The Manila Times

Palanca Awards returns, honors 60 writers

- ALVIN I. DACANAY

THE Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature ended its two-year hiatus on Wednesday night with its 70th edition honoring nearly 60 writers, including a broadcast journalist, a prizewinni­ng independen­t filmmaker and a Bacolod-based poet-lawyer.

On the sidelines of the awarding ceremony in Taguig City, Criselda “Dang” Cecilio-Palanca of awards sponsor Carlos Palanca Foundation told The Manila Times that seeing Filipino writers at the annual literary gathering “happy to be here, to see each other again” was “really heartwarmi­ng.”

“We were just waiting for the coronaviru­s pandemic to end,” she

said of the foundation’s “big decision” to not hold the awards in 2020 and 2021 — when state-mandated quarantine­s and physical distancing measures were enforced to limit Covid-19’s spread — “because we knew that the writers always looked forward to this.”

“Thank God that [the awards are] back,” she added.

In her speech, Cecilio-Palanca said that out of 1,455 literary works submitted this year, 56 received prizes, and of the 59 writers who won, 28 were first-timers. One of them was television journalist Atom Araullo, who clinched first prize for his essay “Letter from Tawi-Tawi,” which was first published on GMA News Online on August 5.

The essay is the text version of a documentar­y he and his colleagues made earlier this year, about an educator who visits children in their homes to teach them — and by extension, their parents — in a province where illiteracy is high and the residents are prone to manipulati­on and misinforma­tion.

He told reporters he had almost finished writing the essay — partly out of a worry it would soon lose currency, especially after the May 2022 elections — when the Palanca Awards announced its return this year. He said he submitted it as a “personal challenge,” adding that he “never imagined in a hundred years that I would make it to the awards.”

Like most new recipients of the prize, Araullo, who counts journalist and novelist Ernest Hemingway as an inspiratio­n, considers his win a “great validation.”

Also big winners this year were Khavn and Raymundo T. Pandan Jr., whose “ANTIMARCOS” and “Bitterswee­tland” nabbed the grand prize in the Novel in Filipino and English categories, respective­ly.

A previous winner for poetry in 1997 and futuristic fiction in 2001, Khavn scored his third Palanca for a work described in Filipino in a blurb from one category judge, performanc­e poet Victor Emmanuel Carmelo “Vim” Nadera Jr., as “a prolonged cry of opposition to the return of the Marcoses in the Philippine government.”

Upon accepting his prize, the maverick director of the Gawad Urianwinni­ng “Balangiga: Howling Wilderness” gave an impromptu, rap-style acceptance speech that paid tribute to Ericson Acosta, the activist-author reportedly killed in a military operation in Negros Occidental province earlier on Wednesday.

Pandan, who earlier won for poetry in 2006 and poetry for children in 2012, dedicated his latest work on an October 31 Facebook post “for Negros, for its people, for the crop which sustains us, and which we must sustain to endure but also to find joy in our bitterswee­t lives.”

The former law dean of University of Saint La Salle in Bacolod said he first began writing the first draft in 1984, completed it the following year and edited it for this year’s competitio­n almost at the last minute.

The ceremony’s guest of honor was University of the Philippine­s professor emeritus and scholar Dr. Nicanor G. Tiongson, who, in his speech, urged his fellow writers to create works that fearlessly expose wrongdoing and oppose abuse of power.

“Tandaan na ang mga akda na ginagawa natin ay makakatulo­ng para mapalaya ang ating mga kababayan ang kanilang sarili sa bakal na kamay ng mga kawal ng kasinungal­ingan (Remember that the works we create would help free our countrymen from the iron hand of the forces of falsehood),” Tiongson said.

“At sa kanilang paglaya, unti-unting maglalaho ang buwang ng kamangmang­ahan na naghahati sa atin at ating mga kapatid, at sama-sama nating mabubuo ang gintong lipunan ng pakikipagk­apwa sa tinubuang lupa (And once they’re free, the ignorance dividing us from our brethren would gradually vanish and we’ll form together that golden society of fellowship in our homeland),” he continued.

Regarded as the country’s counterpar­t of the United States’ Pulitzer Prize, the Palanca Awards was named after business and philanthro­pist Carlos Palanca Sr., and establishe­d in 1951. It aims to cultivate Philippine literature by providing incentives for writers and serving as a treasury of their works.

For the full list of winners, visit www. manilatime­s.net.

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