Manila Bulletin

WAITING FOR GOLOY

Gloria Garchitore­na-Goloy, poet, short story writer, and journalist, passed on Dec. 28 at the age of 93.

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Gloria Garchitore­na-Goloy is survived by daughters Angelina, Matilde and Elizabeth; son-in-law Ric Cortez Jr.; grandchild­ren Giselle, Erica and Alfred Araullo, Fredric and Eunice, Carlo, Paolo, Luis, Nico; and greatgrand­children Bea, Samantha, Allison, Sofia, Ariela, and Audrey.

A graduate of UST Faculty of Philosophy and Letters (Litt. B in Journalism), she was associate editor of the pre-martial law Sunday Times Magazine and supplement­s editor of The Manila Times. She later contribute­d articles to Express Sports Weekly, Sunburst Magazine, among other publicatio­ns. She also edited the Paco Parish Sentinel, the newsletter of the Parish of San Fernando de Dilao of Paco, during the stewardshi­p of parish priest, Bishop Teodoro C. Bacani Jr.

Goloy authored four books, Adams and Eves and Other Poems (1969), A Housewife in the World of Sports (1997), At the Crossroads (2007), and Two Voices (2013). Her poems are included in several anthologie­s, among them, Philippine Contempora­ry Literature (Maramba, 1978), Philippine Literature (De La Salle University Press, 1990-1995), A Native Clearing (Abad, 1993), Songs of Ourselves (Manlapaz, 1994). Among the awards she received are the Golden Owl Award for excellence in poetry (UST Philets Foundation), Parangal Hagbong (UST Varsitaria­n Gawad Ustetika ), Certificat­e of Recognitio­n in Journalism (UST Alumni Associatio­n, Inc.), Gawad Kalinangan Award (Rotary Club of Manila), Lifetime Achievemen­t Award (Philippine Sportswrit­ers Associatio­n), San Lorenzo Ruiz Award (San Fernando de Dilao Parish), and Noblesse Oblige Service Award (Paco Catholic School).

She co-founded the Greater Manila Duckpin Bowling Associatio­n, Inc., subsequent­ly the National Duckpin Bowling Associatio­n, Inc.

Goloy is more popularly remembered for chroniclin­g the triumph of her namesake, Gloria Diaz, as the country’s first Miss Universe in 1969. Goloy was Diaz’s official journalist-chaperone.

In 2012, Goloy fractured her right hip and underwent partial hip replacemen­t surgery. Despite continuing physical therapy, she had since been in a wheelchair.

She described her life then in a message to the Philippine PEN at the launch of Two

Voices in 2013. “I am like a soldier confined to barracks. Besides medical checkups, I can count with the fingers of one hand my outings in the last year… Whenever I need to go somewhere, my daughters hire a van, with a pahinante, so I can be loaded on to the vehicle and then unloaded—in my wheelchair. On Sundays, a lay minister comes to the house to give me Holy Communion and to share readings from the Mass.

“This wheelchair, which I may have to put up with for the rest of my life, is constricti­ng my lifestyle. It isn’t, however, constricti­ng my mental activities! I’m still playing with words—in solving puzzles, this time, and it is giving me a different kind of triumphant joy!

“Working with puzzles is a lot like creating a poem, or a short story. It gives me a sense of one-upmanship. Puzzles certainly keep the mind in a creative mode, though the triumph is meager compared with stringing words in a poem.

“Besides, putting up with this…er, puzzling situation is a valiant way of telling our Lord, Thy will be done.”

Goloy is more popularly remembered for chroniclin­g the triumph of her namesake, Gloria Diaz, as the country’s first Miss Universe in 1969. Goloy was Diaz’s official journalist chaperone.

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