BENCHWARMER
Ramon
Dacawi
The greatest acts are done without audience,
plaque or ceremony.
That line is from novelist Richard Paul
Evans. He’s the dad who wrote and self-published the best-selling “The
Christmas Box” trilogy originally intended as a yule gift for his kids.
With this attribution, no need for the quotation marks that might
dilute the substance of such truism.
The quote came back last Saturday morning,
after Dhobie de Guzman, news anchor of ABS-CBN, dropped an earth-shaker he read
from his cell, one of those top-of-the line gadgets I don’t know
how to buy or use.
(We were at Luisa’s Café, operated by
Chongloy (a. k. a. Roland Wong). It’s along Session Rd., Baguio’s
short, inclined main street, lined up by commercial buildings now modernizing
and changing the urban landscape. Luisa’s may soon take the role of Dainty, the
more popular café across the road that will soon serve its last coffee glass. It’s
being closed and remodeled by the new owner, perhaps for another
MacDonald’s branch.
(Dainty in the good old days was then
described by the venerable Gov. Ben Palispis of Benguet as “The University of
Life”. If you want to know the latest news or learn something, go to Dainty,
the governor used to say.)
The news from Dhobie came just before I could
hop from Luisa’s to Dainty (later renamed Session Delights and now Streamline,
after the popular cake the heirs of Ng Ah Chin, the operator for decades, want
to patent in his memory).
Dhobie scanned his cell screen and said,
“Manong, Mayor (Betty) Verzola of Luna, Apayao is dead. Car accident, in
Pagudpud (Ilocos Norte).”
Print media reports later said Mayor
Verzola’s partry were on their way home when their official vehicle, a
Mitsubishi Montero, hit a calf that was crossing the highway in the dead of
night.
Her party came from Baguio where she shared
her experiences in local governance in a seminar for local government unit
officials, including those elected in the May polls. Mayor Verzola was the
instrument in the development of Luna, a 22-barangay town that includes
the famous or infamous Marag Valley that she once described as “ paradise lost
and paradise regained”.
The valley was lost in the war years back,
waged by government troops against New People’s Army rebels.After the war,
Mayor Verzola guided us there, visiting journalists serving as judges in the
regional schools press conference hosted by her town.
We saw the charred remains of wooden houses burned
and destroyed by the war. They had been rebuilt with concrete materials.
Cement posts were juxtaposed beside charred wooden ones the villagers
found reason to preserve, even if it meant narrowing down the original floor
areas.
We were led to the Marag River, the cleanest
water body I ever saw. It bore no evidence of the war.Villagers
told us it offered, by boat, the fastest ride to Pamplona, Cagayan. At
the elementary school, kids greeted us with a dance presentation, as if not one
of them was ever scarred by the war.
Still, the mayor and the villagers told us
each and every family either lost a member or had a kin injured in
the war.
Their coping they expressed through the
inscriptions on the triangular base of the flagpole holding high the
colors of this republic that the school kids and teachers raise every
morning.
Inscribed on one one side of the
triangle was the community’s tribute to the soldiers of the republic who
died in the performance of their duty - to defend the duly constituted
government. The inscription on the second side honored the rebels who
also offered the ultimate sacrifice fighting for a just and humane society. The
third side of the triangle likewise memorialized the civilians who were killed
in the crossfire.
Back in the poblacion, Mayor Verzola’s
attention was drawn to the footsteps of the town hall. There, an Aeta mother
with two kids in tow was trying to sell her bunch of black-and-white
colored woven bamboo baskets of different sizes.
It was late in the afternoon and the mayor
was worried the mother and kids would not make it home in the hills
before nightfall.
As she did many times over in previous
occasions, the mayor asked for the total price of what remained of the
woman’s baskets. Mayor Verzola was used to taking in whatever were left
of goods her constituents would bring to sell in the poblacion, especially if
the vendors came from remote areas.
The mother came up with a reasonable
amount that encouraged me as much as the mayor’s intentions did.
I offered to split the goods and the payment
with Her Honor and she gratefully accepted.
Back home, my daughter Beng wondered what to
do with the baskets. I’m sure she’d be reading this piece and understand who
Mayor Verzola was and is, even if she never had the honor of personally meeting
Her Honor.
It’s true – some of Mayor Verzola’s greatest
acts of good governance were done without audience, plaque or ceremony.
(e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments.)
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