Dark Days of Authoritarianism: To Be in History
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Dark Days of Authoritarianism - Langham Global Library
This collection of essays plunges the reader into both the darkest period of postcolonial Philippine history and the most hope-filled moment when the brutal Marcos dictatorship was overthrown by a peaceful, popular uprising. The writers were all participants in the stirring events of 1986, and come from diverse social, professional and ideological backgrounds. The multiple literary genres – factual narrative, personal anecdote, political analysis and theological reflection – model how the past should be recovered for the sake of understanding and acting in the present. It will humble, encourage and enlighten all who continue to struggle today in the Philippines and in other parts of the world with political repression and the non-fulfilment of political dreams.
Vinoth Ramachandra, PhD
Secretary for Dialogue & Social Engagement, IFES
This is a significant book edited by a long-term friend, Dr Melba Maggay. This book focuses on the postcolonial identity of the Philippine people during the puppet rules of Marcos and beyond. Marcos used romantic justification for his martial law to shut out opposing voices and peoples. EDSA revolutions gave a glimpse of hope that never delivered, because the people in all social strata did not change in their deep-structure psyche. Today the populace rule
of Duterte would be a regression and unapologetic savage without accountability.
What happened to the Philippine people from the 1970s till now is relevant to the world at large, especially for those struggling in the post-colonial era in Africa, Latin and South Americas, and Asia. This book is insightful for it operates on two levels: the stark reality of encroaching evils on the personal level and the reflection of the cultural deep-structure that let these things happen. It is especially rare for a book such as this to explore even from a theological and Christian perspective.
Wing Tai Leung, PhD
Founding President, Lumina College, Hong Kong
Former General Secretary, Breakthrough Youth Ministry
There is an unseen hand that works for the good of those who try to stand for God’s original purposes for society and its institutions.
The editor herself gives us the clue to read this intelligent, intense and inclusive narrative. The contemporary political and social context in the Philippines, which mirrors what occurred in the 70s and 80s, has closely the same past in Latin America: authoritarian regimes and dictatorship under martial law. Previously, they were illegal regimes; today, the leaders are democratically elected but have authoritative natures,
along with populists and violent nationalists. This is actually a global phenomenon. It’s a book urgently relevant.
Marcelo Vargas A.
Centro de Capacitación Misionera, Bolivia, Latin America
Three decades after the ruthless rule of Ferdinand Marcos ended, this diverse collection of personal essays gives a revealing and timely insight into the dark days of martial law in the Philippines, the subsequent peoples’ power revolution
and ongoing consequences in the 21st century for the first Southeast Asian nation to declare itself a democratic republic. These are important stories of struggle, resilience and faith amid a convoluted interplay of ideological politics and social change.
Rev Tim Costello, AO
Chief Advocate, World Vision Australia
Dark Days of Authoritarianism: To Be in History is simply a remarkable work. Its style – testimonies and reflections of people from diverse social and professional backgrounds and divergent ideological commitments from a very dark period in the history of the Philippines – make it a compelling read. Everyone’s story is marked with fear, loss and grief. And yet resounding in all is faith and hope, inspiring courage and perseverance in their struggle to end impunity and oppression.
The integrity with which each tell their story, how they confronted and were confronted with issues, questions and struggles of faith and life in a repressive and oppressive regime, at personal, community and institutional level, is refreshing. It is amazing how their story mirrors our story in the dark days of despotic rule in Africa in the 1970s and 1980s.
Dark Days of Authoritarianism is relevant today, not least for us in Africa, who, like the Philippines, are faced with the resurgence of authoritarianism. The enthralling stories, and reflections on the lessons from those dark days, provide encouragement and challenge the activist generation today, that fearful as the times may be, hope must triumph.
As one who is involved in civic-political activism, working for a non-violent end to militarism and authoritarian rule in my home country of Uganda and the continent of Africa, reading Dark Days of Authoritarianism is energizing and challenging at the same time. I am so glad that I have the book as a resource for the difficult journey ahead.
