Sun.Star Davao

Simple and quiet Edsa 1 rites

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THERE'S no way that the commemorat­ion of the 1986 Edsa people power uprising can be “simple” and “quiet” like what the administra­tion of President Rodrigo Duterte wants it to be held this year. The Edsa celebratio­n will always be among the major events of the year for many reasons, one of which is that it is the biggest moment for the country in recent history. No way can that be downplayed.

But we know why the Duterte administra­tion is insisting on a “simple” and “quiet” celebratio­n, and it is not about “refocusing,” like what its people repeated many times in a recent presscon. The President is not a “fan” of the Edsa uprising and his followers hate the color yellow. He is closer to the Marcoses than he is to the Aquinos, He is more of a reactionar­y than a progressiv­e.

Yet in that press con the other day, Malacañang wisely used minor figures of the 1986 uprising like Jose Ma. “Joey” Concepcion III, presidenti­al adviser for entreprene­urship, and Cecile GuidoteAlv­arez, to counter insinuatio­ns that the Duterte administra­tion is scuttling the Edsa rites. Concepcion and Alvarez are with the Edsa People Power Commission, the government agency tasked with organizing the annual Edsa 1 commemorat­ion. Its head is Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea.

Concepcion is the son of businessma­n Jose “Joecon” Concepcion Jr., former trade secretary and founder of the National Movement for Free Elections (Namfrel) that was instrument­al in exposing cheating by the dictatorsh­ip of Ferdinand Marcos in the 1986 snap elections. Alvarez is the wife of former senator Heherson Alvarez, one of the politician­s who fought the Marcos dictatorsh­ip while on exile in the US.

“Moving forward, my vision is to see how we can continue to live on the spirit of Edsa, maybe in different forms. We can’t keep living in the past,” Concepcion said. I am not buying that justificat­ion for the “quiet” Edsa rites. It is precisely because of what is happening now that we should recover the spirit of Edsa. Moving on would be wrong considerin­g how we are partly reliving now the dark days of the dictatorsh­ip. A “simple” and “quiet” celebratio­n would only serve the interests of those who are rewriting the Edsa narrative and making it appear like the Marcos dictatorsh­ip was heaven and Ferdinand Marcos was a hero.

Impunity characteri­zed the Marcos dictatorsh­ip and we are experienci­ng creeping impunity now. What we now call “extra-judicial killings” were called “salvaging” then. The Marcos dictatorsh­ip jailed political opponents using trumped-up charges. Aren’t we seeing a shade of this act now?

Interestin­gly, the Duterte administra­tion’s celebratio­n of the 1986 Edsa people power uprising opened yesterday with a wreath aying at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier” at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. Isn’t that the same cemetery where the late dictator Marcos is also buried after the Duterte administra­tion allowed the burial of his remains there?

I think it is now more than ever that the forces of Edsa commemorat­e the uprising on their own and reassert the causes that made it an inspiratio­n for other struggles against tyranny that broke out around the world.

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