Imagining Camiguin

This is not paradise. “It is the island of your imagination,” says Gov. Pedro “Loloy” Romualdo rather poetically. With its colonial ruins, turnof-the-century homes, rustic coastal villages, awesome sunrises and sunsets, and varied geological formations, Camiguin is definitely imaginable as the setting for many a magical-realist novel or historical film. But, on my first visit … Read more

A question of responsibility

How much responsibility should we take for our individual actions? How much responsibility should we assume for the actions of our children?  How much responsibility should we bear for the kind of society we have?  Or for the kind of world we have? All over the world thoughtful people are asking these questions, especially as … Read more

The values of mothers

We would all be psychopaths without our mothers.  We would be insensitive individuals driven by raw desire, completely oblivious of the needs and pain of others, and requiring constant social restraint. We first begin to think beyond self-interest from our mothers’ example of selflessness.  We learn kindness, generosity, and sacrifice from seeing what these women … Read more

The crisis of political parties

In Western democracies, the public pays for a large part of the expenses of political parties.  This subsidy acknowledges two essential functions that electoral parties play in a democracy.  These are: one, to aggregate and represent the interests of citizens in the nation’s political life; and two, to participate in the orderly contest for governmental … Read more

Where we are headed

One does not have to be a seer to know that as a nation we may be heading toward disaster.  We live in a time of great affluence and of astounding possibilities for human happiness and fulfillment.  And this only makes the degrading poverty in our country so scandalous and so unnecessary. We have changed … Read more

The family during moments of ease

Taking advantage of a recent visit by my sister Lilia, a US-based nurse, I proposed a family reunion in Baguio. From a brood of 13 brothers and sisters, eight signed up for the trip with their spouses and children.  We came in five vehicles loaded with food, and rented a big house with a kitchen. … Read more

Ariel Sharon’s war

In 1982, Ariel Sharon was Israel’s Defense Minister.  Yasser Arafat was the head of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), which was then acting as a government in exile.  Two of the biggest refugee camps in which Palestinians who had been driven out of their homes in Northern Galilee had found shelter were Sabra and Shatila … Read more

A new norm in international relations

Israel’s Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has sent an army of more than 3000 soldiers and 200 tanks and bulldozers into the Palestinian towns of Nablus, Bethlehem, and Ramallah.  Israeli forces cordoned off these areas, cut the electricity, and blocked all food supply to their inhabitants. The aim is to get rid of Yasser Arafat as … Read more

Filipino piety

In Europe, religious piety produced some of the world’s greatest artistic achievements – Bach’s music, Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel frescoes, and Gothic architecture. In contrast, Filipino piety cannot seem to rise above the dread with which we regard the Supreme Being.  Our ardor does not result in offerings of sustained creativity but only in acts of … Read more

The promises and risks of metaphors

My brother, Fr. Pablo David, a biblical scholar, has published a fascinating essay on the power of metaphors and the changing images of God in the Bible.  He focuses on the shift in imagery that the “weird” prophet Hosea popularized to induce the ancient people of Israel to re-imagine their relationship with Yahweh. From being … Read more