Tuesday, December 9, 2008

A Beautiful Speech

The True Gospel of Solidarity
by Joseph Nathan Cruz
Magna Cum Laude, BA English Studies - Creative Writing
CAL Recognition Rights, April 15, 2000.
(Forum, April 28, 2000)


     My mother is a domestic helper. In other people's homes she cooks, does the laundry, cleans the bathroom, and takes care of the infants. She put me through school doing that kind of work because that was the only thing she could do. She never finished high school, never enjoyed bourgeois luxuries. And later tonight, we'll be going home to our hovel in a squatter area in Taytay, Rizal dubbed Coco village because most of the houses are made of cheap, coco lumber.


     And yet, few of my classmates know that. Most are comfortable with their neat picture of the world. Comfortable with cute, little concerns in the University like projects and papers, reports, boyfriends and girlfriends, torn hymen, cheap thrills in the lagoon, concerts, cell phones, night lives. And in this age that flaunts globalization and the advance of technology, we are led to believe more and more that we have entered an age of solidarity and  unity. An age where there is interconnection in a global village that continues to spawn genuine development for all mankind. Indirectly, it leads us to a complacency supported by the lie that the world is alright. After all, we feel alright. The pain and suffering exists somewhere out there to a few insignificant people.


     I have walked among you. But lost in anonymity, I am assumed to be no different from anyone even by some of my friends. When I was a freshman, a close friend of mine enjoyed lambasting the squatters, the jologs, for their bad behavior, their bad smell, their propensity for breeding baby after baby they cannot support. My friend did not realize that I was from that background. He did not realize that I grew up watching my friends die of sickness, or get pregnant too early, or get injured or killed in petty street wars, or go to jail, or get assigned to the typical, monotonous lifestyle of the poor. And the assumption that everything is alright grows with the lie that we are more or less the same, that we are united, that the dawning of a new world order has started to bring the sought-after solidarity.


     But the right approach to true solidarity and unity is not one that denies difference, denies the pain of the oppressed just because it is not beautiful, or, as our country's President says, "It is too depressing." The right approach is to expose the truth, highlight the difference and work for its remedy. For as long as there are poor people, Moros discriminated against, oppressed women, abused children, and multitudes of other categories consigned to the margins because they threaten the image of unity and stability that feeds the established status quo, there can be no true solidarity.

     But the creativity of the artist, the magic of their potent images, the works of the men and women of letters --- these have the power to transform, power to wake our people from the stupor that gives them dreams that are lies. Power to destroy myths and create a world that is beautiful and true.


     Of course, the arts and letters can be used the other way. The way that sells out, aids corruption, subverts the potentiality of what is good. But will you? As graduates we are in a phase that continues to taunt us with the question, "Who do you sell your brains to?"


     It is easy to be complacent. To believe the lies. But we shouldn't. We owe it to our teachers who taught us patiently despite the low salary, to our parents who worked so hard for us, and to our people whose blood and sweat built this institution and continue to put us through school. We owe it to them to become the prophets of this age who will preach the true gospel of solidarity. Only then can we all be truly one in a world where it would make perfect sense to celebrate the fact --- squatter ako, katulong ang nanay ko --- and we are proud because, and not in spite of, the fact.

     I'm sure, all of us have issues about which we keep silent because of the power of the lies. 

     This is the day to be free. I call on you --- fellow scholars and artists, unite!

12 comments:

  1. What a stirring speech! I know I'll be affected by it for a very long time.
    Thanks for posting, Gabi.

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  2. i love this speech. included to sa kom3 book

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  3. You're welcome, Meewa. :) Yup, it's something really worth sharing. I am amazed at how he said SO MUCH, given the brevity of his speech. It provides a worthy answer to the eternal question "What are the arts good for?"

    And David!! Nakakatuwa naman... ang alam ko this speech is also included in several high school textbooks as well. Dapat lang. I posted a copy in the bulletin board of my high school class and we discussed it at length. Every Filipino should read this.

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  4. it's no cliche to say that this is a great speech written by a real and receptive human being, of the intelligence that is beyond what the academe could even provide; it is intelligence of being alive........I wish there were more people like this in UP

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  5. So do I, Sir. :) How beautifully you phrased it po... "the intelligence of being alive..." ... of showing great humanity ;)

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  6. hey gabi i'm gonna steal this speech ha, put it in my blog also ;)

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  7. it's music to my ears gabi as it reminds me of the life of carlos bulosan and how art could be a driver of realization. You see, art is not just confined in “ Art just for the Art’s sake” but is meant to move out to know the real, (our social ordeal)
    this speech will be very dear to me and will perpetually remind me of how education can serve a transition in making a difference not just in our lives but for the wide speck of our society as well. i have the same experience of working hard for my education with minimal support from my family. my mother didnt finish her education and was only fortunate to step in first phase of high school. but with big dreams, she labored hard to keep our family going even if it wasn’t enough to sustain our education. This lot led us to find initiative to finance ourselves and with God’s grace I was able to graduate with pride. At sa susunod na taon, kapatid ko naman. Salamat sa Diyos.

    Thanks for posting this.

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  8. by the way UP Visayas has so many stories to tell in the same habiliment like this . mahihirap kasi kami dito.heheehe

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  9. Oh wow, thank you so much for sharing your story with us, Totomel.

    My own mother and father came from an impoverished background and were working students for most of their lives. My siblings and I were raised comfortably but the value of education has always been ingrained in us, from the start. We are truly blessed, not only for the opportunites afforded us but also to have such parents.

    Congratulations in advance to your sister (or brother)!

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  10. how true! it's so easy to grow complacent, or be overwhelmed by seemingly weighty problems, forgetting what a blessing our education is. thank you for posting this!

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  11. "The right approach is to expose the truth, highlight the difference and work for its remedy."

    True indeed.

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