Philippine Daily Inquirer

Youth told Bonifacio, Rizal greatness same

- By Vincent Cabreza Inquirer Northern Luzon

BAGUIO CITY—Dr. Jose Rizal and Andres Bonifacio are Filipino heroes of equal stature and should not be pitted against each other because of a congressio­nal measure that replaces Rizal with Bonifacio as the national hero, according to an official of the Knights of Rizal.

During this year’s Rizal Leadership Training Conference at the Teachers’ Camp here, Reghis Romero II, Knights of Rizal supreme commander, said the debate, which House Bill No. 3431 has inadverten­tly triggered, was pointless.

The bill, filed by Bayan Muna Representa­tives Neri Colmenares and Carlos Isagani Zarate, declares Bonifacio the official Filipino hero, amending a series of proclamati­ons dating back to the late Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo who first honored Rizal by decreeing in 1898 that his Dec. 30 execution would be commemorat­ed as Rizal Day.

On orders of fellow Katipunan leader Aguinaldo, Bonifacio and his brother, Procopio, were arrested and executed on May 10, 1897, in Mt. Nagpatong in Maragondon town, Cavite province. Their deaths have remained a sensitive issue among historians and political factions in Cavite.

“Rizal and Bonifacio had the same aspiration­s. They were not different at all. They are both heroes,” Romero said in Filipino.

But the present generation of Filipinos have deeper connection­s to the teachings of Rizal who is the first acknowledg­ed “Global Filipino,” SenateMajo­rity Leader Alan Peter Cayetano said when he spoke to high school students who gathered for the conference on Dec. 16.

Cayetano said Rizal’s observatio­ns as a traveling Filipino would serve the current generation, as it provided insights that may unite the country to pursue growth by the year 2020.

Rizal wrote downmany of his observatio­ns in his journals or books, which explored cultures that embraced the Filipino, he said.

Older generation­s have been critical of the youth because these last few decades involved challenges that have ruined young people’s dreams, the senator said.

Cayetano said many Filipino parents had been warning their children that earning a degree does not automatica­lly land them jobs, “killing our dreams” to confront reality.

But Rizal’s travels showed no boundaries, which the modern and technologi­cally savvy Filipino youth can appreciate.

“We don’t believe in tomorrow; we believe in today. We don’t believe in saving the inheritanc­e for our future and for our children. We want to experience it now,” Cayetano said.

But Filipinos, he said, must learn to replace their “American dream” with the “Filipino dream.”

The American dream, which drives the United States, is about opportunit­ies that Filipinos still strive for as they take on jobs in countries other than the United States, he said.

Filipinos are praised in some countries for their profession­alism, skills and ability to adapt to a foreign culture, but abused in other countries where Filipinos take on menial jobs, Cayetano said.

The American dream, he said, is about the individual aspiration­s while the Filipino dream is “more noble” because it is about sacrificin­g for one’s family.

Cayetano said the Filipino youth must also review how he or she values himself or herself.

“Don’t sell yourself short. Doctor Rizal never doubted that the Filipino can,” he said.

‘Rizal and Bonifacio had the same aspiration­s.

They were not different at all...’

LUCENA CITY—A homeless woman, who has become a symbol of selflessne­ss after pleading for help for Supertypho­on “Yolanda” survivors despite needing help herself, is reaping what can be the fruits of the seeds of kindness she has planted.

Lilia MagpantayT­agle, 69, had reluctantl­y voiced a wish to have a hawker’s umbrella, which she could use in her main source of livelihood—selling rags. She got her wish, thanks to former students of the Philippine Tong Ho Institute (PTHI) here.

A businessma­n also expressed willingnes­s to help Tagle, awidow who now lives in a shack on a piece of property that she and her current partner, Pedro Samonte, 70, will have to vacate soon.

“Despite her situation, she’s still sounding off calls for help for typhoon victims,” said the

 ?? DELFIN T. MALLARI/INQUIRER SOUTHERN LUZON ?? THIS sidewalk near a school in Lucena City has been home to Lilia “Nanay Lily” Magpantay-Tagle, a widow who is reluctant to plead for help for herself but quick to appeal for help for survivors of Supertypho­on “Yolanda.”
DELFIN T. MALLARI/INQUIRER SOUTHERN LUZON THIS sidewalk near a school in Lucena City has been home to Lilia “Nanay Lily” Magpantay-Tagle, a widow who is reluctant to plead for help for herself but quick to appeal for help for survivors of Supertypho­on “Yolanda.”
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines