Published by Sunday Punch Dagupan Pangasinan July 1, 2019
Quincentennial Imperatives and Quintessential Beauties
By Virginia
Jasmin Pasalo
This is my third
attempt to write about how the church can be a source of creativity for its
remaining believers. On all attempts, I am intermittently distracted unable to
give a coherent ending. As I write, the fire tree on the highway invites
attention and I lay down my pen to watch the parade of orange and red flowers
dancing to the beat of the wind and the bougainvilleas dividing the lanes.
Fe Mangahas is
engaged in conversation with a staff, relating how Lapu-lapu won against
Magellan, but she suddenly shifted to me, and I am making an effort to focus on
the story unfolding on the road. By now, I have decided to drop the subject on
the church. The thoughts were not flowing.
We are on our way to
Baler, Aurora upon the invitation of the National Historical Commission of
the Philippines (NHCP) to meet with historians all over the country to discuss
the progress of the Local Historical Committees Network (LHCN).
Specifically, a) To formulate strategies to mainstream the mandate of the
NHCP at the local level through the LHCN affiliates; b) Identify the points of
synergy between NHCP and the LHCN affiliates on research & publication,
documentation, public programs, preservation and collection building and
management; and c) To formulate a three-year action plan.
Fe suddenly bursts
with excitement over the talisay blooms. These flowers have a way of taking us
away from the serious stuff, and we are again unable to concentrate. We wonder
at this beauty, the way Fe remembered the story of Japanese soldiers stopping
in awe to marvel at the caballero blooms during the war.
Fe and I should be
doing a history of these beautiful indigenous flowers, and weave their
existence into our traditions and culture.
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