Last weekend, a good friend of mine, Dr. Jose Dacudao, who used to work at the Vicente Sotto Medical Center (VSMC) in Cebu City and has since moved to Butuan City (he is the only brain surgeon there) dropped by my office and asked me about the notes and addresses of the Iloilo professors so he could meet with them. So I gave him the addresses since he was going to Iloilo from Cebu City. Dr. Dacudao is no politician, but he is one busy person, organizing groups advocating for the preservation of indigenous cultures and languages. He introduced and brought me to that Internet organization called Defenders of Indigenous Languages in the Archipelago (DILA). He believes this can only be done if the country shifts to a federal form of government.
In Iloilo City, Dr. Dacudao met with Prof. Leopoldo Causing of the WVSU and in fact, he rang me up and finally, I was able to talk to the professor. Yes, as we wrote before, I again emphasized to our Ilonggo friends that while were sold to the federal system, we were not fully convinced with a parliamentary one, unless we had one that was strictly a two-party system. But Prof. Causing was very open-minded and concurred that a two-party parliamentary system was a better idea after all, weve already witnessed how the present multi-party system has given us politicians devoid of any real ideology.
Weve written about the preservation of our languages many times in this corner and let me tell you that if theres any commonality with the people in the Visayas, were all in favor of removing the subject Tagalog a.k.a. Pilipino from the curriculum because as Dr. Dacudao would say, "Forcing us to learn Pilipino destroys our other languages and it is economically useless especially to our overseas Filipino workers (OFWs)." Well, let me add my own, that Pilipino as it is being taught in our schools today is merely a dialect of the Tagalog language because it is actually 99.9 percent Tagalog.
I have heard many sad stories of people from Cebu, Negros or Panay applying for a job and not getting the position simply because the questionnaire was in Tagalog. Clearly, this is disadvantageous to us who were not born in that tongue. Hence, the quick fix to this problem is to adopt a federal form of government so that each individual states can assure the preservation of their respective cultures by teaching their kids in the tongue they were born.
If you didnt know, the concept of a federal state pre-dates even the time of Apolinario Mabini, the "Brains of the Katipunan" wherein he envisioned a Philippines broken into three states of Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. I really dont know why our Department of Education (DepEd) doesnt teach this? Didnt they make a research on the life of the Sublime Paralytic?
In his book The War Against the Americans 1899-1906 written by Resil B. Mojares, he wrote that on Dec.17, 1898, the Federal State of the Visayas was established in Jaro a mere four days before the Treaty of Paris was signed between the United States and Spain, wherein Spain ceded the Philippines to the United States. Theres no doubt that during our struggle for freedom, one of the plans of our forefathers at the turn of the century was already to establish a federal form of government. If the Ilonggos then were ready to embrace a federal state and went into the motion to established one it just makes me wonder why the people in the North would say that were not ready for a federal system? Yes, better believe that you can still hear people say that we are not yet ready for a federal system of government!
If you want to know why the Ilonggos established a federal state in the Visayas, it was because they regarded Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo as a dictator. In fact, Cebu or most of the Visayas were not even represented in the Malolos Congress, but as historian Resil Mojares indicated, both Gen. Arcadio Maxilom and Juan Climaco placed themselves under the authority of Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, but apparently, the Ilonggos didnt want to be under him. Perhaps they were more "pro-Bonifacio" at that time. But this is something that Ilonggos ought to be proud of that they established a federal state of the Visayas before the Americans took over the Philippines!
Anyway, last Monday night, I also met another Ilonggo, the honorable Francis "Wan Tan" Palanca, the top Councilor in the City of Victorias who is the secretary general of the Philippine Councilors League in Region 6 and we also talked about the same issues Ive been writing about. On March 21st, there will be a convention of the Philippine Councilors League in Cebu City and hopefully, we can have resolutions supporting the use of our native tongues in education and more importantly, support the move towards federalism.
A week ago, the Regional Development Council (RDC-7) took the cudgels for them to do a comprehensive study on this system of governance and through the Development Administration Committee (Dev-Ad) headed by Msgr. Roberto Alesna, who created an ad-hoc body for this specific task through research by the University of San Carlos (USC) ably represented by Political Science Prof. Ricky Poca. So lets all help to achieve this goal, which is what is known as nation-building.