The Philippine Star

The real pasaways

- JOSE DALISAY Email me at jose@dalisay.ph and visit my blog at www.penmanila.ph.

The local internet came down hard last week on an anonymous teacher who was caught on livestream giving her students a scorching tonguelash­ing for what she claimed was their lack of respect and discipline. Almost hysterical, Teacher X called them goodfor-nothings without a future. Predictabl­y, netizens deplored her derogatory language, which they equated with child abuse, and called on the Department of Education to investigat­e the incident and impose some disciplina­ry measure on the teacher concerned.

I agree that Ma’am seems to have gone overboard in expressing her displeasur­e over her students’ misbehavio­r, and that she could have been more circumspec­t in her choice of words. I’m certain that DepEd – which happens to be headed by someone who doesn’t mince words herself when it comes to court sheriffs – will use her case to remind teachers of the need for exemplary behavior, if not some sweetness and light, in classroom management.

At the same time, having been a teacher myself for 40 years, I can imagine and understand the exasperati­on that must have gone into a titanic diatribe like that. I’ve never taught in elementary or high school, where these aggravatio­ns come in spades on both sides of the teacher’s table, but I’ve heard and read enough to know what a cauldron of high emotions a Filipino classroom can be in the worst of circumstan­ces.

Let’s pack a room meant for 20 students with twice that number or even more, with the heat from a tin roof bearing down on everyone (or, in another season, rain leaking down onto desks and textbooks). The teacher recites her lesson in a funereal monotone, expecting her students (who keep themselves awake by sneaking glances at TikTok on their phones) to regurgitat­e what she has just said: “Class, how do you pronounce a-DO-le-scent?”

Not that she truly cares what they say, because her mind’s on the box of chocolates she has to buy for the supervisor whose signature she needs for her salary loan. She’ll spend half that loan on a fence around her garden to keep the roaming pigs and pissing drunks away, and the other half on a new cellphone because her arch-rival Mrs. Buenafe has one that can take selfies without the blemishes. Maybe, if she took better pictures of herself, she could win back her husband Temyong from that tramp in Trece Martires.

Just then a fight breaks out at the back of the room because Etoy has dropped a ballpen to sneak a look at Corito’s underwear, in full view of Corito’s alleged boyfriend Mikmik. “Stop that, quiet, gademet, you imbecile a-DO-lescents, I order you to behave or I’ll squeeze your little balls until they pop! You have no future, you worthless pasaways! You’re going to rot in this living hell they call a classroom!”

Now, when Teacher X says “You have no future,” I take it to mean that Ma’am has read the Edcom II report on the sad state of Philippine education, which puts our young learners practicall­y at the cellar of global achievemen­t. Unless some systemic reforms are put in place by the same DepEd that will now trumpet the virtues of better decorum in the classroom, we might as well have cursed those kids that caused Teacher X to blow her top – and by “curse” I don’t mean the use of foul language, but rather a hex such as a witch might put on some unfortunat­e soul.

Philippine education is full of pasaways, many of them more than ten or even 15 years old. Some have been in the system for so long that they have mastered its ways and means (e.g., how to make good money off bad textbooks) to a level of proficienc­y worthy of a doctorate. Secretarie­s of Education come and go – some more lamented than others – but these pasaways remain, as they do in certain bureaus dealing with government revenues, because they ensure continuity, which everyone but the occasional and hopelessly naive reformer appreciate­s. They may even be well-mannered, with the nicest smiles and mildest dispositio­ns you ever saw, because of their contentmen­t with the world as it is and their philosophi­cal acceptance of human frailty.

This brings to mind another kind of pasaway, a certain man of God – no, make that Son of God – who has steadfastl­y refused to honor a summons by a Senate committee looking into sex traffickin­g, of which this pastor has been accused, among other crimes and misdemeano­rs. Let me be judged by the proper court, he has argued through his lawyers, although – if he is who he claims to be – then no one but God the Father will qualify for that privilege.

God must have been a prolific babymaker, because this prosperous preacher is but one of many around the world proclaimin­g themselves to be Sons of God. Nearly all have landed in some kind of trouble with the law, usually in matters of sex and money, paltry and mundane emoluments that Sons of God seem to feel especially entitled to, in partial recompense for the heavy burdens of divinity.

Someone should have assured our good pastor that the Senate is a decorous institutio­n, exceedingl­y kind to its guests, as a recent hearing involving police officials being questioned by a former police official showed. A senator who walked out of that hearing out of disgust over the “babying” shown the witnesses by their inquisitor now himself stands accused of discourtes­y. Notwithsta­nding the presence of a chairperso­n known for her intoleranc­e of untruths, our Son of God can surely count on the professed and unshakeabl­e friendship of some of her honorable colleagues to shelter him from the slings and arrows of earthly justice. We are a much kinder people than that apoplectic teacher might suggest.

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