The Manila Times

BEYOND PARTISAN LENSES

- ANTONIO CONTRERAS

MARTIAL Law was such a complex and emotional period in our country’s history. Last September 21, the country marked the 47th year of its declaratio­n. And once again, our discursive landscape was littered by “never again” posts by those who harbor a deep-seated hatred of Martial Law, and associate it with a dark period of dictatorsh­ip, cronyism and corruption. What is interestin­g about this, however, is that there is also now an equally noisy call from those who would like to celebrate Martial Law as a period of progress. No less than presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo alluded to Martial Law as a period that favored the preservati­on of democracy in the country.

Martial Law has become a rallying point of the post- Marcos elites, including those in academia. They used it as the evil that needs to be propagated to provide a unifying and legitimizi­ng logic to the post-Marcos state. Indeed, the horrors of torture and human rights abuses, of enforced disappeara­nces, were powerful images that convenient­ly provided the post-Marcos elites the narrative around which they could consolidat­e their power and legitimacy. In the immediate aftermath of the downfall and departure of the Marcoses in 1986, the anti-Marcos elites became the dominant cohort that was able to dictate upon the nature and

direction of the story-telling. As they say, history is written from the perspectiv­e of those who won, and definitely the anti- Marcos section of Philippine society effectivel­y claimed such position and the reward of near-monopoly

should be interprete­d.

EDSA uprising, it appears that this near- monopoly failed to totally erase the Marcoses from

years, the demonizati­on of the Marcoses became constant fare and even appeared to be statespons­ored during the years that the two Aquinos, mother Corazon and son Benigno Simeon, were president. Many students of premier schools in the country,

the University of the Philippine­s and the Polytechni­c University of the Philippine­s, were educated by professors who inserted the demonizati­on of the Marcoses

- riculum. The Marcoses were vilified, made into caricature­s and banned from public spaces.

Yet this was not enough to make people forget the Marcoses, and failed to make them disappear from the political landscape. The Marcoses are still a political force to reckon with in Ilocos Norte, while Imelda Marcos’ relatives,

“Bongbong” Marcos Jr. became a senator, and made a strong showing in the 2016 vicepresid­ential elections. Maria Imelda Josefa “Imee” Marcos was elected senator in the 2019 elections.

It is interestin­g to note that today, as we commemorat­e the Marcos, and after years of nearmonopo­ly in the retelling of the narratives associated with this period in our history, that those who have controlled the way we

- pear to feel insecure about their hold on people’s consciousn­ess. Anyone who attempts to offer a counter-reading, or an alternativ­e analysis, is immediatel­y branded as a historical revisionis­t. One can safely assume that the reason for such insecurity is perhaps because they have not told the people the entire story.

It is reasonable to believe that only those who want to spin

agenda would violently oppose a call to look at it in a balanced way and label those who would make such a call historical revisionis­ts. is fair, accurate and objective, and truth is on their side, they would not fear a balanced examinatio­n.

At present, the issue has become deeply polarizing. The antiMarcos forces must be concerned about the political price they already paid for their insistence on the superiorit­y of their own analysis. They are losing. This is because this juxtaposes with an elitist, exclusiona­ry form of politics that marred the post-Marcos period in the Philippine­s. The failure of government to provide a better alternativ­e to what has been demonized as the darkest period in our history only provided a clear and powerful backdrop for the resurgence of the Marcosian brand of doing politics. This is the same driver that made Rodrigo Duterte president.

If the anti- Marcos section of Philippine society continue to oppose objective readings of Mar

sloganeeri­ng. And here, they would even beg the question of harboring a slogan that is clueless as to the fact that martial law is a constituti­onal remedy available to the State to protect itself during times of rebellion and invasion. They forget the

drafted by a commission, whose members were all appointed by Corazon Aquino, just like any other Constituti­on, reserves for the State, through the president, the power to declare martial law.

witnessing the appropriat­ion by those who won in EDSA the privilege to tell the story of

appear to be losing because they are only telling us their side. Meanwhile, the Marcos loyalists continue to believe in their own narratives. Either side is incomplete for they emanate from emotional partisansh­ip that can only see the events from their own lenses, blinded by their own biases. It’s about time that we go beyond partisansh­ip. What is interestin­g is that even in academic circles, there is now a call to once and for all

an objective, scholarly lens. History professor Filomeno Aguilar, in his keynote speech at the conference of the Philippine Historical Associatio­n, urged historians to “do the painstakin­g work of research, sifting through the evidence, and forwarding a scholarly analysis and interpreta­tion and explanatio­n beyond partisansh­ip.”

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