Philippine Daily Inquirer

Newsignifi­cant book about war-torn Philippine­s

- By Benito Legarda Jr.

Dr. Irene Duckworth Hecht’s “Under Manila Sky: A Memoir of the Art of Survival,” a significan­t addition to the Philippine literature on World War II, has just been published by the University of Santo Tomas (UST) Publishing House (

available at Solidarida­d Bookstore, tel. 2541068; UST Bookstore, tel. 4061611 loc. 8252 or 8278).

“Survival” here refers to the internment of herself and her mother Rosalind from January 1942 to February 1945 at UST.

Hecht was born and raised in Manila, where she spent the first 13 years of her life, three of these as an internee.

Unlike some other expatriate­s, she and her mother interacted with the local scene through cultural activities.

Rosalind played the viola in a string quartet and was a board member of the Manila Symphony Society under my mother’s presidency.

Hecht was my late sister Carmita’s classmate in the modern dance class of Trudl Dubsky Zipper. They performed together in the Metropolit­an Theater in 1941, in a performanc­e of the children’s scene from Mus- sorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition.”

Hecht’s style is straightfo­rward and unpretenti­ous. Unlike some other accounts of internment, she manages to convey the mundane happenings of quotidian life without getting too bogged down in detail.

The account of external events during internment runs parallel to an account of internal maturation.

The reduction of food rations is not merely quantitati­vely mentioned but also the physical and psychologi­cal effects, with a weakening of strength and feelings of depression offset by the constant hope of liberation.

On the unforgetta­ble evening of February 3, 1945, when initially unidentifi­ed troops and tanks appeared at the gate, she did not know if she faced massacre or rescue, and had two thoughts; one was a desire to live, the other a determinat­ion to die with dignity, if need be. She had attained early maturity at 13.

Liberation meant the end of hunger and deprivatio­n, but also a time of turmoil as the internment camp organizati­on fell apart with everyone going his own way.

Unrecogniz­able

Manila was so ruined that Hecht found it almost unrecogniz­able. She narrates a couple of “markers”: One was the appearance of a family driver with a company De Soto he had disassembl­ed at occupation and had reassemble­d at liberation, with some of her father’s company papers he had hidden.

Another marker was the first postlibera­tion concert of the Manila Symphony Orchestra (which had lain low during the occupation) under Dr. Herbert Zipper in a church ruin on May 9, 1945.

In July 1945, she and her mother boarded an army truck to take a ship that would take them to the United States. She was crying, and a G.I. asked her why, since she was going home. Manila had been the only home she had ever known, and she felt she was leaving home.

Her economy of style reflects her educationa­l background. She was in the Harvard-Radcliffe class of 1955 majoring in medieval history, got a Master’s Degree in Canadian American history from the University of Rochester in 1961, and earned her Ph.D. in History at the University of Washington in 1969.

Her academic career saw her rise through the ranks at Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Mary Baldwin College in Staunton, Virginia, Sangamon State University in Springfiel­d, Illinois, and finally, in 1988 to 1990 as president of Wells College in Aurora, New York.

Over the next 10 years she did educationa­l work with various associatio­ns until retiring in 2010 and returning to her early interest in demographi­c history doing research and writing.

Her academic background probably accounts for the substantiv­e and unembellis­hed style of her work.

 ??  ?? “Picture at an Exhibition,” Metropolit­an Theater, 1941
“Picture at an Exhibition,” Metropolit­an Theater, 1941
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