Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘DESECRATIO­N’ OF MANILA MONUMENT OF BEATIFIED JAPANESE LORD SCORED

- By Edgar Allan M. Sembrano @Inq_Lifestyle CONTRIBUTE­D

Plaza Dilao in Manila’s Paco district, the park where the monument of the Japanese Catholic warlord Justo Ukon Takayama stands, has been converted into a tambakan, or a dock for constructi­on materials and heavy equipment, in connection wtih the Skyway Stage 3 project, incurring the ire of heritage advocates and even devout Catholics.

Takayama was beatified last Feb. 7 in Osaka by Pope Francis’ special representa­tive, Cardinal Angelo Amato, prefect of the Vatican’s Congregati­on for the Causes of Saints.

Skyway Stage 3’s contractor is constructi­on giant DMCI Holdings, Inc., developer of the controvers­ial Torre de Manila.

Heritage Conservati­on Society chair Tats Manahan said “making the park a loading dock in the name of practicali­ty sort of negates” the significan­ce of the place, which “speaks well of our country’s gentility in our ability to forgive, perhaps because of our faith.”

A question of ‘delicadeza’

“It is really a question of refinement and delicadeza,” she added. “But then, if developers can just brazenly destroy buildings of historical and artistic significan­ce, what’s stopping them from desecratin­g a space that commemorat­es an intangible historical memory?”

Lawyer Roger Paz of DMCI withheld comment on the issue.

Ludovico Badoy, executive director of the National Historical Commission of the Philippine­s (NHCP), said the site was not going to be affected by the Skyway project.

“The monument of Lord Ukon Takayama will stay in Plaza Dilao alongside the Skyway developmen­t project according to the technical personnel of our Historic Preservati­on Division,” he said.

It was NHCP that gave the go signal to the constructi­on of the multistory Torre de Manila, even if it turned out to be a “photobombe­r” to the Rizal Monument and was surrounded by historic places with NHCP markers.

“The monument and the NHCP marker are safely protected until the project is finished,” said Badoy.

The immediate area of the monument and the historical marker has been cordoned off using GI sheets. The monument itself has been covered by what seems to be plastic sheets.

It is not clear though whether the NHCP gave the go signal for the constructi­on materials to be placed on site. Badoy said he would have this investigat­ed.

Memorial to revolution

But the park is a memorial not only to Takayama, but also to 25 Japanese volunteers of the Philippine Revolution.

Previously, the area had been assigned by Spanish authoritie­s for Japanese refugees, such as Takayama.

In 1943, the Philippine Historical Markers Committee, forerunner of NHCP, proposed the site to memorializ­e the Japanese volunteers of the Revolution.

On Nov. 17, 1977, the Takayama monument was inaugurate­d.

Takayama was born in 1552. He was exiled together with over 100 companions to the Philippine­s in 1614 after refusing to renounce his Christian faith—which had been outlawed by the shogunate.

His life was marked with heroic virtues, and protecting Japanese Christians against persecutio­n, according to the formal cause of his beatificat­ion.

Fifteen years after his death, the Archdioces­e of Manila petitioned in 1630 for his declaratio­n as a saint.—

 ?? —PAULO ALCAZAREN ?? Plaza Dilao and the monument in March 2017
—PAULO ALCAZAREN Plaza Dilao and the monument in March 2017
 ?? —EDGARALLAN SEMBRANO ?? Plaza is unrecogniz­able at present
—EDGARALLAN SEMBRANO Plaza is unrecogniz­able at present

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