Feel-good story
>> Tuesday, May 28, 2013
BENCHWARMER
Ramon
Dacawi
Eighteen years is a life-time, yet there are
stories that live on for a life-time, forever etched in memory. The need is
always there, for these stories to be told and retold so they can be passed on
like prized heirloom. One such story was recalled
and re-lived last Tuesday, after Conrad Marzan, the expat
Baguio-Cordillera folksinger with a heart, came home this summer from Northern
California where he is based for seven years now.
Eighteen years ago this time of the year,
Conrad’s mother, retired public school teacher Tomasa Marzan, withdrew
a substantial amount from the Philippine National Bank. Her grandchildren
needed the sum for their school enrollment. After placing the cash inside her
bag, she flagged down a cab and asked to be brought to the post
office where she was to meet her husband, war veteran Perfecto Marzan.
In her rush, she paid and stepped out of
the cab wihout her bag. Another passenger who boarded and
asked to be brought to Camp Allen noticed the bag and told the
driver. With the fare’s blessings, the cabbie turned back to the post office
but couldn’t find Mrs. Marzan.
After delivering his second passenger to Camp
Allen, cabbie Art Pasag drove to his rented home along Naguilian Road. He asked
his wife to open the bag for documents revealing the name and address of the
owner, which was at Puguis, La Trinidad, Benguet.
It was already evening and Art was unfamiliar
with the address. The Born-Again couple decided to search the
address the following morning. Meanwhile, they spent the evening praying for
divine grace so the bag owner could sleep, feeling assured of its return.
They located the place the following morning
and were received by Mr. Marzan. Mrs. Marzan had set out early, to
the city, to peer into uniform-looking cabs, hoping to get a glimpse of and
recall the face of the cabbie she had flagged down the afternoon before.
Conrad later told me the story, including how
his father tried to know more about the couple when they came to return his
wife’s bag. His father had insisted on presenting Art with a P2,000 cash
goodwill token. Conrad’s dad learned Art was driving double time to
raise the amount needed for the pre-surgery tests of his 22-year old son
Victor, who was born with a heart defect.
In gratitude, Conrad and his fellow folk and
country musicians did what they still do best: stage a concert-for-a-cause for
Victor. With support from then regional police director, Chief Supt. Rogelio
Aguana, they raised P28,000.
I wrote of Art’s honesty for the People’s
Journal group of publications that, through Manong Alex Allan, had taken me in
as correspondent. The article triggered a call from then regional tourism
director Lita Mondiguing who asked if I knew where the Pasags were staying. She
said then Tourism Secretary Vicente Carlos had read the news item and
responded. He ordered her to look for Victor so he could be admitted to the
Philippine Heart Center.
Feeling the need to follow up on
developments, I tagged along and about six hours later, we were in Secretary
Carlos’ office along Kalaw St., beside Fort Santiago.
“The whole country is proud of you,” Carlos
told Art as they shook hands. Turning the Victor, he said the boy would be
admitted that morning for surgery at the Heart Center and that the rest of the
Pasag family would stay in a hotel behind the medical facility for the duration
of Victor’s hospitalization. All of their expenses would be sponsored, he said.
Soon, Victor was back home to Baguio, his
heart mended, allowing him to finish his bachelor’s degree in mass
communications. Later that year, Art was called to Malacanang where he was
honored for his honesty as “Taxi Driver of the Year” under the
Kalakbay annual awards of the Department of Tourism.
Back in Baguio, fellow journalist and DZWT
anchor Cris Bartolo called me up about the follow-up story on the city’s not
wanting of honest cabbies. He admitted the virtue has turned contagious. “Adda
effect na diay istorya ni Art Pasag,” he said, “Nagadu metten ti um-umay ditoy
istasyon nga taksi drayber, manong,” he said. “Agi-iyeg da ti papeles, bags,
sagad, sapatos ti baby ken dadduma pay nga nabati dagiti pasahero da.”
Personally, that was not the end of the
story. One time I boarded a taxi and whipped out my fare the moment we were beside
my in-laws’ house my family was taken in for years. The cabbie wouidn’t take
the bill. I looked and recognized Art, who was smiling and gently shoving back
my hand.
That made me wary. Before boarding a cab, I
would have to be sure it was not Art at the steering wheel. Once I recognized
him while waiting for a ride at the top of Session Road. I shook my hand,
indicating I would rather walk down, which I did until I turned right after
Mercury Drug at the foot the the main street. Art, who drove down at my pace,
all the while motioning with his hand for me to ride, was left with no choice
but to give up.
Now and then, I would retell Art’s story
during basic training for campus journalists, for them to convert into a
feature, from the first, second or third person account.Last Tuesday, the story
served as dessert at the reunion lunch hosted by Conrad for the
Pasag couple and their son Victor, now 40 and with a family of his own.
The story will be retold now and then, to
enliven journalism lectures, speaking engagements and
interactions.(e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments).
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