1986 People Power Recollections






“Where were you in ‘86 EDSA Revolution?”

This caught my eye while on a jeepney cruising along the Quezon Bridge near Quiapo a long, long time ago. It was written on a wall of an old dilapidated building along the Pasig river. The handwriting was crude. written in black paint, and whoever put it there and for whatever reason we will never really know.
But it was a good question, come to think of it, for this year's 21st Anniversary of the People Power Revolution, an event that changed not only the history of the Filipino nation and its people but also proved to the world that change could be achieved peacefully. The people in the communist world soon followed thereafter as they emulated and learned the lessons of our unique form of ending a tyrannical regime without bloodshed.
Thus, we Filipinos could lay a claim that we had a hand in the collapse of the Soviet Union and the communist bloc in the late 80s to the early 90s and in the process changed the lives of millions of people all over the world. But while other nations have progressed since, our country remains in a quagmire of our own making -- but that is another story that would merit a deeper analysis and another post in the future. Suffice it to say that for now, we will not stray away from the topic.

Back to the question, I was neither at home in Tiwi, Albay nor protesting in EDSA at that time. I was in the Visayas, Barotac Nuevo in Iloilo to be exact during the National Secondary Schools Press Conference (NSSPC) held in that rustic but charming town and if I remembered it correctly, some 30-plus kilometers away from the City of Iloilo.


I was in my third year of high school in 1986 when I was chosen as one of the representatives of the Bicol Region (by virtue of me placing 5th in the News Writing Category at the Regional Secondary Schools Press Conference (RSSPC) held at the Camarines Sur National High School in Naga City of the same year) to the NSSPC. Lady Luck smiled on me in Barotac Nuevo as I placed 9th (only the top 10 were announced and awarded certificates onstage) out of 150-plus contestants nationwide and was the highest placed Bicolano in the News Writing Category.


My recollections of the events that led to the 1986 People Power Revolution began on the day when Benigno “Ninoy” S. Aquino was murdered on the hot tarmac of the then-Manila International Airport on August 21, 1983.

My grandfather, who was the head of our town's contingent of the Bicol Saro, the leading opposition party in the Bicol Region during the dark years of the Marcos dictatorship, was keenly awaiting the news of the opposition senator’s arrival, and what he heard from sketchy reports was that Ninoy was shot dead by an assassin despite the presence of Avsecom personnel in the heavily guarded airport.

I remember my Lolo in shock, only muttering in a barely audible voice that “this is the beginning of the end for Marcos. He is finished and sooner or later he will be deposed by the people.”
It never occurred to me then that his words would prove prophetic years later, but now it comes as no surprise to me as my grandfather was a serious student and practitioner of politics, having been elected vice-mayor and then mayor of Tiwi, Albay in his younger days. But he was of a different kind, who believed in a school of politics that was really “for the people, by the people and of the people”, where the elected leaders did not enrich themselves in office -- a strong contrast to the battle cry of our present crop of shameless politicians as told to me by a descendant of Filosofong Tasyo years ago -- ”poor the people, buy the people and off the people.”
So, when the dictator called a snap presidential election and the Cory-Doy bandwagon rolled into Bicolandia, I was there with Old Grandpa. I saw up close and personal the two opposition candidates at the house of then-Asssemblyman and later Senator Victor S. Ziga when they held their Miting de Avance in Tabaco, Albay, and became a certified member of the Yellow Army by playing recordings of protest songs (Freddie Aguilar’s Bayan Ko) at all the anti-Marcos rallies in our town as well as leading my friends in installing campaign posters in any available spaces we could find, usually during the nighttime.
I remember listening with Lolo to the fiery interpellation and filibustering of the loquacious Assemblyman from Mindanao, Homobono Adaza during the canvassing of the election returns in the Batasan Pambansa as then-Speaker Nicanor Yniguez of Leyte and other Kilusang Bagong Lipunan (KBL) stalwarts railroaded the process and proclaimed Marcos as the winner of the snap polls, contrary to the beliefs of the people and the National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL) count which showed the opposition as the runaway winner.
While the daily protests against the dictator and the boycott of all the crony companies were in full-circle, the Bicol delegation to the annual secondary schools press conference was on its way to Iloilo. We were billeted at the classrooms of Saint Paul School in Barotac Nuevo and during the parade of delegates the next day I could see the local people’s faces light up whenever they saw the Bicol Banner and exclaimed, “Bicol, panalo sainyo si Cory at Doy!” and enthusiastically flashed the Laban sign as we passed by.
After the News writing contest, my mom and I decided to go shopping at SM-Iloilo and there in the sidewalks, on the frontpages of the Inquirer and
Malaya newspapers were the pictures of Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Lieutenant General Fidel V. Ramos barricading themselves in the military camps along Epifanio De Los Santos Avenue (EDSA) as they announced their withdrawal of support from their erstwhile leader.
We could sense the tension in the air as even the local leaders, policemen, parish priests and the Ilonggos were monitoring the events unfolding in Manila over the radio in every nook and cranny of the city.
Even the delegates and speakers could not remain apolitical as news updates continued to pour in with the majority cheering for the reformists. Only the delegates from Region I (Ilocos) were rooting for the status quo.
When the late Joe Quirino, who was the speaker for Feature Writing at the time, made a remark about the yellow garland that he was wearing and showed his true colors during his lecture, the entire auditorium cheered him with the exception of the Region I delegates for obvious reasons.
When news came that there were more than a million people in EDSA and that Channel 4 had been taken by the reformist soldiers from the loyalist soldiers, the audience applauded while the Ilocanos just kept mum in their seats.

