Sun.Star Pampanga

Somewhere in Central Luzon

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(Editor’s note: The articles that will be featured will be published by series and are excerpts from the book ‘Somewhere in Central Luzon’by the columnist).

Since Angeles achieved its cityhood status in January 1964,the town known as Kuliat ( a former barangay of San Fernando, the capital town) has never been the same. The decade beginning 1962-1972 remains a memorable epoch in local history which can be described by one word. Syncopated.

It is an unpreceden­ted era when Angelenos made their first tangible millions as a boom town hosting American military personnel at the height of the war in Vietnam, and its colorful transition from a boom boom town to a bang bang city with the entry of and by rule of the author’s favorite characters and their collaborat­ors.

Syncopated is the term which, in music, denotes a measure into which a new accent or rhythm is introduced over the regular accent. Angeles is the country’s big town and its charm may be best described in terms of a shopping center that offers something for everyone and everything for someone. It’s the American concept of a big town, rich both in history and promise of the future (excerpts from the introducti­on of Ram Mercado).

‘Somewhere in Central Luzon’ The insurgency movement in Central Luzon, like any conflict arising from the human condition cannot be traced to any single factor or specific point in time. Historical­ly the numerical superiorit­y of ethnolingu­istic group known as Pampangans was evident in the central plains stretching north to Lingayen Gulf , west to the Zambales mountain ranges, south to Manila Bay and east to the Sierra Madre.

Following the defeat of Pampanga chieftain Raja Soliman in Tondo in 1571,Spanish conquistad­ores easily invaded the Kapampanga­n region. The Spanish period saw the foundation of settlement­s mostly located in coastal and river routes. The oldest towns are those along the southern portion along the Rio Grande or Pampanga river, or adjacent its tributarie­s farther north.

Already invested with a rich socio-economic culture before their conquest, Pampangans resisted new and foreign influence, except in the faith which converted the natives by the hundreds. In succeeding decades fratricida­l rivalry between Mexican and Spanish friars blew up the problems of maladminis­tration and corruption among the clergy which had a direct hand in running the affairs of local government.

The Pampangans started to witness the invaders’exploitati­on of the natives, their resources, and even their original culture. The highly productive agricultur­al land of the Pampangans and the region’s accessibil­ity to Manila increased Pampanga’s importance and strategic value to the Spanish settlement­s in Manila.

Corrupt practices of Spanish officials, cruel exactions led to a series of rebellion by Pampangans and attempts to invade Manila. For many decades, acts of oppression and tyranny nurtured the seed of insurgency among the natives which,when watered and exacerbate­d by the conspiracy of the social and political elites of Pampanga, spread undergroun­d roots for generation­s to come.

A revolt of the masses was the revolution of 1896.it was the fruit of illustrado reform movement and Bonifacio’s Armed struggle. It was a failure in many aspects. Filipino upper class leaders filled up the vacuum left by by the Spanish rulers and their minions. The Americans abetted, though softened somewhat, the existing exploitati­on. (Next: The appearance of peasant and labor leaders in 1929) .

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