I was up early as usual even on a Sunday of a long weekend.
At 54, I am energized enough the day after with just 4-5 hours of sleep. I read
it’s normal for people my age. As mother and wife, I busy myself with feeding
my dogs and doing the laundry. The brood is still fast asleep save for the
older son who is an early riser like me but is wont to stay in his room with
his laptop. He likes that small world of his which I think he appreciates all
the more now that he is home only on weekends after deciding to dorm.
I checked my Twitter feed and posted a second greeting to
one mother who has been in jail for more than 100 days. It’s her 58th
birthday today. She happens to be the bravest woman in our country and the one
our president and a host of others targeted to put in jail even before this
regime won the biggest mistake of a presidential election ever. Senator De Lima
is feisty. She fights for the truth and human rights and these two things were
twisted to get her imprisoned. If you are Filipino, you would know how she
ended up in jail as Duterte’s first political prisoner. Hopefully, you are that
kind of Filipino who agree that the truth was twisted and her rights were
violated in the process of shutting her down.
I apologize to Senator De Lima because I could not fight for
her freedom and I could not defend her enough against people who think the
worst about her. I remember a colleague who believing the media and Filipinos’
favorite source of info, Facebook, disdainfully commenting months ago at De
Lima’s mention of God in one of her speeches before her Senate colleagues
abandoned her to the lions in HOR and DOJ. I was so angry that I could only
say, “Please shut up before I could start hating you for what you are saying.”
I should have lectured him on the truth about all the ganging up being done but
I was just too angry to do so. Good
thing that this much younger colleague backed down but I guess that is one
reason I could not talk politics and current events with my co-teachers
anymore.
I see calls for her release here and abroad but I don’t see
enough people in street protests to do the same. Some sectors even resent
leaflets being handed out at the PPM with her name on them, angrily dismissing
any statement from her as unnecessarily coloring the event yellow. I am sorry,
dear Senator that people especially some younger “activists” of today, do not
see you as one they should be crying for justice for, too.
This reminds me of my own youth when the likes of Ninoy
Aquino were picked up and banished from public view by the Marcos regime. After
the initial shock of Proc 1081, many Filipinos carried on with life, our family
included. The Press was subdued and so we didn’t know much about the thousands
who were kidnapped, tortured, jailed or killed in Marcos’ name. I didn’t
consider Ninoy as somebody worthy of my attention then because many regarded
him as a traditional politician too like the then president. Ninoy languished
in jail for more than seven years. I was with the university student council
when he was assassinated. I didn’t care to pay my respects for him at his wake
because I still believed then he wasn’t worth it. It took me the years that
followed to realize how his death galvanized the Filipino people into one big
force to topple a dictatorship. It took me years to realize he was one very
intelligent, eloquent Filipino leader who finally had his heart and mind in the
right place after years of being in jail.
Dear Senator, up to now, whenever I mention your name in class or in the
faculty room, I sense the same lack of interest in your plight. I apologize for
my community’s continuing cluelessness about if not apathy toward the injustice
done to you, Senator De Lima. I apologize on behalf of a country that is yet to realize your
contributions to the elusive goal of good governance. I apologize that you have
to spend your birthday in jail when your colleagues, many of whom more jail-worthy,
enjoy their being callous enablers of a presidency this country never deserved
to suffer from but had the biggest blunder of voting into power.
I know you are a very prayerful woman whose relationship with
our God is further strengthened by this test which His enemy imposed on you.
Despite the situation you are in, let me assure you that in time (I hope soon),
more Filipinos will realize the truth about you and your enemies will be outed
and punished for what they have done to you.
God bless you always, Senator De Lima. Happy birthday,
Madam!