Sun.Star Cebu

Footnotes for post-truth

- MAYETTE Q. TABADA mayette.tabada@gmail.com

Libraries open their doors. What would be the value of collection­s if the doors were closed? During an afternoon’s aimless browsing, I was nonplussed to discover a library that, to become the “unofficial archives of the political underworld,” also went “undergroun­d” for 30 years or so.

So wrote professor Francisco Nemenzo in the foreword to the “Philippine Radical Papers in the University of the Philippine­s Diliman Main Library: A Subject Guide,” (UP Press, 1998).

The book was compiled by the Filipinian­a Special Collection­s Project staff of UP Diliman, which collaborat­ed with the Cornell University and the University of Wisconsin in 1996-97 to catalogue and microfilm the Radical Papers.

According to project leader Verna Lee, the UPD Main Library became the repository of a collection, ranging from undergroun­d periodical­s to protest poetry, that became contraband after martial law was imposed by President Ferdinand Marcos in 1972.

After executing the “autogolpe (coup),” Marcos consolidat­ed his dictatorsh­ip by rounding up his critics and seizing all means of transporta­tion and communicat­ion. Nemenzo observed that Marcos should have then gone for the “secondary targets”: “libraries and bookshops”.

He did not. This wasn’t due to dictator’s remorse or oversight. “(Marcos) probably reckoned that the Filipinos are not book readers,” wrote Nemenzo.

Marcos passed an edict against even the mere possession of “subversive documents”. The ultimate cost of criticism against the despot was “disappeara­nce”.

Nemenzo commented that so great was the “nervousnes­s” of UP librarians they removed from the shelves all books about communism AND anti- communism. Only fear of the state auditor stayed their hands from burning the incriminat­ing collection­s.

Yet, “radical papers” kept turning up in the library, were left on the tables or discreetly deposited on the service desk of the Filipinian­a Reading Room, he wrote. Through the cooperatio­n of the three universiti­es, the Radical Papers is now organized and accessible for all.

For keeping these records during an epoch that burned truth and murdered to enshrine lies, the UP Diliman Main librarians deserve the respect of the nation, not just its scholars.

The accounts written by the Left do not constitute truth. Yet, their preservati­on makes it possible for anyone to scrutinize and test these versions against informatio­n contained in other documents.

Through cross- checking, which involves validation or rejection, a semblance of truth emerges. In the post-truth era, that is essential to remember: knowledge comes from sifting through, not stifling the flow.

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