Mang Gerry as seen by MangTene
>> Monday, July 9, 2012
BENCHWARMER
Ramon S. Dacawi
(Former Baguio city
councilor EdilbertoTenefrancia delivered this tribute to former city councilor
and media icon Gerry Evangelista last Thursday afternoon at the city council
session hall. Evangelista, a pioneering pillar of the print media here, passed
on last July 1. )
We
have come to say goodbye even as we pay high respects to an outstanding
citizen, an exemplary public servant, a chronicler and booster of Baguio and
its virtues. We bid farewell to a good man.
Gerry
Evangelista grew up in and practically with the city of Baguio. The city has
just passed its centennial year, and Gerry is, at 84, not far behind. Gerry has
seen how Baguio has changed over the years, and has chronicled for future
generations what Baguio was, and could be.
Sometimes
in despair, we look at how unpleasant things are and ask, why? Gerry dreamed of
what his city could be, and with fist in the air he would exclaim, why not! He
did what he could. It wasn’t enough. It never is even with the best of us. That
he tried is all that was expected of him.
Sixty
years ago, when Gerry was in the prime of youth, I came to Baguio as a teenager
in pursuit of higher learning. It was a city then of 60,000 residents, no
traffic, no pollution, all peace and quiet, order and serenity. I came to know
Gerry as one of the campus writers of Baguio Colleges, and I admired him from a
distance.
I
remember Gerry writing under the pen name Squire Gevan. Gevan is short for
Geronimo Evangelista. Squire is what he also aspired to be. In British
tradition a squire is above a gentleman and below a knight. In British and
American legal history a justice of the peace could put Esq. after his name.
That he was too. Learned in the law.
Accomplished
as hearing officer in the Peoples Law Enforcement Board. It wasn’t a high
profile position. But he knew that at the PLEB he could do some things
positive. He strove to cleanse and to improve the police service. The face of
government is often the face of a policeman. Where you have an abusive officer,
you are certain to create enemies of the state.
Where
you have dedication and heroism in a police officer, you make loyal citizens,
willing to give all for the sake of flag and country. In his own way Gerry made
everyone feel in PLEB the stirrings of civic duty and patriotic pride.
But
back to when Gerry was young. Those campus writers whom I admired were a hardy
lot: Monching Mitra and Carding Parana. G. Bert Floresca and the brothers Florendo.Steve
Jularbal and Gerry Evangelista. They were mentored and patiently guided by Ben
Salvosa, Sinai Hamada, Cecile Afable and the local intellectuals of post-war
Baguio. They themselves chose the name for the fortnightly student publication:
the Gold Ore.
It
was an appropriate name for the venture they started to pursue. Baguio was the
mining capital of the country during the gold boom of the thirties. The budding
writers of Baguio were not yet gold, but they were gold ore. They were young
and their skills were raw. They were struggling to get out of their cocoons and
their drafts were rough. But they had wise and patient mentors for guides. They
would soon be the pillars of Baguio print media. And sooner than we think they
are gone or are going.
A
generation has passed. Our earthly abode has turned a million times since
our city was chartered, and a sea change has come upon our city, and even on
our psyche. The old folks still remember early mornings when the mists roll in
splendor from the beauty of the hills and the sunshine warm and tender falls in
kisses on the rills. Can the Baguio of our tender years come back? It’s the
dream of most everyone. It was the dream of Gerry. Now he dreams no more.
This
event is a milestone in the annals of journalism in Baguio City. With Nars
Padilla, Swanny Valdez and Gil Bautista, Gerry Evangelista is the last of the
grand old hands in print media in this city. Writers whose by-lines underscored
the news and opinions about Baguio have gone to their heavenly rewards with the
passing of the millennium.
The
brothers Hamada, Ben Salvosa, Cecile Afable, Monching Mitra, Tibo Mijares,
Carding Paraan, Bert Floresca, the brothers Florendo, Kiko Dipasupil, Gem
Mamoyac, Sid Chammag, Cecile Afable. Now Gerry Evangelista takes center stage
and bows out like all the rest did before him. It was their lifelong passion,
their magnificent obsession: to dig up the facts, to sift fact from fiction, to
bring truth to light and leave an informed, involved and enlightened public to
make up its mind and make the decisions.
Baguio
is a good place to bring up children. Good schools, good teachers, good
students, good environment. Our children grew up together. The Evangelistas
never heard of the RH bill. Good for humanity. With or without planning they
have ten lovely children, assets wherever they live. June and our Cynthia were
with the second batch of SPED Center. June and our Danny would work together in
the Office of the Solicitor General. Rachel and Emily were classmates in
Central School. Eric and our twins were in the grades and high school together.
Secretly we all want to live forever.
We
don’t But we live forever in the children we bring to this world and who take
on after us. Often they are better than we have ever been. That can happen here
in Baguio because as good our teachers are, we don't leave our children to the
sole responsibility of the teachers. Gerry and all the rest of us were active
in PTA.
PTA
was not just and adjunct to the school. It was a partner in the rearing of the children for self
discovery, for pursuits to reach their best potentials, for community
involvement and civic efficiency.
Gerry
knew the weakness of public governance. He could have simply raged, raged
against Augean stables. But to him that wasn’t enough. He knew that all it
takes for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing. So he offered himself
to public service. And for a time he was city councilor. A good one. And for
the last time he would come to the City Council. His body is now cold but our
memories of him are warm. His voice is now still but his concern for his city
vibrates in the book of ordinances and resolutions.
Baguio
was not built in a day, Gerry would say. Nor was Baguio City. Over a hundred
years, peoples and events made up what
Baguio turned out to be. It is a city we are proud of. It is a city many would
like to be part of. To commemorate its centennial, it was necessary to recall
the past, honor the builders, inspire
aspirations of a better Baguio.
It
was Gerry principally who with a facile pen chronicled what was and used to be,
and rallied us to what Baguio should be. What would have been his epic
contribution to the celebration of Baguio’s centennial is a book: The Builders
of Baguio. It records the history of Baguio as exemplified in the lives of
those who helped build Baguio. Gerry was about to put it to press when tragedy
struck.
The
last year had been difficult for Gerry and his family. That road to calvary is
over now. But his book is still an unfinished opus. The chairman of the defunct
centennial commission, Dr. Virgilio Bautista, declares it will go to press. It
will be a fitting tribute to him who through life chronicled the life and times
of his beloved city, Baguio.
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