Read this in The Manila Times digital edition.
WHY did many people like me demonstrate after the assassination of Sen. Ninoy Aquino 40 years ago? Many had much more at stake and more to lose than 24-year-old me who had nothing to gain, yet we did so. I assume that, like me, they felt two overwhelming emotions that logic, calculation and self-interest could not overcome. Shame for having been collectively cowed and cowardly when many rights we at least ostensibly had were taken away long beyond any reasonable justification for it. Let's not forget that, to Senator Aquino's chagrin, the people did not rise when martial law was declared 51 years ago, and it was actually very popular at the start. Collectively, many felt the pre-1972 system was falling apart and minus false nostalgia for that era (second richest in Asia when reality was with $200 GDP per capita, we were for a time merely among the less poor). We were already falling behind our neighbors economically (worse was to come, alas). Add student unrest and social tensions, and many felt we needed discipline, order and effective government. Don't think pre-martial law governance was anything exemplary. Think traffic is bad today? Before martial law, there were jeepneys on EDSA and all main roads. Many attempts to remove them failed and only martial law enabled them to be moved to secondary roads.
The second overwhelming emotion was outrage. That our country had come to that where not just opponents, but the leading political opponent could be assassinated and under those circumstances. For all the claims of political opportunism and populism prior to martial law that dogged Senator Aquino, his incarceration and sacrifice made him more than he was before and a talisman. I find it sad that some writers have likened his return to playing a Filipino equivalent of "Game of Thrones" and losing. As is usually the case, some political calculation and opportunism were part of his return but to think it was limited to that seems blind and cruel to me and is belied by the surprising and sustained response of the people. One of his many eloquent comments on his travel back, which many warned him not to undertake, was on his potential assassination and he said, "The Filipino is worth dying for!"
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