When the church bells finally tolled on the night the Marcoses left Malacanang, the entire auditorium went wild as the delegates from Regions II to XII and NCR whooped it up while the delegates from the Ilocos region just kept quiet.
Despite the celebration of the moment, many were still apprehensive about the sketchy reports regarding the dictator's alleged flight from Malacanang -- it was then-Minister of Education Culture and Sports Minister Jaime C. Laya himself who confirmed to the delegates the real situation regarding the country’s leadership, declaring in his opening speech:
“This will be my first and last speech to you as your Minister of Education, Culture and Sports” or words to that effect.

Surprisingly, his pronouncement was greeted with silence, but not for long as the place was rocked by a thunderous explosion of joy and happiness.
Amid the wild celebration, I saw the Ilocos delegation quietly shedding tears for their beloved Apo.





Let us not desecrate the memory of the original People Power Revolution and the heroes who shed their lives so that the Filipino people could be free again.
Let us preserve and honor their sacrifices by becoming good, honorable and responsible citizens.
Quo vadis, Gringo, Butz, et al?


Looking back...





Note: Where have all the 1986 People Power Revolution heroes gone?

Comments

Anonymous said…
I was with some friends at a bar that very night when the owner -- who's a friend -- approached our table and advised us all to go home. I was still clueless as to what was happening, and it was only when I reached home that I got wind of the events that had just transpired.

Still half-drunk, I stayed awake all night listening to June Keithley at Radio Bandido calling for the people to form a barricade around Camp Aguinaldo to prevent the forces loyal to Marcos from attacking them.

Personally, I feel that we should've let them (the Marcos soldiers) have a go at it before kicking out the dictator. That would've saved this country from going through several coup attempts from those so-called "heroes"...
Anonymous said…
I was just a kid in Toronto, ON... however, I vividly remember watching my parents glued to the television - hearing stories and watching events unfold in a country that they had left.
Anonymous said…
SNLGUY,

You’re right on the money, my friend. Personally too, the Philippines would be better off without these wolves masquerading as “heroes” of the People Power Revolution.

In a way, they’re not really heroes; the real heroes were the millions of people who protected them from the wrath of the dictator. If you ask me, they’re just desperate men who were trying to save their skins from the repercussions of their failed power grab. It so happened that they were at the right place at the right time and grabbed credit for deposing Marcos and his ilk which in my opinion the Filipino people will eventually succeed on that with or without them in the picture.

Their numerous attempts to grab power just months after EDSA I exposed their real colors.


fruityoaty,

I am sure your parents at that time were one with the Filipino people in spirit. I hope that you are proud of your Filipino heritage although that we cannot be said of our shameless “leaders” who continue to pillage the coffers of the nation and trample the rights of the people.

The day will eventually come when the Philippines and its people will be free of these “makakapal ang apog” politicians.
Leah said…
I remember watching all these things unfold on TV and wondering what all this hype about? I was not interested in politics at all but with all the hoopla I wanted me to know more.. I think I was more engrossed with Kris being interviewed.

btw, I was not surprised at all to hear of your writing award back then. It shows here in your blog that you are a good writer.
atto aryo said…
Thanks for triggering some good old memories. I remember, I too had just won at the RSSPC (I won first to third place in 6 categories) and the death of Ninoy stopped me from going into the Nationals. Medyo magulo na kasi noon kaya medyo natakot ang parents ko.

My young mind at the time was more concerned with the lost chance to shine rather that how the event affected Philippine history. It was a good thing I went to Manila for collegem, and later saw things from a different perspective.
Unknown said…
Hi,

I was there where you were during EDSA 2. I represented my school in Nueva Vizcaya as winner in the Regional 2 Conference in Isabela. Unlike your region, Region 2 is more a Marcos country, so I was shocked and the Barotac event is one of the most unforgettable experiences I have ever had. When I had the chance to visit Iloilo, I really had to stop and had my photo taken. It was such a great memory of a very colorful history that happened in my high school life. Mine is crvallejos.blogspot.com

Caesar
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