Philippine Daily Inquirer

Laya’s CCP vision: Culture for ‘kanto’

- —STORY BY JANE BAUTISTA

Jaime Laya, a former education minister and Central Bank governor during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, is back in government at the age of 83, this time as the newly appointed chair of the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s (CCP). Laya on Wednesday said he planned to revive the “balagtasan”—a debate in the form of impromptu Filipino poetry—and other expression­s of folk creativity in ways that ap- peal to today’s youth.

Jaime Laya, the Central Bank governor during the Marcos dictatorsh­ip, is back under another Marcos as the chair of the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s (CCP) where he plans to promote culture and the arts through innovative ways that appeal to the youth.

Two of his visions are the “Kanto Canta” music competitio­n and revitalizi­ng the “balagtasan,” a Filipino form of debate done in verses that integrate rapping to adapt to modern times.

“The idea of Kanto Canta is that it needs to be their original compositio­n and use indigenous musical instrument­s like the nose flute, guitar or bandurya,” he said on Wednesday during the Pandesal Forum at Kamuning Bakery in Quezon City.

Participan­ts will submit a music or performanc­e video shot in any “Pinoy kanto” or area and uploaded on YouTube.

Laya said the competitio­n started last year with many participan­ts; some winners even managed to secure commercial contracts.

To debunk impression­s that it is only for the elite and older people, Laya said the CCP will motivate the youth through initiative­s that use new technologi­es like anime and digitizati­on.

Career building

The CCP also intends to provide a career progressio­n for winners of the National Music Competitio­ns for Young Artists Foundation created under Ferdinand Marcos Sr.’s Proclamati­on No. 1173, Thirteen Artists Awards (TAA) and students of the Philippine High School for the Arts (PHSA).

The TAA is a triennial conferment founded by the CCP in 1970 that recognizes outstandin­g contempora­ry visual artists.

“When you win in these competitio­ns, people tend to forget you. At PHSA, we pick and support students with potential but after graduating, they are also forgotten,” Laya said.

He said the CCP will identify the most promising performers and artists and give them scholarshi­ps or support for advanced studies.

“We want to continue it so we would have renowned artists in the future like Lea Salonga and Cecile Licad,” Laya said.

The government-owned and -controlled cultural center was one of Marcos Sr.’s iconic legacies.

In a Senate hearing last September, CCP president Margarita Moran-Floirendo announced that it would temporaril­y close its doors for two to three years to make way for renovation and structural retrofitti­ng.

Laya said that the renovation had nothing to do with the current Marcos administra­tion, particular­ly former first lady Imelda Marcos, because the budget was approved under President Duterte’s term.

Marcos minister

Laya, now 83 years old, was the first minister of budget and management, then became governor of the Central Bank of the Philippine­s from 1981 to 1984, before he was ousted by Marcos Sr. amid crucial debt negotiatio­ns with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the Philippine­s’ commercial bank lenders.

But from 1984 to 1986, he was promoted as minister of education, culture and sports and headed the National Commission for Culture and the Arts and the Associatio­n of Certified Public Accountant­s in Public Practice.

During the forum, he shared that he was discovered by the late dictator’s chief economic planner Gerardo Sicat, who insisted on his appointmen­t even if “President Marcos did not know me at all.”

When Sicat was able to compel Marcos Sr., he said, “Don’t you think I should meet him first before I appoint him?”

In Malacañang, he said Marcos Sr. called him “Jimmy” and “spent one hour persuading me to join the government.”

Laya said he was initially uninterest­ed because he was already the dean of the University of the Philippine­s (UP) College of Business Administra­tion and partner in the accounting firm SGV.

‘Imagine’ that

“I was 33 years old. Imagine, he is the martial law dictator, talking to me, persuading me, so I got flattered,” he said.

“I told him I will join them for one year,” but right then and there, he was immediatel­y sworn in.

Laya was one of the first Philippine officials to say publicly that the 1983 assassinat­ion of opposition leader Benigno Aquino Jr. had hurt the economy as investors pulled out of the country due to the heightened political unrest following the killing.

He expressed confidence in the leadership of President Marcos Jr. and his “excellent economic team (who) I’m sure know what they’re doing.”

He advised current leaders to make long-term plans and think about the welfare of the next generation of Filipinos 50 years from now, instead of just “short-term remedies.”

A business administra­tion magna cum laude graduate of UP, Laya received his Ph.D. in financial management from Stanford University and an MS from the Georgia Institute of Technology.

He is currently the chair and president of Philtrust Bank and treasurer of the Opera Guild of the Philippine­s.

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