BENCHWARMER
Ramon
S. Dacawi
(Antescript: This is a reprint of a piece written years back to celebrate the honor of my having met and gripped the hand of a hero. The memory of the encounter returned last week, during a media trip to Ifugao, courtesy of Gov. Eugene Balitang. The retelling is for Ifugao Vice-Gov. Pedro Mayam-o. – RD.)
Once in a while, a story comes along which needs to be told
and retold - for the human virtue it inspires. It seems easier to find it in
fiction than in the real world that tends to breed cynics among us. A good man
or woman is hard to find nowadays, except in paperbacks and in the movies.
I've heard one such story, not in fiction but of one who was
flesh and blood. It is about selflessness. It is about one ordinary man with
deeds quite extraordinary you'd think he was a novelist’s creation. He existed
–and lived a full life. Until now, he's unknown, except in the remote
Ifugao community he built and lived in.
The story is no bull. I first heard it from then regional
director Stephen Capuyan of the education department. He remembered it the
moment we met, perhaps sure that my Igorot blood would trigger my interest to
listen to something literally close to the Cordillera.
Manong Steve recalled his disbelief when a farmer appeared in
his office at the Teachers' Camp, to seek help in solving a serious, albeit
personal, problem. It was about the man's dwindling livestock. He swore only
the education department could help in saving whatever remained of his cowherd.
"The moment I heard about cattle, I thought I knew he
was barking up the wrong tree," Manong Steve said. "I advised him to
direct his woes to the Department of Agriculture."
But the man was unfazed and persistent. He admitted he was
losing his cows but not his head. He insisted he went to the right office to
spill out his grievance over the education department's lack of a sense of
urgency regarding agricultural sustainability.
"Dandani maibuse ndagiti bakak (I’m about to lose all my
cows),” the man tried to explain. Dakayo met
koma n apo ti agbayad kadagiti agisursuro idiay barangay mi ta
awanen ti maisueldok kadakuada( I hope you can now pay the teachers in our
barangay as I can no longer shoulder their wages)."
Manong Steve's visitor was MongilitLigmayo, an unlettered
Ifugao farmer. His story began to unfold many years ago in Ambasa, one of the
interior barangays of Lamut town in Ifugao. LakayLigmayo, originally from
Banaue, resettled there as a pioneer farmer. He plowed the remote Ambasa
wasteland into a farmland. Gradually, the isolated place drew more farmers and
slowly developed into a barangay.
As the farmers produced more rice and more children, Mongilit
clearly saw the need for an elementary school. He offered over a hectare of his
land for the school site. He knocked on government offices for help. He went on
to help build the school with his personal resources, to the extent of
fashioning out some of the desks and fixtures.
In no time, the first batch of kids were in the sixth
grade. Soon, they would need a high school, but the nearest was in the
poblacion and there was hardly a road linking Ambasa to the town proper.
Mongilit, then the barangay chief – a position he would hold for 20 years -,
had to decide again.
He sliced off another two hectares of his land for the high
school site. Again, he directly oversaw the construction and, with his sons,
again built desks and tables.
But even with an unfinished classroom, there were no
teachers. There was no provision in the education budget to hire additional
teachers. Again, he offered to bankroll the initial teachers' initial salaries
and the first high school class opened.
More students meant more teachers to pay. To keep them and
the students in class, the old man started selling some of his cows. One day,
when he could hardly count any of his herd, he decided to travel to Baguio..
Manong Steve’s story sank in. I was gripped with a yearning
to meet and interview the old man. I needed to write a feature, to attempt to
do justice to his story that needed to be told and retold. The article would be
my deliverance from a newsman's state of jadedness.
My yearning was akin to or bordering on the urge for
spiritual purging and renewal of my sense of the sacred. That must be the
feeling of those going to spiritual retreat where they cry a river and come out
with the purest of intentions Like those coming out of the cursillo or a
so-called Values Orientation Workshop for those in government.
"Talagamit a, makapasangit dayta istolyam, Manong (Truly,
your story is a tear-jerker)," I told director Capuyan in flawless Ifugao
diction. He laughed. The story hit me like when folksinger Conrad Marzan
dished out Gordon Lightfoot's “Second Cup of Coffee” or that time I was reading
Maeve Binchy's “The Glass Lake”.
And then, fulfillment was at hand. Director Capuyan promised
to have me tag along in one of his official visits to Ifugao. Somehow, I forgot
about the self-proclaimed mission as fast as dry paper burns. It came back when
some of us Baguio journalists were asked to serve as resource speakers in the
regional schools press conference in Kiangan.
From Kiangan, my buddy Peewee Agustin and I tried but failed
to reach Ambasa. Blocked by the current of the river dividing the village from
the rest of Lamut, we detoured to the municipal hall. Lady lawyer and then
Lamut mayor Linda Bongyo-Chaguile received us and validated what director
Capuyan narrated.
"He's here now; let me introduce you to him," she
said. After some photographs, we repaired to a carinderia for lunch with
KapitanMongilit and his wife. I was at a loss for words, unable to figure out
the questions. The diminutive fellow was reluctant to talk about his
achievements and I did not pursue. Still, I was content, feeling fulfilled and
honored having met him in his quiet dignity.
I struggled to shrug off the lurking vanity we newsmen enjoy
when rubbing elbows with conventionally greater mortals such as traditional
politicians. I basked in his glory when Manong Juan Dacawe, a non-trapo, made
it as vice-governor of Ifugao. "Is he your relative?" somebody asked
me after the elections. "Did he win?" I asked back. "Yes."
"Then he's my relative."
I lost the photographs and again forgot to write. A few years
ago, I learned LakayMongilit had gone to the farmland of his Maker Kabunian. In
2003, Lamut officials led by Mayor AngelitoGuinid renamed the Ambasa Elementary
School after the farmer who never learned to read and write. The enabling
ordinance, which local legislative secretary DominadorValenciano took pains to
fax me, cited LakayMongilit's unwavering doggedness in building the school.
In 2004, Ifugao Representative Solomon Chungalao filed House
Bill 01043 that separated the Ambasa annex of the Lawig National High School.
The bill renamed it the MongilitLigmayo Memorial National High.
The unschooled KapitanMongilit never ever thought of
recognition, much less aspired for renown. Monuments can never measure true
greatness. Yet we need to remember heroes whose sacrifices we need to pass on
to our kids, to inspire and nurture in them the sense of community that
LakayMongilit lived by.
Too late in the day,I thought the unlettered farmer’s legacy
would give him enormous potential as nominee for a posthumous “Lingkod
Bayan” national award under the honor awards program of the Civil Service
Commission. The rules, however, disqualify him: Nominations should be made for
those who died while in the government service and within 12 months after the
death of the nominee.
Still, as novelist Richard Pauil Evans observed, “the
greatest acts are done without plaque, audience or ceremony.” . So was Mark
Twain right: “It is better to deserve honors and not have them than to have
them and not deserve them.” (e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments
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