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Lean Alejandro and UP student activism

- Dennis gorecho

‘The struggle for freedom is the next best thing to actually being free,” said the late UP student leader leandro alejandro.

Popularly known as Lean, he was a student leader and later key figure in the national anti-dictatorsh­ip movement.

Lean was assassinat­ed on September 19, 1987 after announcing a planned nationwide strike against continued military involvemen­t in government even after Martial Law was lifted and a new administra­tion in power.

Lean was instrument­al in setting up the UP Sandigan para sa Magaaral at Sambayanan (SAMASA) student political party, which was a key force in UP campus politics in the 1980s and 1990s.

SAMASA began as a university­wide alliance of student organizati­ons campaignin­g for the return of student institutio­ns such as the student councils.

When the University Student Council was re-establishe­d in 1981, SAMASA won landslide victories in that election and in several elections after. Lean became USC chairman in 1983.

SAMASA was establishe­d when students’ movement was at its peak to defend their democratic rights to organize inside and even outside campus grounds.

Though I was in my first semester as a BS Economics freshman in 1987, I had vague memory of Lean at the time of his death.

I was not aware of his popularity perhaps due to my personal struggle or preoccupat­ion to adjust myself with the UP culture.

Apolitical was the right word as I was the typical nerd in my first two years, spending most of my time in the library, classrooms and dormitory.

I was warned several times not to participat­e in rallies and be associated with the activist groups.

Years later, if asked “Bakit ka ba naging aktibista?,” I usually answer back by saying that UP is the perfect place to grow in all aspects, whether it be intellectu­ally, politicall­y, socially in different or opposing spectrum.

Students have always been a potent force in social organizati­on and social change in Philippine society.

The UP student politics has taught

us the vision of service to the people.

The campus molded us to fight for the causes we believe in; trained us for the skills we need to communicat­e ideas and rally others to effect changes in society.

In 1979 Lean joined the staff of the Philippine Collegian as features writer, while I became part of Kule from 1989 to 1991 as its photograph­er and later chief photograph­er. I also became a member of SAMASA.

My mother knew that I would sooner or later be part of the student movement, which in a way became my justificat­ion for using the iconic “sandals” or tsinelas during my UP days.

Of all the rallies I covered, the dispersal of the May 14,1990 anti-us-bases rally at the Central Bank was the most memorable.

I suffered a head injury when a teargas canister hit my head, causing laceration­s that needed seven stitches. While at the hospital, I called my mother and greeted her “Ma, Happy Birthday. Please pick me up here at PGH.”

One of the SAMASA election campaign poster in the early 1990s featured my photo with the phrase “May panahong magduda’t magtanong, ngayo’y panahon ng pagharap at pagsulong” lifted from one of the progressiv­e songs.

More than his extraordin­ary height, Lean stood out as an activist because he possessed insight, a unifying approach, speaking and writing skills, and courage and boldness.

Almost three decades after Lean’s death, the Great Lean Run was organized in 2015 by SAMASA using an innovative and historical approach to teach the new generation lessons on martial law.

The 3.7-kilometer run at the UP Diliman Sunken Garden and Academic Oval is a special distance experienti­al run that includes an obstacle course, race, and chase production.

Participan­ts crawled through mud under barbed wire, got bombarded by water cannons, and ran away from truncheon-wielding military men or “Metrocom police” and “paramilita­ry groups” under threats of arrest or torture.

UP SAMASA aimed to “re-introduce” Lean, his ideals, and his works to the current generation of student activists through the fun run.

“I am sure you will agree with me,” Lean said in a letter, “when I say that the greatest adventure on Earth today is our struggle for freedom. The pain and the sacrifice are staggering. The battles are historical. And the victory shall be truly glorious indeed.”

The documentar­y film “Lean—in the Line of Fire is the Place of Honor” premiered live on Youtube on August 30, 2021, while a forum was hosted by Lean’s fellow UP student activist and renowned journalist, Malou Mangahas.

The documentar­y that took four years to finish memorializ­es Lean so that not only can those who knew him, remember him but more importantl­y that future generation­s would come to know him and learn from his life, struggles and contributi­ons. Let us continue to live by the ideals that bound us together. Let us celebrate activism.

 ??  ?? Almost three decades after Lean’s death, the Great Lean Run was organized in 2015 by SAMASA using an innovative and historical approach to teach the new generation lessons on martial law.
Almost three decades after Lean’s death, the Great Lean Run was organized in 2015 by SAMASA using an innovative and historical approach to teach the new generation lessons on martial law.
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