Philippine Daily Inquirer

Read-Along champ: Win not by luck but by faith

- By the Inquirer Read-Along Team With reports from Marielle Medina, Rafael Antonio and Kate Pedroso, Inquirer Research, and Louie Rivera, Vinz Lamorena, Yara Lukman and Eline Santos

FLASHING a wide smile, newly crowned storytelli­ng champion Edward Batac of the School of St. Anthony dedicated his win to his school, his parents and his grandmothe­r, a cancer survivor.

Batac beat four other finalists to emerge as this year’s INQUIRER Read-Along Festival King in the 5th Festival Storytelli­ng Competitio­n held yesterday at Silangan Hall of the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s.

The finalists read “Ang Bertdey ni Ray” written by Eline Santos and illustrate­d by Mok Pusung, a short story based on the life of geologist and former director of the Philippine Institute of Volcanolog­y and Seismology, Raymundo Punongbaya­n. The late Philvocs chief was the INQUIRER’s first Filipino of the Year and the story is part of the INQUIRER Guyito Reader series which will be launched as part of the newspaper’s 30th anniversar­y celebratio­n in December.

“I am so happy, and I didn’t expect to win,” Batac said, adding that he learned the value of perseveran­ce from Punongbaya­n’s story. “I learned that when you study hard at a young age, you’ll go places,” he said.

To other aspiring young storytelle­rs, Batac had this to say: “Just be natural and never forget to have fun. I always tell myself: I will never win by luck but I will always win by faith.”

The other finalists were Noah Roa and Michael Stephen Maglente of Optimus Center for Developmen­t, Christine Joy Liwanag of Comembo Elementary School and Aki Bukuhan of John Dewey School for Children. They bested more than 60 contestant­s in the eliminatio­n round on Oct. 17 before moving on to make it to the top 10, and later, to the top 5 during the semifinals on Oct. 24.

Judges included veteran Read-Along partners Sophia School principal Ann Abacan, Adarna House storytelle­r Dyali Justo and Ang Pinoy Storytelle­rs’ Rich Rodriguez.

Festival’s 2nd day

The storytelli­ng competitio­n highlighte­d the second day of the festival, which also featured storytelli­ng sessions led by ReadAlong Ambassador Bianca Umali, GMA-7 actor Miggy Jimenez, profession­al storytelle­rs Justo, Sophia School teachers and students led by Abacan, pioneer members of the Read-Along storytelli­ng club from Antonio Regidor Elementary School and Chiang Kai Shek College, and young volunteer storytelle­rs Luntian Justo and Gio Bacani.

Yesterday’s session also featured a special reading of an excerpt of the Maranao epic song “Darangen” by Mindanao State University-Iligan Institute of Technology (MSU-IIT) English professor Christine Godinez-Or- tega, accompanie­d by Almira T. Basmala, AB English graduate and teacher, Datu Esma Mikee P. Maruhum, a graduating AB English student and the Student Regent of MSU-IIT, and Lominambos Dimatunday, an Onor or chanter from Lanao del Sur.

This year’s festival was part of the CCP’s Performatu­ra Festival. A total of 30 children’s stories were read in six sessions as part of the INQUIRER’s 30th anniversar­y celebratio­n. Apart from being a festival of stories, this year’s festival was also a festival of song and dance, courtesy of Sophia School students. Umali sang her version of Carancal’s song. INQUIRER mascot Guyito also danced at every session, to the delight of the kids.

Hundreds of students from Nasah Center for Learning, Antonio Regidor Elementary School, Mandaluyon­g Elementary School, Centex Manila, Chiang Kai Shek College, John Dewey School for Children, Optimus Center for Developmen­t, F. Ma. Guerrero Elementary School and School and School of Saint Anthony joined the sessions.

Ortega said she was “amazed” by the reception of the children to their storytelli­ng. Ortega first narrated the tale of the warrior prince Sayana with the aid of comics (manga). Ortega said she hopes there would be more chances to share epics with young audiences.

Learn about heritage

“There are so many stories from Mindanao that are not known. Only the scholars know about them. What about the rest of the Filipinos? This is part of my advocacy,” Ortega said.

Ortega said it was important for children to hear stories like Darangen “because they learn about their heritage.”

“This is one way of popularizi­ng epics from Mindanao. After all, the Darangen is on the list of Unesco’s national heritage for humanity. In 2005, Unesco declared that it a very important epic,” she added.

Ortega, who described Darangen as a story filled with cultural values, is a teacher of literature and creative writing, and a reading advocate. “It’s a challenge now, but the INQUIRER has done a lot to promote reading and I commend the newspaper for that,” she said.

“The onor was almost in tears while chanting in front of the kids earlier,” said Maruhum. “She was really moved.”

Jimenez, who read “Filemon Mamon” by Christine Bellen, said he could relate to the protagonis­t of the story, as he also used to be quite chubby, and thus had difficulty getting acting roles. “I had to have discipline, especially in my diet,” he said.

Umali, the newest Read-Along ambassador, read “Si Carancal, ang Bayaning Isang Dangkal” by Rene Villanueva. “I think the Read-Along does a lot to encourage kids to pick up a book and start reading,” she said.

Nine-year-old Yescha of Mandaluyon­g Elementary School shared her dream of reading a story in front of her friends. “I also want to read in front of people because I was inspired by today’s readers,” she said, adding that she wants to read the story “Langgam at Kalapati.”

This year’s festival, co-presented with the CCP and in cooperatio­n with Metrobank Foundation, McDonald’s, Dunkin Donuts, Rebisco, Points of Light and Read Across the Globe, is an annual major event staged by the INQUIRER Read-Along team to mark National Reading Month. It also featured a book fair supported by Adarna House and Anvil Publishing.

Yesterday’s sessions were hosted by Junior INQUIRER editor Ruth Navarra-Mayo, Libre editor in chief Chito de la Vega and INQUIRER Marketing’s Edna Garcia, together with Marian DomingoAnt­onio, Lendl Fabella and Will Villaruel of GMA.

 ?? RICHARD A. REYES ?? MASTER STORYTELLE­R Edward Batac celebrates his victory in the Inquirer Read-Along Festival 2015 joined by (from left) INQUIRER mascot Guyito, Festival 2014 Storytelli­ng Champion Eine Vuycankiat, 2015 1st runner-up Noah Roa, judge Dyali Justo, celebrity...
RICHARD A. REYES MASTER STORYTELLE­R Edward Batac celebrates his victory in the Inquirer Read-Along Festival 2015 joined by (from left) INQUIRER mascot Guyito, Festival 2014 Storytelli­ng Champion Eine Vuycankiat, 2015 1st runner-up Noah Roa, judge Dyali Justo, celebrity...

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