BENCHWARMER
Ramon
Dacawi
(In remembrance, we
are reprinting this piece done after the greatest teacher the University of
Baguio Science high ever had kicked the bucket in his hospital bed evening of
Sept. 2, 2009. –RD.)
In a homecoming of sorts
for those who passed through his disciplinary mold and mood of teaching, former
University of Baguio Science High director Emmett Brown Asuncion will be laid
to rest tomorrow (Monday) morning in a plot at the Baguio Memorial Park he had
prepared for eight years ago.
As of press time
Friday, representatives of the graduates, from 1967 onwards, were still
finalizing the time and place of the funeral mass, but people who knew the
teacher were advised to check the final arrangements with any of the alumni.
Asuncion passed on
quietly early last Wednesday evening, six months after he was wheeled into the
Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center for heart ailment, a day after he
hallucinated and began seeing angels through the window of Room 337 of the facility.
He was 70, according
to a detail in an identification card retrieved by Beaulah (Zeny) Badua of
Class ’70.. He is survived by two sisters – Anicia and Julia -, both nuns who,
because of their calling, asked Beaulah to sign papers on their behalf. Another
sister, Sr. Cecilia Agnes, also a nun, died earlier.
Badua, who works in an
international Christian ministry, spent most of the last six months by Emmett’s
bedside as care-giver. As she did five years back, when Asuncion suffered his
first stroke and she decided to bring him for check-up and confinement in
Metro-Manila.
When she realized it
was time, she gripped Emmett’s hand and whispered:“It’s all right, it’s all
right for you to let go.” An electrocardiogram confirmed the pulse she had just
checked was gone. “Somehow I knew it would be today but I couldn’t tell you
when you visited this afternoon, manong, ” she told an older graduate who
returned to the hospital when told it was over.
John Fianza (Class
’80) rang up the funeral parlor and then texted the news to school
administrators and faculty, blood and fund donors and fellow alumni, including
those now serving as doctors or nurses at the medical facility.
They gathered at Chapel C of La Paz Memorial Thursday evening, for laughter and tears recalling the martinet-like atmosphere with which Emmett taught them Latin and English grammar, literature, play production, cheering, hymns for the annual cantata and community immersion.
They gathered at Chapel C of La Paz Memorial Thursday evening, for laughter and tears recalling the martinet-like atmosphere with which Emmett taught them Latin and English grammar, literature, play production, cheering, hymns for the annual cantata and community immersion.
“How we loved to hate
him then,” one admitted. Another recalled how her batch spent the whole night
of their reunion talking about their former teacher. They shared how he would
penalize them for infractions, as if the punishments were now their medals of
valor.
“I never get angry
with people I don’t care about,” Emmett once told a bunch of rebellious
seniors, He had just berated them for drinking gin inside their classroom at
the basement of the university gym, a day before their graduation march.
Reading those words
while on a bus, Neil Ambasing(Batch ’87), who helped handle Emmett’s medical
case, wept and then wrote: “As a physician, you get trained to detach yourself
from the situation in order to think objectively. I have been doing that for
months now and I haven't realized I needed a catharsis.”
Expatriate Joel
Aliping (batch ’82) had second thoughts flying in from California for Baguio’s
centennial anniversary, then told his wife Emily to handle their kids’ transfer
to another school. “My wife reminded me about family being first priority, and
here I am as a member of Emmett’s family,” he muttered while Emmett’s room was
being cleared .by fellow alumni Jun and Leandro Fernandez and volunteer Eliza
Gatchalon.
“Emmett stayed with us
for years and he’s our second father,” Marlou Fernandez, Jun and Leandro’s
elder brother, explained, before someone would ask about his batch. “I didn’t
study at the Science High but my child did.”
Beaulah was told
the loss would hit her hard after the funeral, after tomb had been sealed and
the crowd of mourners had dispersed. Just when she tries to resume work, tries
to move on.
“It’s been worth
it,” she replied. (e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments).
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