Bishop David Zac Niringiye, PhD
Civic-Political Activist
Senior Fellow, The Institute of Religion, Faith and Culture in Public Life
Author, The Church: God’s Pilgrim People
The longing for freedom and for social justice lies deep in the human psyche. This moving book tells us the story of true events in the Philippines and how different groups sought to bring about change. In particular, it shows how committed Christian men and women can seek the good of their society, the power of prayer, and the grace of God. A prophetic voice for our times.
Rose Dowsett
Missiologist
Dark Days of Authoritarianism
To Be in History
General Editor
Melba Padilla Maggay
© 2019 The Institute for Studies in Asian Church and Culture (ISACC)
Published 2019 by Langham Global Library
An imprint of Langham Publishing
www.langhampublishing.org
Langham Publishing and its imprints are a ministry of Langham Partnership
Langham Partnership
PO Box 296, Carlisle, Cumbria, CA3 9WZ, UK
www.langham.org
ISBNs:
978-1-78368-485-4 Print
978-1-78368-486-1 ePub
978-1-78368-487-8 Mobi
978-1-78368-488-5 PDF
ISACC and the Contributors have asserted their right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988 to be identified as Author of their part of this work.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher or the Copyright Licensing Agency.
Scripture quotations marked (NIV) are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan.
Scripture quotations marked (RSV) are from Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright © 1946, 1952, and 1971 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78368-485-4
Cover & Book Design: projectluz.com
Langham Partnership actively supports theological dialogue and an author’s right to publish but does not necessarily endorse the views and opinions set forth here or in works referenced within this publication, nor can we guarantee technical and grammatical correctness. Langham Partnership does not accept any responsibility or liability to persons or property as a consequence of the reading, use or interpretation of its published content.
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Contents
Cover
By Way of a Prologue . . .
Part I
1 The Awakening of Miss Goody Two Shoes
Subversive Materials
Politicization
Writer’s Business
Noise Barrage
At the Desk
Aquino Assassination
NPA Camp
People Power
2 Life under Authoritarianism
Academic Dis-ease
The NGO World: Community Organizing and Human Rights
Family Concerns and Coming Full Circle
3 The NatDem Front
Introduction
A Social Volcano about to Erupt
From the Masses to the Masses
EDSA People Power
The Middle Forces on My Mind
My Onward Journey
References
4 Truth in a Revolution
A Revolutionary Apprentice
The Revolution Gets Murky
Plagiarized Class Analysis
China on My Mind
The Mystery of Truth and Faith
5 A Peek from behind the Bamboo Curtain
My Big Provincial Family
Activism at the State University
Radio Peking
Double Lives
Martial Law and Its Ideological Fallout
Change Is Coming!
The Journey Home
6 Uncle Sam behind the Scenes
Part II
7 Snap Elections 1986
8 Seventy-Five Long Hours
9 Onward, Soldiers of Faith
10 Diary from the Barricades
Saturday, 22 February 1986
Sunday, 23 February
Monday, 24 February
Tuesday, 25 February
11 The Darkest Moment
Part III
12 Thoughts on the Aftermath
EDSA 1 Happened because of Martial Law
Moving Forward in Our Politics
13 A Nonviolent Revolution
My Motivation for Joining the Revolution
Reflections on Revolution and Active Nonviolence
A Good Revolution?
Closing Theological Observations
14 On Historical Babies, Paradigms and Miracles
Vox Populi?
Religion in the Revolution
A Question of Paradigm
The Magic of Miracles
Concluding Remarks
15 A Gift for Millennials
Lessons Learned
Where Do We Go from Here?
Civil Society Responses
Populism versus Pluralism
References
Epilogue Putting an End to Our Unfinished Revolutions
Taking on the Shadows
What It Cost Us
People First
Our Choices Matter, and We Are Not Unaided
About the Contributors
About Langham Partnership
Endnotes
By Way of a Prologue . . .
To be in history is to be in a place somewhere and answer for it.
Walter Brueggemann
By the look of it there was nothing portentous about that fateful day in September 1972. The sun was shining, there was the usual crowding round jeepney stops, and the wires between electric posts crisscrossed the sky like a mad artist’s tangled lines. I was about to head to the Manila Chronicle office, where I was learning to be a cub reporter, my first job after university.
