This story was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 3, February 19-25, 2006


 

On the 20th anniversary of the EDSA I uprising:
Twenty People Who Made EDSA I Possible

Twenty years ago on Feb. 25, a million Filipinos massing up at EDSA booted out a dictator. We in Bulatlat are commemorating the 20th anniversary of that historic uprising by paying tribute to 20 people who made EDSA I possible. They are 20 people who fought the Marcos dictatorship from the outset, 20 people whose heroic efforts led to EDSA I.

BY ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO
Bulatlat

Feb. 22-25, 1986 were three days that shook the world. Those were three days when rosary-bearing nuns faced soldiers armed to the teeth and colegialas stuffed roses into the barrels of soldiers’ guns and masses of men came together to stop tanks at EDSA (Epifanio de los Santos Avenue).

The troops blocked by civilians at EDSA on those three days were under orders to storm Camp Aguinaldo, the general headquarters of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), and fight it out with a small band of their comrades in arms who had chosen to defy the Marcos regime. The mutineers were led by then Gen. Fidel V. Ramos, then Col. Gregorio “Gringo” Honasan, and former Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile.

Enrile and Ramos had, a few days before, announced their defection to the opposition following the outbreak of public outrage against the results of a fraud-ridden snap presidential election on Feb. 7, in which Marcos was officially proclaimed as the winner over Corazon “Cory” Aquino. “Enough is enough, Mr. President,” Enrile’s voice rang over the airwaves. The people who had massed up at EDSA were mostly there in response to a call from then Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin to save the mutinous soldiers, who were being pursued by loyalist troops under orders from Marcos.

Marcos had been forced to call for a snap election amid a crisis that is rocking his rule.

The mainstream opposition parties united behind Aquino, widow of oppositionist Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. who had been slain nearly three years before and previous to that was persecuted for a long time by the Marcos dictatorship.

In 1983, Ninoy, then in exile in the U.S., had decided to come back to the Philippines to try to talk Marcos into restoring civil liberties. He knew his life was in grave danger, but on he went and a single bullet to the back of his head ended his life at the tarmac of the airport now named after him.

His assassination provoked the unorganized masses, middle class and even businessmen to take to the streets in the millions. These were the bulk of the crowd that massed up at EDSA on Feb. 22-25, 1986.

Those were three days that shook the world, as what happened on those dates are said to have inspired anti-tyranny mass actions in other countries.

But those three days were not all. What is now known as the EDSA I uprising was just the culmination of more than a decade of people’s struggle against the reign of terror that began when martial law was declared on Sept. 21, 1972.

Among the first to challenge the Marcos government’s reign of terror were organized workers through a series of strikes beginning in 1974. The most well-known among these was the 1975 strike by workers at the La Tondeña brewery, who were supported by a number of priests and nuns.

The workers’ actions were followed by campaigns by church-based human rights workers and a reviving student movement.

Another landmark in the pre-1983 anti-dictatorship struggle was the indignation rally against the fraudulent results of the Batasang Pambansa elections in 1978, in which more than 500 anti-Marcos oppositionists from various political colors braved police brutality.

These were just some of the anti-dictatorship efforts that led to the EDSA I uprising.

Twenty years ago on Feb. 25, a million Filipinos massing up at EDSA booted out a dictator.

We in Bulatlat are commemorating the 20th anniversary of that historic uprising by paying tribute to 20 people who made EDSA I possible. They are 20 people who fought the Marcos dictatorship from the outset, 20 people whose heroic efforts led to EDSA I.

 

© 2006 Bulatlat  Alipato Publications

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