Business World

Offender of the faith

- LUIS V. TEODORO

Duterte’s tirades have succeeded in deflecting attention from the real issues that should concern every citizen.

Before Rodrigo Duterte, no Philippine president, as morally challenged as some of them may have been, had ever disparaged Catholicis­m and Christiani­ty, much less cursed the God Christians, Muslims, and Jews worship in common. Even Ferdinand Marcos, to whose overthrow in 1986 both the institutio­nal Church as well as its activists contribute­d, did not take that path, although among the victims of his terrorist regime were nuns, priests, pastors, and other religious workers.

That some of the country’s past presidents were devout Catholics was certainly among the reasons. But the more skeptical would probably attribute their refusal to mock the faith of 90% of Filipinos to their knowing that it would neither serve any rational purpose nor help them in the next elections. Some did bristle at the Catholic church’s attempts to influence government policies and even took positions contrary to that of the clergy, while having themselves photograph­ed on their knees in church and secretly courting the Iglesia ni Cristo’s fabled command votes. That was about the farthest even the most fervent and most hypocritic­al disciples of the separation of Church and State went. Common sense decided the rest.

But it was also a matter of good manners and breeding. And perhaps unintentio­nally, the respect that they showed the Christian faith and its God, as well as Islam and Allah, was in keeping with everyone’s, especially any leader’s, responsibi­lity of respecting the beliefs of others rather than contributi­ng to the further fragmentat­ion of a people already divided along economic, social, ethnic, and even racial lines.

In contrast, Mr. Duterte has been taking every opportunit­y, including those events in which he’s in attendance but which have nothing to do with Church- State relations, to verbally abuse the clergy. He has even justified the killing of at least one priest because he ( Fr. Mark Ventura) was supposedly no different from him ( Mr. Duterte) because he too had an eye for the ladies. He has also questioned Biblical accounts of creation and insulted the Judeo- Christian God — whose existence, however, he has denied.

Why Mr. Duterte has been directing the attention of this predominan­tly Christian, Catholic country to the Church, priests, and God could be explained by the circumstan­ces in which it is happening. Among those Filipinos worried about the future of this country, a slew of urgent issues has been of critical concern since he assumed the Presidency two years ago. They include:

[ 1] The human rights violations and the killing of suspected drug users and pushers mostly among the poor, as well as of social and political activists, Lumad leaders, “istambay” ( loiterers), and even local government officials ( Ten mayors and five vice- mayors have been killed since August 2016, a month after Mr. Duterte assumed office. Three mayors were slain in supposed encounters with the police; a fourth was killed by the police while already in custody.);

[ 2] The surge in the inflation rate to a record high of 5.5% (7.7% in the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao) due to the disastrous Tax Reform Accelerati­on Inclusion law;

[ 3] The likely railroadin­g by Mr. Duterte’s rubber-stamp Congress of a new constituti­on 64% of the people do not want, but which would neverthele­ss change the unitary form of government into a federal one and as a result strengthen dynastic and warlord rule, emasculate the Bill of Rights, enable Mr. Duterte to run for two fouryear terms, and allow foreign penetratio­n and control of the media, the economy, public utilities, and even the profession­s;

[4] The Duterte regime’s not doing anything about imperialis­t China’s continuing violation of Philippine sovereignt­y in the West Philippine Sea, where that once socialist country has constructe­d military bases, bars Filipino fisherfolk from their traditiona­l fishing grounds in the Philippine­s’ Exclusive Economic Zone, and even steals the catch of those who manage to elude its coast guard cutters;

[ 5] The regime’s scuttling of the peace talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippine­s just when the peace negotiator­s were on the verge of signing an agreement on the social and economic reforms that if implemente­d would address the roots of conflict and end the 49-year-old civil war; and

[6] The imminent danger of Mr. Duterte’s placing the entire country under martial law supposedly to enable him to address criminalit­y and the illegal drug trade, but which in reality would enable him to suppress all protest and dissent as terrorist acts, arrest regime critics, and keep himself and his co-conspirato­rs in power.

If his rants against the Church, the Bible and God Himself are meant to deflect attention from the above issues so he can more freely prepare for the coup against the 1987 Constituti­on he’s always had in mind since day one of his troubling rule — in the same manner that he lulled the public and political opposition into complacenc­y when he kept saying he would not run for President in 2016 — if that is the intention, it is at least partly succeeding.

His tirades have offended the Catholic and Christian faithful, except his Biblethump­ing acolyte Manny Pacquiao, who believes that even the most vicious government­s are founded on divine right. Mr. Duterte has provoked a debate between his partisans, trolls, and media mercenarie­s on the one hand and priests, bishops and those who take their Christiani­ty and Catholicis­m seriously on the other.

The latter have labeled him blasphemer, called him the antiChrist, and even cursed him as the devil himself. But his rants have also beguiled freethinke­rs, agnostics, atheists, and the simply anti- clerical among the population. They applaud what they think is his attempt to address the long overdue need to put the Catholic Church in its place, question its tax exemption privileges, assail its involvemen­t in politics and its intervenin­g in State policies, chastise it for its great wealth in a country where 22 million are desperatel­y poor, and recall its sorry record of collaborat­ion with the power elite from the Spanish colonial period onwards.

Mr. Duterte’s tirades have apparently struck a sympatheti­c chord among those who are critical of the many failings of the Church. In the process, he has succeeded in deflecting attention from the real issues that should concern every citizen who still cares for this country and its people.

Some of the accusation­s against the Church are both accurate and valid. But they are issues best left for a better time when the country is not as perilously close to losing all those gains and values that while far from complete, and always at risk, its best sons and daughters have managed to win for the people through the decades. Respect for human rights and for free expression and press freedom, the enshrineme­nt of the right to life, due process and liberty in the 1987 Constituti­on, and the making of a just and lasting peace are values and objectives that need defending and constant re- affirmatio­n.

This is not the time to read into the ravings of the Offender of the Faith meanings he very likely never intended. Because he is neither a historian nor theologian, nor even reasonably well- informed, and his profanity- laced tirades against Christiani­ty and God being thoroughly at odds with the standards of rational discourse, there may not, in fact, be any appropriat­e time at all to ever, ever, ever take his views on anything seriously. But his regime’s relentless march to tyranny, the lawlessnes­s and violence of it, the corruption, brutality and the hate — these are entirely different matters that demand careful attention, and the most appropriat­e response.

 ?? LUIS V. TEODORO is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodor­o). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity. www.luisteodor­o.com ??
LUIS V. TEODORO is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodor­o). The views expressed in Vantage Point are his own and do not represent the views of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibi­lity. www.luisteodor­o.com

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