But then the minutes of waiting for a ride turned into almost an hour, for the jeepneys were few and far between. The boy behind the newspaper stand had no paper to sell that morning, and the corner of the sidewalk where the cigarette vendor held court, her radio blaring, was unusually silent. The sun beat down with increasing heat, and the crisscrossing electric wires above the roofs of houses seemed to lacerate the sky and hurt my eyes.
I gave up the idea of working that day and turned back home. As I reached the threshold I heard the stentorian voice of President Ferdinand Marcos, and soon enough his face showed up on TV as he intoned solemnly that he had declared martial law to save the Republic and build a new society.
Anxiety snatched at my heart and I quickly grabbed the phone to call my friends. Most lines were strangely busy, and those who did answer only said hello
and then the line went dead. Much later, I learned that some of my friends had gone underground, gone to the hills and caught malaria, or been killed in an encounter with government troops.
I spent the first three months of martial law visiting my editor and friends who were rounded up under what came to be known as preventive detention.
It was the regime’s invented tool for arresting without warrant and clapping in jail political oppositionists without charges.
The Chronicle was one of the first newspapers to get shut down. I found myself suddenly without a job. It took time to get my bearings after this shock. I could not, in conscience, work for The Daily Express, the only newspaper that had not been closed down because it belonged to a Marcos crony. I shifted to writing mostly innocuous speeches for cabinet ministers.
At first, martial rule did seem to bring some order to what looked like the beginnings of a new society.
I was caught jaywalking across a busy street in San Juan, along with others hurrying to go to work. We were fingerprinted, had to pose for mug shots, and were told to sweep the market and the streets clean by way of punishment. It seemed that the government was dead earnest in enforcing its slogan Disiplina ang kailangan.[1] The skyline changed as new buildings rose up, numerous infrastructure projects got underway, and the papers were full of foreign investments pouring in.
But then what I read and heard within the walls of power was not quite what I was experiencing on the ground. I would hear of a friend from my activist days in the university being tortured and raped while in detention. A cousin in the provinces mysteriously died in jail without knowing what he was there for. It was like being in the land of the novelist Kafka, where one gets thrown behind iron doors and there is no one to address questions to, no one to turn to for redress or at least some clarity as to the abstract technical reasons for which one languishes in the castle dungeon.
Now and again, I would hear of bright young men and women getting killed at the foot of some lonely mountain or being discovered lying in a ditch by the wayside. These would have been leaders of our generation, those of us who were part of what has come to be known as the First Quarter Storm,
that wave of student protests and unrest in the early 1970s which was eventually used by Marcos as part of the reason why he declared martial law.
Unlike today’s steep descent into outright barbarism alongside the creeping but systematic dismantling of checks and balances in our institutions, Marcos was forthright in declaring martial rule and he took the trouble to coat with finesse and a veneer of legality the abolition of Congress. The judiciary was captured and the Supreme Court was reduced to a stamping pad for the plethora of presidential decrees issued. The atmosphere of prosperity and progress, the cultivated sophistication symbolized by the Cultural Center and other such artifacts of the edifice complex
of Marcos’s wife Imelda, the soporific effect of a controlled press that pacified our questionings and subdued our critical instincts into acquiescence – all these combined to mask and keep below the radar screen the brutality and the massive raid on the country’s coffers that was going on.
The telltale marks of the regime’s excesses could not be prevented from showing, however. Its dirty fingerprints were stamped indelibly on language and popular culture. Words changed lexical meanings; for example, detention
and detainee
in ordinary circumstances mean holding an arrested person in temporary custody, but this was stretched to prolonged and indefinite incarceration as the powers saw fit. Salvage,
which in ordinary English means to rescue or save from total destruction, in the context of that time became the opposite: a murder marked by torture and mutilation. The victim was hogtied, the eyes were gouged out and the tongue cut, the mouth was stuffed with a newspaper crumpled into a ball and the body was dumped in a river or a field overgrown with talahib.[2] "Na-salvaged."
