The Philippine Star

A GIFT FROM DOWN UNDER

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We had some very distinguis­hed visitors over at UP from James Cook University in Australia last week, and while most of them came from the sciences, I was happy to join the team that greeted and met with them, led by our very capable Vice President for Academic Affairs, the sociologis­t Cynch Bautista. These growing partnershi­ps are part of UP’s continuing effort to assume a more internatio­nal outlook — to imbibe the best of what leading universiti­es around the world have to offer while projecting and sharing our strongest academic and intellectu­al resources as well.

While most of our internatio­nal academic exchanges have traditiona­lly been conducted with universiti­es in the West, especially the United States, we have increasing­ly and consciousl­y broadened our reach to embrace more universiti­es within the region — Taiwan has been a very active partner of late — and Australia should be a logical focus for more of these exchanges.

I myself have had the pleasure of visiting Australia several times — as a visiting writer with the Australia Defence Forces Academy in Canberra, as a guest writer at the Sydney Writers Festival, and as a speaker at literary conference­s in Perth and Melbourne. What has always impressed me about Australia is not only the sheer vastness of the land, but also the openness and friendline­ss of the people I’ve met there, and their refreshing informalit­y.

Though not that old — it was establishe­d in 1970 — JCU has risen quickly to become one of the world’s top universiti­es focused on the tropics, with cutting-edge research in such diverse but important areas as rainforest monitoring, natural disasters, reef management, and vaccine developmen­t. Aside from campuses in Townsville and Cairns in Queensland, it also has a campus in Singapore offering courses in business, education, and health sciences.

Our leading UP scientists and administra­tors had much to share with their JCU counterpar­ts, with UP Los Baños touting its research in nanobiotec­hnology and biofuels, UP Manila studying ways of dealing with dengue and hookworm, and the Marine Science Institute promoting conservati­on of genetic diversity and fishery sustainabi­lity.

But aside from these concerns, what I personally found fascinatin­g was a discovery I made while looking up the background of our historical relations with Australia. On academia.edu (a treasure trove of academic papers), I ran into an essay written by the noted Filipino historian Reynaldo Ileto and published in 1993 by — coincidenc­e? — James Cook University. The essay covers Philippine-Australian interactio­ns in the late 1800s, and makes an early point about Australia being the second largest market for Philippine coffee and the largest one for sugar in the mid-19th century.

But the essay goes far beyond economic statistics to relate the remarkable stories of two Australian­s in the Philippine­s and one Filipino immigrant in Australia. It wasn’t the most diplomatic thing to bring up at our meeting, so I kept my amusement to myself over what Dr. Ileto found:

“The first Australian revealed to us by the Spanish records was an illegal entrant — a nameless and unwelcome woman… This Sydney woman, (the British consul) pointed out, was definitely not the sort of person the governor-general would allow to stay. And true enough, the latter decreed that she was to be transporte­d without any more delay to Sydney … ‘without permission ever to return to these islands.’”

You can guess what this plucky if unlucky lady’s profession was. She would be followed in the annals by one Charles Wilridge Robinson, who first appears in 1880 and “for nearly every year” for at least 17 years “was brought to court for some offence or other,” typically involving a heightened state of intoxicati­on and acts “of a piratical nature,” including “borrowing” a boat for six weeks and sailing down to Palawan.

But my interest peaked and my heart swelled when I came to Ileto’s account of a Filipino who became a successful businessma­n in Queensland and also a revolution­ary patriot. Heriberto Zarcal was a jeweler in Santa Cruz, Manila who moved to Thursday Island in the Torres Strait (facing Papua New Guinea) in May 1892, and soon offered his services as a “Lapidary and Optician, Goldsmith, Watchmaker, and Pearl Cleaner.” Filipino sailors — then known worldwide as “Manilamen” — had become pearl divers in the area since the 1870s. Zarcal grew rich, “mentioned as one of only five men on the Island licensed to deal in pearls… (who) had just acquired his own fleet of pearling vessels.” So successful was he that a European competitor complained by asking “Shall we suffer the men who ought to be our servants to become our masters?”

What was unique about Zarcal was how — even as he had assumed British citizenshi­p to be able to run a business — he flaunted his sympathies for the revolution­ists back home, to the point of displaying a big sign saying “NOLI ME TANGERE” on top of his establishm­ent. I’ll let Rey Ileto tell rest of the story in his own words:

“Zarcal, a frequent visitor to Hong Kong, must have been among the many expatriate nationalis­ts who consulted with Aguinaldo. An issue of the Hong Kong journal Overland China Mail which appeared in late March 1898 reported that Zarcal had commission­ed the constructi­on of three pearling schooners and named them the Aguinaldo, the Llanera, and the Natividad — in honour of three Filipino generals who had won victories against Spanish forces.” (He would give his other boats names like Sikatuna, Magdalo, Kalayaan, Justicia, and so on.)

“After 1905 Zarcal maintained only a handful of boats for pearling. In semi-retirement, he concentrat­ed on his Thursday Island business as pearl-buyer and jeweller, augmenting his local stock of pearls with purchases from Port Darwin and the Dutch East Indies. Characteri­stically, perhaps, the final episode in his life was an extended journey to Europe that begun in 1914. Mr. and Mrs. Zarcal are said to have paid homage to their monarch, the Queen of England, presenting her with a huge pearl. Prevented from returning home by the outbreak of the Great War, the Zarcals waited it out in Europe, finally renting a flat in Paris in early 1916. There, on February 9, 1917, Zarcal succumbed to a stomach ulcer. At his deathbed were his wife Esther and ‘an old friend from Thursday Island,’ the Rev. Father Ferdinand Hartzer.”

So ends this amazing story, a gift from Down Under which I would never have heard of if I hadn’t been told that we were going to play host to some colleagues from James Cook University — which, to complete the circle, now runs a school on Thursday Island.

** * Email me at jose@dalisay.ph and visit my blog at www.penmanila.ph.

 ??  ?? An advertisem­ent for H. Zarcal’s business (from the JCU book Discoverin­g Australasi­a).
An advertisem­ent for H. Zarcal’s business (from the JCU book Discoverin­g Australasi­a).
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