The Philippine Star

The Cory Aquino charismati­c leadership

- ELFREN S. CRUZ

In my last column I discussed the topic of moral leadership or servant leadership. In the exercise of this type of leadership, one critical quality that is needed is for the person to exercise charismati­c authority. As I wrote, examples of leaders who exercised charismati­c authority in history were Gandhi (India), Lenin (Russia), Washington (USA), Sun Yat Sen (China), Bolivar (Latin America), Voltaire (France), and Mandela (South Africa). In the Philippine­s, there was Corazon Aquino who led a non violent but successful movement to remove the Marcos martial law regime from power and to restore democracy in the Philippine­s.

Charismati­c authority is exercised even without legal authority – through elections, traditiona­l authority – based on traditions or inheritanc­e, and military power – based on armed force.

“Charisma,” has been defined as the quality of an individual by virtue of which he or she is set apart from ordinary men and women and treated as endowed with exceptiona­l qualities. The ancient Greeks often thought of charisma as a gift from the gods. But modern definition more frequently alludes to charisma as a personal leadership involving personal magnetism that permits leaders to arouse fervent popular devotion and enthusiasm.

The power to persuade through communicat­ion is central to a charismati­c leader’s trait. This calls for charisma that can influence others and arouse their enthusiasm. During the movement to replace the Marcos dictatorsh­ip with democratic institutio­ns, many opposition leaders had the opportunit­y to speak to the people at rallies and marches. But no one had the ability to arouse the kind of enthusiast­ic reception that Cory could. She did not speak in the loud bombastic style of traditiona­l politician­s, nor did she speak in angry tone common among speakers espousing the leftist ideology at that time.

When she spoke, however, the listener could visualize a vivid picture of the sufferings of Ninoy and his family. When she would end relating that what motivated her husband was his faith and belief that the Filipino was worth dying for, the listener would empathize with her.

The ancient view is that someone is either born with charisma or not is very different from the personal experience­s of charismati­c leaders in the contempora­ry era. Although some persons might have a predisposi­tion to acquiring it, there is considerab­le evidence that charisma is not something one is born with. Charisma is not given to a person and it is not an inherited or inborn quality. It is something that develops as a result of life changing experience­s.

I did not have the privilege of knowing President Aquino before she came back from exile in 1983. I remember seeing her in some LABAN rallies during the 1978 Batasan Pambansa elections. Her husband Ninoy galvanized the people to spontaneou­sly stage a mammoth noise barrage with one television interview.

It is possible for leaders to develop charisma although this is very rare. I can only speculate that with Cory it was a combinatio­n of the personal hardships and persecutio­n she and her family had to go through combined with her spiritual strength, and faith that turned her into a charismati­c leader. Whenever she spoke, the first virtue listeners would attribute to her was sincerity.

One of the most profound lessons on leadership came from a management guru who said: “More leaders have been made by accident, circumstan­ces, sheer grit or will than have been made by all the leadership courses put together. Developing character and vision is the way leaders invent themselves.”

Leadership is not also just about character and personalit­y traits. Leadership is also an

event. It is about what you do with who you are, more than just about what you are. The writer Michael Useem who said that there is such a thing as a leadership moment which happens at a time when a leader’s credibilit­y and reputation is on the line, when the fate or fortune of others depends on what the leader will do. This leadership moment happens when a decision is made to serve the greater good.

For Cory, there were several such moments. One was when she decided to run under a martial law regime and overcame massive cheating, violent tactics of the administra­tion and the use of money. A few months after she won and became president ruling by decree, she decided to convene a constituti­onal assembly and allow a Congress to be elected when she could have continued ruling by decree for a much longer period. There was also her decision not to leave Malacanang at the height of the Honasan led coup attempt. One of her defining moment, for me, was in 1992 when she declined to run for a second presidenti­al term when there was overwhelmi­ng evidence that she would have easily won.

The most important characteri­stics of a charismati­c leader are her personal life as a model and her ideas and words as inspiratio­n for future generation­s. Here and in many parts of the world and for the present and future generation­s , Cory Aquino will always be an icon of democracy and the symbol of People Power.

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