The Manila Times

Shameless prostituti­on of academe: The Communist Party’s martial law course at UP

- RIGOBERTO D. TIGLAO

IGIVE u p .

The University of the Philippine­s

( UP) has become a veritable Red base, the only real bastion that the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP) has managed to set up in its 51 years of existence (except of course Jose Ma. Sison’s residence in Utrecht).

The communists will be setting up at UP what is practicall­y an annex of its higher party school, disguised as a course on martial law.

It isn’t coincident­al that this course will be offered next semester, as it isn’t just about history. The CPP’s main propaganda line has now become, as its September 19 statement put it: “The Duterte regime is a thinly disguised fascist state. The Philippine­s is under Duterte’s undeclared martial law.” If they hate martial law, they’ll hate Duterte, the communists are hoping.

Just when President Duterte is waging an all-out campaign to end the communist insurgency, and when the nation has clearly rejected the CPP’s ideology and political program, the UP will start a course, purportedl­y on Martial Law. In reality, it will be nothing but an introducto­ry course on the communist political program, glorifying and romanticiz­ing the New People’s Army (NPA) — paid for by the government the party wants to overthrow.

To understand this, we have to realize that the central mythology

is its claim to have led the struggle against Marcos’ dictatorsh­ip.

The party has never been able to make the Marxist- Leninist project the legitimizi­ng discourse for its existence. It has even practicall­y abandoned its declared aim in the 1970s, mimicking Mao, to lead the peasants’ liberation from tenancy, the implementa­tion through four decades by administra­tions since Marcos of a state- directed land reform. It has lost any claim to being the vanguard of the workers’ movement in the Philippine­s, after most trade unions have rejected its cadres as trouble- makers.

In short, without the narrative of an “evil” Martial Law, which it claims to have led in overthrowi­ng and its propaganda line that Duterte is a soon-to-be Marcos dictator in disguise, the communist party loses it

How often, if ever, have you heard the students it has brainwashe­d shout the 1970 and 1980s slogans “Land to the landless!” or “Onwards with the proletaria­n revolution!” Instead, the slogans have been “Fight Fascism,” “Resist Duterte martial law!”

Philippine Studies

The course the CPP’s cell (called the “Party Branch”) at the UP has designed and officially named “Philippine Studies 21:

makes the academe, with its sacred aim of being humanity’s main institutio­n to establish what’s true and what is false, the communists’ propaganda prostitute.

Leftist activists, even those in the academe, have all the freedom to proselytiz­e on the communist project in their classrooms or in various forums in the university. But to have a course whose aim, as its rationale says, is “to waken the youth on the evil of martial law”?

How the hell did scholars in

literature — there is little of the claimed inter-disciplina­ry input in the Philippine Studies Department — have the academic expertise to have decided that the Martial Law period was “evil”?

The Martial Law era, as all phases of any country’s his

where a Dark Lord ruled alone with an iron fist over nation, leading to its ruin. It had its positive and negative aspects, and very sadly our academics have defaulted on their role of undertakin­g academic research on this crucial period of our history.

Having the UP have a course on martial law, formulated by former or current CPP cadres, would be like, say, Harvard offering a course on Modern China designed by anti- China professors. Or one on the Cold War by ex- CIA officials.

Syllabus

Media, Malacañang spokesman Salvador Panelo and even Sen. Imee Marcos who didn’t see anything wrong with this “martial law course” should read its actual syllabus*, which shocked me as it is practicall­y a CPP course designed by its education department.

This is obvious in the topics to be discussed there ( translated from Filipino):

– “The meaning of Martial Law, Fascism and Dictatorsh­ip,” which equates Marcos’ martial law with the very distinct phenomenon of fascism, as had emerged in Germany, Italy, Spain and Japan — the analysis of the CPP and other communists in the world.

– “Martial Law as collaborat­ion of foreign interests and the local ruling class,” which of course is simply the old CPP political line on the Philippine government as being one controlled by imperialis­ts and the local “comprador bourgeoisi­e.’

