Public leisure in postcolonial Baguio

A trip to Baguio on any long holiday break would persuade any visitor of the paucity of leisure in our society.  This city on a hill originally founded by Americans for the rest and recreation of colonial bureaucrats has become simply too small and too lacking in facilities to accommodate Filipino families in search of … Read more

This time last year

At about this time last year, Filipinos delayed their Christmas parties so they could watch television.  On the last day before the Senate impeachment court went on holiday recess, Clarissa Ocampo came on board as a surprise witness against President Joseph Estrada. Thus began the most politicized Christmas break we ever had in our nation’s … Read more

Stories told with courage

Marilou Diaz-Abaya goes against the grain of her culture in almost her films.  She questions the truisms of common sense not by marshalling logical arguments against them but by telling stories of people who are victims of these truisms.  She invites her viewers to suspend the imperatives of their beliefs even only for a moment, … Read more

Growing up with Julia

She turns one year old today, a child who first saw light as the Filipino nation began one of its darkest moments – the impeachment of a sitting president.  I constantly thought of her during those days when everything seemed uncertain, when the routines of our lives were replaced by the swirl of daily demonstrations.  … Read more

Heroes for a nation that cannot remember

Nothing more powerfully communicates the self-understanding of a nation than the identity of its heroes.  We first teach the history of our country to our children by telling them the lives of our heroes.  Our heroes’ personal sacrifices mirror the nation’s own suffering, and their hopes define the nation’s moral identity. A nation that is … Read more