Philippine Daily Inquirer

History meets in newly restored Casa Real

Food for thought was provided aplenty, and so were Ilonggo meals and snacks

- By John N. Crossley Contributo­r John N. Crossley, of Monash University, Australia, presented the paper “Doctrina Christiana: National Treasure, World Treasure” at the PNHS conference.

THE SPLENDIDLY restored Casa Real in beautiful and bountiful Iloilo City was the setting for the Philippine National Historical Society’s (PNHS) 36th National Conference on National and Local History, which was supported by the province of Iloilo through Gov. Arthur Defensor Sr., the National Commission for Culture and the Arts’ Committee on Historical Research, and the Philippine Social Science Council.

More than 200 delegates attended the conference held on Oct. 22-24. The papers presented spanned the historical period from 1593 to 2016, and the whole length of the country was represente­d, from Vigan to Jolo and Tawi-Tawi, from Puerto Princesa to Tacloban, from the Ifugao in the north to the Maranao and Tausug in Mindanao and Sulu.

Local history featured large. Casa Real and the photograph­ic history of Iloilo opened the sessions; the activities of World War II guerrillas in Laguna were recounted at the end. The influence of the Church through the religious orders, especially the Franciscan­s and Jesuits, notably in the Visayas and Northern Mindanao, was demonstrat­ed, and the religious and social traditions of the Maranao of Lanao further developed the all-too-small amount of historical research that has been ac- complished so far by the Muslims of Mindanao and the far south.

There were moving accounts of World War II, together with a film episode, which showed a maturity in Filipinos’ analysis and observatio­n of Japanese intentions and Filipino reactions at the time of the Japanese Occupation of the Philippine­s in 1941-1945. These impacted on both those old enough to remember the conditions and those who were not yet born before 1941. Neverthele­ss, the objectivit­y of the presentati­ons was commendabl­e.

Although the papers were uniformly excellent, a couple stood out in demonstrat­ing an independen­t, truly Filipino approach to history that did not simply follow western dictates. Analyn Salvador-Amores scrutinize­d the import of Commission­er Dean C. Worcester’s recently recovered film of the Igorot of the Cordillera­s for Filipino communitie­s and Filipino history, quietly demolishin­g the narrow colonial approach all too commonly encountere­d. Clement C. Camposano’s thoughtful theoretica­l analysis of the notion of nation in the “discordant” writings of Jose Rizal, Andres Bonifacio and Isabelo de los Reyes raised important questions that should lead to reassessme­nts of the roots of the Philippine Revolution and its aftermath, not to mention the country’s idea of nationhood.

Food for thought was provided aplenty, and so were Ilonggo meals and snacks. Despite having been fed continuous­ly throughout the conference with an abundance of refreshmen­t, the proceeding­s ended with a generous conference dinner hosted by Governor Defensor, and a short program of gracious, spectacula­r and wonderful costumed dances by Western Visayas State University-College of Pescar’s Irong-Irong Dance Troupe.

Everyone is looking forward to the PNHS’ 75th anniversar­y meeting, which Greg Hontiveros, president of the Butuan Heritage Society, will host in Butuan City next October along with Mayor Ferdinand M. Amante Jr. It will be hard to surpass the quality of the papers this year, but it is expected that will happen again in Butuan.

In the meantime, the conference participan­ts overwhelmi­ngly supported plans for the nomination of the “Doctrina Christiana” and the Jawi scripts (many of which have been compiled by historian Samuel K. Tan) to the UN Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on’s Internatio­nal Register of the Memory of the World.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? THE CASA Real after restoratio­n work; it became the setting for the 36th national conference
of the Philippine National Historical
Society.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO THE CASA Real after restoratio­n work; it became the setting for the 36th national conference of the Philippine National Historical Society.

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