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The
"Brown Rimbaud"
The
tenth of December is marked as International Human Rights Day. The first
International Human Rights Day fell on December 10, 1948, when the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which declares all people to be free and to have
equal rights and dignity and enumerates all human rights, was adopted by the
United Nations General Assembly.
By
Alexander Martin Remollino
Bulatlat.com
Eman
Lacaba, poet and warrior
The
tenth of December is marked as International Human Rights Day. The first
International Human Rights Day fell on December 10, 1948, when the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, which declares all people to be free and to have
equal rights and dignity and enumerates all human rights, was adopted by the
United Nations General Assembly.
On
International Human Rights Day, it is fitting to remember the late Filipino
writer and revolutionary Emmanuel Agapito "Eman" Lacaba. He was born
on the very day the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the UN
General Assembly. He lost his life at the height of martial law--a victim of a
human rights violation.
Eman
Lacaba was born and raised in Pateros. In an essay he wrote as a high school
student, "Personal Statement of Emmanuel Lacaba", which his brother
Jose, more popularly known as Pete, believes was written in connection with his
application for an American Field Service (AFS) scholarship, he described his
family thus: "Our family is neither rich nor very poor. At least we have
enough to live on."
Enfant
Terrible
Eman
Lacaba has often been compared to the French poet Arthur Rimbaud, a fact he
himself alluded to in one of his poems, "Open Letters to Filipino
Artists", where he told of his being called "the brown Rimbaud."
The comparison stems from the fact that he was, like Rimbaud, an enfant
terrible, a literary virtuoso at a very young age--he started writing poetry at
14—and did so like a master even then. The similarity between them became all
the more striking when he lost his life without reaching his fortieth year--just
like Rimbaud.
He
began to display vast and varied talents at a very young age. He learned to read
early and was a very voracious reader before he was in high school—reading
everything, as he said, "from the Bible to Mad, from newspapers to
encyclopedias, from physics to law and business books, from mathematics to
poetry." From first grade to his last year in high school, he was at the
top of his class. A brilliant and prolific writer at a young age, he became
editor-in-chief of the high school paper. He was also a versatile athlete; he
played
basketball, soccer, and was into track and field. He was an excellent actor on
the stage. In recognition of his leadership skills, his schoolmates gave him
many of the top positions in school organizations--he was class president from
fifth grade to his last year in high school, he became president of the High
School Drama Club and the High School Student Council.
He
received almost all of his pre-university education from the Pasig Catholic
College. While still a student of this school, he applied for and received an
AFS scholarship, through which he got to spend an entire school year in the
United States.
After
high school, he had the chance to choose among no less than three scholarships
from the University of the Philippines (UP), the Ateneo de Manila University,
and De la Salle University. He chose the Manuel de Leon scholarship at the
Ateneo de Manila University, where he took a Bachelor of Arts in Humanities, and
maintained it until he completed his course. This, despite the fact that he
spent much of his time away from the classroom, writing or doing research.
Writer-Activist
If
there is something Eman Lacaba is most noted for, it is for having been a
writer-activist. He was a poet, essayist, playwright, fictionist, and
scriptwriter who joined the protest movement in his student days and later lost
his life as an armed revolutionary.
It
was at the Ateneo that he began to be involved in social and political causes.
He was part of a group which fought for the Filipinization of the university
administration, which was then largely American-led, and the use of Filipino as
medium of instruction. His group also called on their schoolmates to immerse
themselves in the issues which had begun to galvanize their fellow students at
UP.
In
his early days as an activist, his poetry began to show signs of the road he was
to take for the rest of his life, with his increasingly frequent use of the
image of Icarus, a Greek mythological character who burned his wings, fell to
the sea, and died because he flew too close to the sun--an often-used symbol for
those who perish in the pursuit of lofty causes.
He
also joined Panday Sining, the cultural arm of the militant Kabataang Makabayan,
and is believed to have participated in the First Quarter Storm.
In
his college days he frequently commuted between the Bohemian life and activism.
It was only after college that he would turn his back on the former.
Before
he graduated from college, he won a major literary award for Punch and Judas, a
short novel depicting the transformation of an intellectual, Felipe
"Philip" Angeles, from Bohemian to activist.
After
college, he taught Rizal's Life and Works at UP and got involved in the labor
movement. He also became a member of the militant writers' group Panulat para sa
Kaunlaran ng Sambayanan. Just two months before the declaration of martial law,
he was among a number of picketers at a small factory in Pasig who faced threats
and truncheons from the police while the strike was being dispersed. He was
arrested and briefly incarcerated.
After
that, he became active on the stage, writing and acting in plays. He also
assisted in film productions, and among his compiled writings are a number of
unfinished film storylines. He wrote the lyrics for the theme song of the Lino
Brocka-directed movie Tinimbang Ka Ngunit Kulang, which takes potshots at the
hypocrisy of society.
In
1975 he set out for Mindanao to cast his lot with the armed revolutionary
movement, to become a "people's warrior", as he later called himself
in a poem.
Such
was his passion for writing that he wrote even while leading the life of a
revolutionary guerilla. It was in the hills, in fact, that he wrote one of the
poems he is best remembered for, "Open Letters to Filipino Artists",
where he wrote of the armed revolutionary movement thus: "We are tribeless
and all tribes are ours./We are homeless and all homes are ours./We are nameless
and all names are ours./To the fascists we are the faceless enemy/Who come like
thieves in the night, angels of death:/The ever moving, shining, secret eye of
the storm."
Death
of a People's Warrior
At
dawn sometime in March 1976, death came for Eman Lacaba. At this time he was set
to go back shortly to the city for a new assignment that would have used his
writing skills, and had even agreed to write a script for Lino Brocka once he
got back there.
It
was not yet six in the morning. Eman and three other companions were having
breakfast in a peasant's hut. Outside the house were their wet clothes and
shoes, left there to dry.
Elements
of an armed team made up of Philippine Constabulary (PC) men and members of the
Civilian Home Defense Front (CHDF) were with a certain Martin, a member of
Eman's unit who had earlier been captured by the military. They happened to pass
by the house where Eman and his companions were having breakfast. Martin
recognized the clothes and shoes and pointed out the house to the PC-CHDF team,
who immediately opened fire without calling on the occupants to surrender. After
a brief gunfight, two of the hut's occupants were killed including the leader of
Eman's group, while Eman and Estrieta, a pregnant teenager, were wounded.
The
PC-CHDF team headed for Tagum with Eman and Estrieta, with villagers carrying
the corpses. However, a few kilometers from the village, the sergeant of the PC-CHDF
team decided not to bring back anyone alive. Estrieta was the first to go. The
sergeant then handed a .45 to Martin and ordered him to shoot Eman. He did not
want to, but in the end Eman himself said to him, "Go ahead, finish me
off." A bullet was fired through his mouth, crashing through the back of
his skull. As he fell, another bullet was fired at his chest. He was 27. Bulatlat.com
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