New names had to be invented to adequately describe the wholesale plundering and extravagant lifestyle of the Marcoses and their proxies; "kleptocracy was coined, for instance, and
Imeldific" became synonymous with ostentatious spending, grossly lavish parties and grandiose extravaganzas.
It is not an accident that the first thing a would-be autocrat does is to clamp down on dissent by muzzling media – or, in today’s technologically mediated social environment, simply run fake news campaigns and make them go viral through an army of trolls. Constant exposure to the subliminal messages of media round about us eventually lulls people into a kind of stupor, passively induced into uncritical acceptance of outright and even outrageous lies. Hitler’s propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels once shrewdly observed that If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.
To this day, the big lie persists that the martial law period under Marcos was a good thing. This is the revised history that the Marcos family and their loyalists wish us to believe.
By sheer repetition and constant reiteration, they wish to mesmerize many into their collective auto-suggestion that this period in our history was in fact a golden era presided over by a strong and heroic leader.
Unlike South Africa, which set up a Truth and Reconciliation commission to investigate the truth of what happened during the days of apartheid, we have continued to suffer the consequences of not having closure over the reported abuses of power by the Marcos regime. We have yet to come to some consensus on what exactly happened. No guilt has been assigned, no sin owned, and instead there is a blithe denial that something terribly wrong was ever done.
The failure to pin down accountability has led to a continuing divide in the nation, a political fissure that now and again surfaces with issues like burying Marcos in the Libingan ng mga Bayani,[3] or Bongbong Marcos contesting the ballots cast for the vice presidency. Depending on what is expedient, free-floating forces align themselves either with the pro-Marcos loyalists seeking a return to power, or with the anti-Marcos forces that surfaced at EDSA and are now derisively labeled by President Rodrigo Duterte as "dilawan."[4]
The restoration of democracy, or at least the semblance of what passes for democratic institutions, has yet to bring the country back to a stable party system and the rule of law. Instead, we are treated to shifting alliances and mass migrations to the party that holds the levers of power. Today, the fragile institutions that rose up out of the ruins of authoritarian rule are once again under threat of being either dismantled or slowly eroded as mere instrumentalities at the bidding of the ruling autocrat.
An enduring legacy of the martial law years has been the mystique of the strongman, fed by the mythology that the culture is, at bottom, authoritarian. The people need – and want – a strong iron hand. Nothing gets done, it is said, because the country suffers from too much democracy,
as the late Singaporean statesman Lee Kuan Yew put it.
There are many shades of gray to this, however.
First of all, we do not account to culture what are really functions of a social stratification rigidified by centuries of colonialism.
Inferiorized and disempowered, our people learned to bow down obsequiously to whoever happened to be in authority. Read properly, this is a maladaptation to asymmetrical power relations. It is not a preferred orientation toward authoritarian rule but a malfunctioning of one of the culture’s most basic instincts: accommodation. On the surface, this accommodative bent looks like servile subservience to those in power. But scratch deeper and it may simply be a strategy of survival on the part of those trapped in powerlessness who can only hang onto the coattails of those in power.
Second, evidence from the remaining scraps of our indigenous culture shows that the traditional idea of a leader is not the strongman but the silongan, from the root word silong, roof
– the term used by Cordillera peoples for the clan chief under whose capacious roof people seek protection and shelter. The silongan took care of those under his sakop, his acknowledged sphere of responsibility. This structure of communal responsibility and authority broke down, however, during the Spanish period when the chieftains were co-opted and became gobernadorcillos.[5] This drove a wedge between ruler and people. Thus was created a thin layer of a local ruling elite – the principalia – whose sense of accountability was no longer to their people but to their colonial masters.
The Americans cemented this ruling elite into an oligarchy, shifting to themselves its misplaced sense of obligation and loyalty by a deliberate policy of benevolent assimilation.
Pensionados were sent to the US to study so as to create a professional class laundered into an American way of life.
The bureaucracy was patterned after an American style of governance, meant to make us a showcase of democracy in Asia.
