience­d by different kinds of people in different ways. Those who consciousl­y rebelled against the state saw and experience­d it differentl­y from those ordinary citizens who simply lived their lives. And there are as many narratives that need to be recognized and valorized, and respected, without labeling or naming those who did not perceive and experience Martial Law negatively as complicit enablers of fascism and tyranny. And consequent­ly, that those scholars who would inquire into these

guide clerics and ordinary Catholics to actively practice core values of socialism, love the motherland passionate­ly, support the leadership of the Communist Party, obey the law and serve society.” There was nothing about its Christian mission.

Two Protestant national com-

plans to Sinicize themselves.

It is important, the Protestant­s say, to “Embrace and support the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party. Be guided by the core values of socialism and endorse the systems, ways, theories and culture of our country’s developmen­t. Based on Biblical teachings, stick to the fundamenta­l beliefs and core teachings.”

Of course, Marxism is also foreign. But since the time of Deng multiple narratives should have the protection that they deserve under the principles of academic freedom, and that they should not be readily labeled as peddlers of historical distortion­s and fakery, and be treated as pariahs.

It is bad enough that when fellow columnist and academic Father Ranhilio Callangan-Aquino expressed his nuanced recollecti­on of Martial Law, which he characteri­zed “as an ambivalent chapter of our history,” he was derisively labeled as a clerico-fascist for not sharing the view of those who see it as total evil, even if he also disagrees with those who saw nothing wrong with it.

What we see here is a case where adherents of a dominant stream of interpreta­tions impose their own narratives as the only correct way of making sense of a complex period in our history. And in doing so, they dismiss those of others who believe otherwise as irrelevant, flawed, and imperfect, thereby demeaning and diminishin­g not only the opinions, but even the lived experience­s of these people.

While it is problemati­c and insensitiv­e for those who did not experience the ruthlessne­ss of Martial Law to ignore the suffering and pain experience­d by others who did — even if they were brought about by their own conscious choices to rebel against the state — it is equally problemati­c and insensitiv­e to diminish and label as false consciousn­ess the opinion of those who saw Martial Law in a more positive light because that is how they lived it. Worse is when those who see Martial Law differentl­y are likened to those who enabled genocidal tyrants by people who are supposed to know the finer distinctio­ns because this is part of their vocation as academics and as members of the intellectu­al class.

Xiaoping, the party has been careful to say that what it practices is “socialism with Chinese characteri­stics.”

In all likelihood, what the party hopes is that Chinese churches will transform themselves not by becoming more Chinese but by becoming more socialisti­c. All Christians in China, bishops and laity, are already Chinese. The liturgy is thoroughly Chinese. The only thing is that they have not yet become communists. But the call for Sinicizati­on has already seen both Catholics and Protestant­s hail the leadership of the Communist Party. Still, I assume, Xi will continue the big squeeze.

frank.ching@gmail.com Twitter:@FrankChing­1

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