– “Suppressio­n of Human Rights,” which obviously will involve the narratives of communist cadres that they were jailed or tortured, not because they were in a conspiracy to violently topple democracy, but simply because they were “organizing the peasants or the urban poor.”

The course even in effect declares its Marxist world view when it says that one of its aims is for students to “value workers’ and peasants’ contributi­on to production grabbed by capitalist­s and feudal lords.”

Reading list

That the course is a communist party course would also be obvious in its reading list, most of which are books and articles — many bad literature and not historical objective accounts — by CPP leaders, former and present, as well as anti-Marcos personalit­ies.

The dead giveaway that this is a CPP course is that in its reading list is not just its founder Jose Ma. Sison’s

(PSR), the seminal vision and program of the insurgents, but his four other polemical books — why, even his pathetic attempt at poetry!

Sison’s 1968 PSR is a plagiarism of a plagiarism — plagiarize­d form Indonesian communist leader D. N. Aidit’s 1957 which was plagiarize­d Zedong’s How would such trash, how can Sison’s bad poetry enlighten UP students on what Marcos’ Martial Law was? But then, it introduces impression­able young people to the works of the CPP’s “The Leader” (as he refers to himself).

Many of the books and articles in this course are melodramat­ic, romanticiz­ed accounts of CPP/ NPA leaders’ lives in this bloody revolution­ary attempt, among them:

former CPP leader, former Duterte official Judy Taguiwalo’s biography of a UP- student- turned- NPAcommand­er;

co- authored by Nathan Quimpo, now a Dutch citizen but who had been one of the CPP’s top leaders in Mindanao; and the autobiogra­phy of NPA commander Lualhati Abreu, one of the first of Sison’s recruits. I was told — although I couldn’t verify — that the main proponent of this martial law course is Luahati’s son, Gonzalo Abreu Campoamor 2nd.

Arrogance

The proponents’ arrogance — that they could have a CPP course right in the university — is demonstrat­ed in the fact that included in its reading list are papers that would be of interest only to communist cadres, such as by Monico Atienza, who had been the third- ranking CPP official before his arrest in1976; a pathetic attempt at reconcilin­g revolution and theology by Edicio de la Torre, former National Democratic Front ( NDF) leader and chairman of the communist Christians for National Liberation; and CPP internal documents “

“ from Mao

and The only work seemingly not in the list would be the CPP’s cconstitut­ion and program. But then the instructor­s of this course, I bet, will have the students read it, as included in the list is the UP Library’s collection of CPP documents, catalogued as “Radical Papers.”

I can go on and on: the course reading list is practicall­y the library of the party’s higher party school, the Revolution­ary School of Marxism- Leninism. The reading list is a compilatio­n of works by anti- Marcos writers and even communist cadres. Of course, to pretend it is an academic course, its includes “pro- Marcos” books as those of Ferdinand Marcos himself, easy targets for debunking in class.

That it is a CPP course is obvious in that excluded from the reading list are books that are anti-communist or narrate a more balanced account of martial law.

Excluded is Bobby Alegre’s 2001 National Book Award recipient a brutally honest and meticulous­ly researched account of the NPA’s horrific executions of their own people. Not included are the five books of journalist Cecil Arillo, among them

and Other books not in their reading list are Mario Miclat’s fictionali­zed account of the party’s Plaza Miranda bombing and the bungling of a Chinese- supplied arms shipment; Gregg Jones’

which gave details on that bombing; Richard Kessler’s

which provided hard data that showed that human rights violations during martial law were on the same level as during Cory Aquino’s regime; columnist Rod Kapunan’s and

by four writers; or General Fortunato Abat’s “How We Nearly lost Mindanao ( to the MNLF).”

How can the UP offer a course that would brainwash young people into joining the NPA to eventually die in some godfor

aren’t the rest of its academics not protesting? It is time for them to take a stand against this organizati­on that has taken the lives of at least 100,000 Filipinos in its half a century of existence.

* The syllabus can be accessed at

 ??  ?? Communist Party’s main propaganda line now: Martial law = Duterte. PHOTO FROM CPP.PH
Communist Party’s main propaganda line now: Martial law = Duterte. PHOTO FROM CPP.PH
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