The Philippine Star

Pinoys on the Potomac

- Email me at penmanila@yahoo.com and check out my blog at www.penmanila.ph.

Erwin Tiongson and his wife Titchie are in their early 40s, successful profession­als and the parents of young sons; they live in Fairfax, Virginia, a pleasantly wooded suburb just outside of Washington, DC. An Atenean from Nueva Vizcaya, Erwin teaches Econometri­cs at Georgetown University, while Titchie, a prizewinni­ng writer, has chosen to stay at home to look after the children. Outwardly they might seem to be just another Filipino couple living the good American life, steadfastl­y focused on the present and the future. But their true passion inclines elsewhere, as Beng and I would discover in one of the most fascinatin­g encounters we’ve had in our current American sojourn.

I’d first heard about Erwin from another new Fil-Am friend, Sonny Busa, a retired Marine, a former consul and instructor in internatio­nal relations at West Point. (Sonny, in turn, had been introduced to me by upstate-NewYork-based Sharon Delmendo, who has done a lot of research on Philippine-American relations — so now you see how the academic circuit works.) Sonny had mentioned to me that there was a Filipino in the community who had taken it upon himself to chronicle the history of the Philippine presence in Washington and the surroundin­g area—more than a century of visits and residencie­s by Filipino politician­s, diplomats, writers, artists, musicians, and other personages whose life and work, in one way or another, drew them to the American capital.

That’s how I found the website that contained all this informatio­n — a WordPress site titled “Philippine­s on the Potomac: Filipino-American Stories in Washington, D.C.” (https://popdc.wordpress.com). If you’ll take a minute to click on that link, you’ll discover what I did, with a child’s wonderment at the entrance of a carnival: short articles and accompanyi­ng photograph­s tracing the connection­s between Filipinos and Washington, DC.

As might be expected, the big political figures, especially those from the Commonweal­th and postwar period, dominate the reportage: Manuel L. Quezon, Carlos P.

It was a treat to listen to a radio recording of Jose Garcia Villa, made in the 1950s, of him reading his ‘Lyric 17’ (1942) which famously begins with ‘First, a poem must be magical….’

Romulo, Sergio Osmeña, Manuel Roxas, and Jose Abad Santos. But cultural luminaries are also well represente­d: Juan Luna, Jose Garcia Villa, Juan Arellano, Enya Gonzalez, Fernando Amorsolo, and Bienvenido Santos, among others.

Quezon had served as Resident Commission­er — effectivel­y our ambassador — in Washington until 1916, and when he went to the US on his wartime exile and died in New York in 1944, it was at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington — not too far from where our embassy now sits — where his funeral mass was held prior to his interment at Arlington (less than 20 years later, John F. Kennedy would follow the same route; MLQ’s remains were moved to the Philippine­s after the war, and now lie at the Quezon Memorial).

Carlos P. Romulo and his family lived in a home on Garfield Street for 16 years, CPR having served in many capacities, from

aide de camp to Gen. Douglas MacArthur to Resident Commission­er, ambassador, and president of the United Nations General Assembly. (One of the website’s most remarkable images has an old sepia photograph of the Romulos superimpos­ed exactly over the same spot in front of the present house, which has barely changed.)

The site provides a treasure trove of other historical facts— including, inevitably, tidbits of informatio­n that serious scholars might dismiss as trivia, but which enthusiast­s like me can’t get enough of. The sculptor and National Artist Guillermo Tolentino, for example, once worked as a waiter in Washington, and somehow managed to meet President Woodrow Wilson and to present him with the gift of a small statue, which Wilson kept in his room until his death; Wilson later helped Tolentino get a scholarshi­p to art school. We also learn that Juan Luna and Felipe Agoncillo went to Washington in 1899 to campaign against the Treaty of Paris, and stayed at the Arlington Hotel, where they were spied upon by the Secret Service. (All these stories are properly attributed and referenced, by the way.)

Better than just poking around the website, the Tiongsons invited us to lunch and show-and-tell, and I couldn’t wait. Learning of my current affiliatio­n with the George Washington University, Erwin had pointed me to an article written by CPR’s granddaugh­ter Liana relating how Romulo had coached a debating team from the University of the Philippine­s in an engagement with the GWU team, over this issue: “Resolved, That the Philippine Islands should be granted immediate and complete independen­ce.” The debate took place on April 18, 1928 at GWU’s Corcoran Hall. “UP won,” said Erwin. “It was the team’s fifth victory, after defeating Stanford, California, Utah, and Colorado. The team would go on to defeat all their other opponents — a total of 14 universiti­es, if I remember correctly.”

Even more interestin­g were the personal stories that Erwin and Titchie shared with us (after a sumptuous lunch of home-made corned beef and baked salmon, which all by itself was well worth the Sunday visit). I can’t go too deeply into the details now, but Beng and I were thrilled to share Erwin’s elation over his most recent discovery, a book that had been inscribed by Maximo Kalaw, MLQ’s private secretary, to a “Nina Thomas” — who turned out to be the American lawyer the young Quezon had been engaged to (he broke off the engagement after being advised that marrying an American was political suicide). Erwin made contact with Nina’s heirs in Virginia; she never married, but she passed on Quezon’s monogramme­d walking stick and their engagement ring to her niece.

Erwin also showed us a movie poster from 1946 of Anna and the King of Siam, featuring Rex Harrison, Irene Dunne, and a littleknow­n actress named “Chabing” —who turned out to be Isabel Rosario “Dimples” Cooper, Douglas MacArthur’s girlfriend (not mistress) between marriages; after MacArthur left her, she resumed her film career (she was notable for having recorded the first on-screen kiss in Philippine movies in 1926), assuming the single name “Chabing,” whose filmograph­y you can look up on IMdb.

It was also a treat to listen to a radio recording of Jose Garcia Villa, made in the 1950s, of him reading his “Lyric 17” (1942) which famously begins with “First, a poem must be magical….” Most moving was the 20-minute documentar­y of President Quezon’s funeral — directed by no less than the renowned director John Ford — that Erwin had magically retrieved from somewhere in the many university libraries, archives, and museums that he still haunts in search of fugitive Filipinian­a. He has begun a collection of war correspond­ence from the early 1900s and the Second World War; one 1902 letter poignantly retained a swatch of jusi, which the wife of an American official in Iloilo wanted her folks to see.

We could have stayed there the whole day, reveling in our memories of the grand old men of Philippine letters — NVM Gonzalez, Ben Santos, Nick Joaquin, Manuel Viray; I shared my own little adventures in cultural retrieval. But Beng and I had sadly had to trundle out again into the autumn chill, warmed by our imaginatio­ns, and in my ears rang a line from Viray’s poem about his old house in Washington, on Cathedral Avenue, which the Tiongsons had also located:

“A streak of light aslant / On the screen door creeps up the line of dusty books.”

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 ??  ?? Titchie and Erwin Tiongson share their trove of discoverie­s. Photo by June Dalisay
Titchie and Erwin Tiongson share their trove of discoverie­s. Photo by June Dalisay
 ??  ?? Imagining Jose Rizal along the Potomac riverfront, with images drawn from Wikipedia Commons
Imagining Jose Rizal along the Potomac riverfront, with images drawn from Wikipedia Commons
 ??  ?? By BUTCH
DALISAY
By BUTCH DALISAY

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