We now know that democracy
– or at least the structures and institutions that make it work within the cultural contexts of the West – is not exportable. Billions of dollars may be poured into institution-building
in places like Iraq or Afghanistan. But unless there are supportive norms within the local cultures that would make it operative, the ruling ethos behind the democratic mechanisms put in place will still be the cult of the strongman, the caudillo. Elections will remain merely contests for power among rival clans, tribes and warlords.
The fledgling democracies that have emerged after experiences of authoritarianism in Latin America, Africa and other places bear this out. As Guatemalan sociologist Bernardo Arevalo puts it: We have the hardware of democracy, but the software of authoritarianism.
It needs noting, however, that there is in this country a subterranean strain of consensus-building practice in our indigenous leadership that has yet to be paid attention to. If sufficiently studied and surfaced as a serious product of inquiry, it could yet serve as a seedbed for democratic institutions to flourish.
The tribal council of elders, like the dap-ay of the Kankanaey in Sagada, or that of the Ikalahan in Nueva Vizcaya, is a living remnant of the old ways of conflict resolution and collegial governance. Unfortunately, this has been submerged under the overlay of modern electoral practices. In Tubo town in Abra, for instance, after political rivalries intensified in the 2007 and 2010 elections, the elders of the dap-ay resorted to the old tradition of butong, a consensus-based arrangement in choosing leaders. The 200 elders of the Dap-ay di Tubo drew up a charter governing elections and the criteria for selecting candidates. They then presented the council’s choice to the people for their approval. To date, all selected candidates in ten villages in Tubo are running unopposed, and Barangay Tabacda, which is included in the watch list of the Cordillera police, had not seen poll-related violence since 2013.[6]
Experiences of immersion in grassroots communities also show that the most effective leaders tend to be those who quietly go alongside people, usually behind the scenes, listening and building consensus toward whatever needs resolving or doing. These consensus-builders are usually silent; they do not talk too much in meetings. Those who seem to be strong leaders are usually found unable to bring people together. The people may seem acquiescent, but come time to do things, they passively resist compliance by inattentiveness, lackadaisical implementation and eventual abandonment of projects.
Unfortunately, it is the trapos – the traditional politicians
– who often know how to smooth out conflict and craft give-and-take compromises that might bring all stakeholders to the table. From the point of view of those used to open conflict, this is seen as backroom wheeling-and-dealing
and lacking in transparency. Naluto na, as they say, already cooked
in the back kitchen or in smoke-filled rooms. However, it may be that those schooled in Western governance processes will need to pay attention to those informal domains where force of personality and interlocking relationships count far more than formal rules and roles. In a culture of personalism, what works is often in that realm where a dense network of kinship ties and connections to power centers is brought to bear on the business at hand.
Clearly, there is a need to be hermeneutically suspicious,
as the Latin Americans say, as to how we read the patterns of our political behavior. Are we looking at these from theoretical frames borrowed from the outside, or are we looking at them from the inside, entering into the universe of meaning embedded in the artifacts, language and life systems of the culture?
For instance, what frames our understanding of recent history – the so-called Marcos dictatorship
and the People Power
uprising that came in its wake? Both of these have been analyzed through various lenses, depending on the ideological commitments of those writing. In this book, we do not attempt to construct or deconstruct interpretive frames that have been used in making sense of what has happened. The approach is simple: we each tell our story, what the British don C. S. Lewis called primal history
– that primitive experience of reality as we have lived it, as against ideas and images constructed for us by anonymous authorities in newsrooms, theorized over by academia and spread by invisible trolls behind computer terminals.
The memories recounted in this book are an unlikely collection, and so are the writers. From various social and professional backgrounds and even divergent ideological commitments, we have come together to bear witness to a very dark period in our history as we have lived it.
The stories are written by people who tried their best to be in history,
to locate themselves in situ, within a social space whose poverty and gross inequalities called for an answer. Within their limited spheres of competence and influence, they tried to navigate with wisdom and integrity through the constraints of a regime that could knock on your door one night, pick you up and make you disappear into the shadows.
The usual tales of horrific torture and other human rights abuses during that period are now dismissed by some as having been suffered by only a few; and anyway, they were rebels, and the state had the right to put them in jail.
The following stories show that one-man rule cast a dark shadow, not just on a small number of dissidents, but on the whole