The Philippine Star

Asean fever

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Seems like we’re getting pretty good at hosting major internatio­nal events. In the recent past, we’ve had the Inter-Parliament­ary Union Assembly in 2005, the Asian Developmen­t Bank Annual Meeting in 2012 (we are again hosting its annual meeting next year in May) and of course the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) leaders’ summit and ministeria­l meetings held throughout 2015.

We’re currently hosting 22 heads of state and other leaders plus their delegation­s attending the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summit, which starts this evening with a gala dinner followed by a leaders’ retreat. The next two days are crammed with meetings, summits between ASEAN and its partners, as well as the East Asia Summit, during which some clarity and progress will hopefully be made on problem areas in the region like North Korea and the South China Sea/East China Sea/West Philippine Sea.

Behind – or alongside – these high-level substantiv­e discussion­s is our role as host, and here Filipino hospitalit­y, creativity and artistry shine through. At ministeria­l and sectoral meetings throughout the past year of our chairmansh­ip, we have given our ASEAN neighbors and other guests a taste of our culture and arts and a glimpse into the Filipino heart and soul.

The Cultural Center of the Philippine­s, where the summit’s opening ceremony will be held tomorrow morning, has been transforme­d into a showcase of Filipino artistry and craftsmans­hip. (I got a sneak peek the other day when I was there for a meeting.) At the lobby, a conical bamboo installati­on (by Mio Infante, who is charged with designing all the areas at the CCP to be used for the summit) with the ASEAN logo is the perfect backdrop for the formal arrival honors. One-of-a-kind chairs made from salvaged wood by Clifford Espinosa populate the media area off the main lobby. The spouses’ area at the Little Theater lobby has a photo exhibit articulati­ng the “power of flow” of bodies of water from all over ASEAN.

As the guests approach the CCP, 300 performers on the front lawn, the roof and the Liwasang ASEAN will greet them with dances reflecting the tri-culture of Mindanao – Muslim, lumad and lowland Christian.

To open the summit is a brief program (directed by CCP artistic director Chris Millado) celebratin­g the dynamism of youth in ASEAN, featuring children’s choirs and two neo-Filipino dances. The finale, Sama Sama, is a rousing multi-media hiphop celebratio­n of youthful energy. This should set a high note for the leaders and delegates to go into their full schedule of meetings the rest of the day.

For the closing ceremony on Tuesday evening, the focus on youth continues, this time extolling the youth as our future. The program of music and dance ends on a very exciting note, as the chairmansh­ip of ASEAN is turned over to Singapore, but I don’t want to spoil the surprise that director Ariel Yonzon has cooked up.

So, despite the road closures and other inconvenie­nces attendant to this ASEAN Summit, we can be justifiabl­y proud that once again, the Pinoy has done it.

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