Solicitor General Alfredo Benipayo, a rara avis
April 9, 2006 | 12:00am
The other day was the 19th death anniversary of my old man, Napoleon. He was a very ordinary man who had no pretense to any worldly possession he did not have. What he did have and which we, the family members, lament not to have inherited was his gift in languages. We remember, with immeasurable pride, of course, that our old folk, who was educated during the American regime, also spoke fluent Spanish and Latin.
To refresh my memory of him, I, also the other day, skimmed through some faded photographs and other memorabilia. I came upon my own high school junior and senior prom. It happened, coincidentally, on April 7 and naturally, I had goose bumps.
According to that memoir, the setting was our bequeathing legacies to the juniors I found, in what I apparently said in that occasion, a very touching note which could have only been suggested by my father - "what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul". In all frankness, I could not remember having said that line but in all candidness, too, having learned it to biblical, I believe it is appropriate all the time, especially today.
Presently, it can very well be uttered by the former Solicitor General Alfredo Benipayo.
I do recall that Solgen Benipayo was, to use a relatively new coinage, on line, to become a Justice of the Supreme Court. That could have been the noblest dream of the former solicitor as it is, the highest aspiration of a lawyer. Benipayo was in a position to have his legal opinions heard in many corners of the government bureaucracy and in the process expose the profundity of his understanding of the law for all to observe. His position was close to the powers-that-be whose fiat must, in addition to being heard, be heeded. All pieces for his rendezvous to a magistracy of the highest tribunal seemed ready to fall into place. Its only wanting piece was a vacancy.
Then came a definitive event. It was the oral argument on a controversial and immensely adversarial case. In the solemn halls of the Supreme Court, the very difficult side of the government on the questioned Presidential Proclamation 1017 was espoused ably by the thought process of Solgen Benipayo. His stand was, in the midst of adverse public opinion, gallant.
Solgen Benipayo was attributed to have said something like the implementation of PP 1017 not being constitutional, or words to that effect. I am sure he was true to his conviction and said what was in his mind. But, his honesty did not matter. To the government of Her Excellency, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Benipayo, by admitting what this administration was denying, bungled a job. The consequence was fully expected. The former solicitor general saw the last day of his office. His exit became inevitable.
It must have taken Benipayo's sleep away for many nights before the oral argument poring on how to say what. While arguing before the Supreme Court, Benipayo could have aped the body language of Former Comelec Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano when the latter claimed never to have left this country at the height of the "Hello Garci" scandal. Or soon after the argument, Benipayo could have mimicked the apologetic lips of the president when she asked forgiveness from this country for "lapse of judgment". To public knowledge, he did not do either. So, he had to lose all worldly perks.
Yet, while Solgen Benipayo did not gain the whole world, he, in my humble estimation, kept his soul intact. He foreclosed his expected appointment to the Supreme Court as he earned the disfavor of the president in much the same degree that he collected the ire of those whose actions he assailed but, more importantly, he stood firm in the belief of what was right and consistent in upholding the truth. I could not ask for more and if my father were alive today, he would have pointed in the direction of former Solicitor General Alfredo Benipayo as an epitome of the line "what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul".
To refresh my memory of him, I, also the other day, skimmed through some faded photographs and other memorabilia. I came upon my own high school junior and senior prom. It happened, coincidentally, on April 7 and naturally, I had goose bumps.
According to that memoir, the setting was our bequeathing legacies to the juniors I found, in what I apparently said in that occasion, a very touching note which could have only been suggested by my father - "what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul". In all frankness, I could not remember having said that line but in all candidness, too, having learned it to biblical, I believe it is appropriate all the time, especially today.
Presently, it can very well be uttered by the former Solicitor General Alfredo Benipayo.
I do recall that Solgen Benipayo was, to use a relatively new coinage, on line, to become a Justice of the Supreme Court. That could have been the noblest dream of the former solicitor as it is, the highest aspiration of a lawyer. Benipayo was in a position to have his legal opinions heard in many corners of the government bureaucracy and in the process expose the profundity of his understanding of the law for all to observe. His position was close to the powers-that-be whose fiat must, in addition to being heard, be heeded. All pieces for his rendezvous to a magistracy of the highest tribunal seemed ready to fall into place. Its only wanting piece was a vacancy.
Then came a definitive event. It was the oral argument on a controversial and immensely adversarial case. In the solemn halls of the Supreme Court, the very difficult side of the government on the questioned Presidential Proclamation 1017 was espoused ably by the thought process of Solgen Benipayo. His stand was, in the midst of adverse public opinion, gallant.
Solgen Benipayo was attributed to have said something like the implementation of PP 1017 not being constitutional, or words to that effect. I am sure he was true to his conviction and said what was in his mind. But, his honesty did not matter. To the government of Her Excellency, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Benipayo, by admitting what this administration was denying, bungled a job. The consequence was fully expected. The former solicitor general saw the last day of his office. His exit became inevitable.
It must have taken Benipayo's sleep away for many nights before the oral argument poring on how to say what. While arguing before the Supreme Court, Benipayo could have aped the body language of Former Comelec Commissioner Virgilio Garcillano when the latter claimed never to have left this country at the height of the "Hello Garci" scandal. Or soon after the argument, Benipayo could have mimicked the apologetic lips of the president when she asked forgiveness from this country for "lapse of judgment". To public knowledge, he did not do either. So, he had to lose all worldly perks.
Yet, while Solgen Benipayo did not gain the whole world, he, in my humble estimation, kept his soul intact. He foreclosed his expected appointment to the Supreme Court as he earned the disfavor of the president in much the same degree that he collected the ire of those whose actions he assailed but, more importantly, he stood firm in the belief of what was right and consistent in upholding the truth. I could not ask for more and if my father were alive today, he would have pointed in the direction of former Solicitor General Alfredo Benipayo as an epitome of the line "what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul".
BrandSpace Articles
<
>
- Latest
- Trending
Trending
Latest
Recommended