Dr. Norma V. Llemit


Let’s offer a prayer for our departed alumna. May she rest in peace.


If you have heard or read about any fellow UPLB alumnus/alumna who passed away, please inform us through https://alum.uplb.edu.ph/submit-obituary


Source: UPLB Office of Alumni Relations

A writer’s truth: The legacy of National Artist Bienvenido Lumbera

Written by Celeste Ann Castillo Llaneta


BIEN

Paano kita tatawagin?

Guro? Patnubay? Uliran?

Kaibigan, kalahati ng danas ko’y nagunaw

Sa iyong pagpanaw.

Rio Alma

28 Setyembre 2021


Photo from UP AVP Jose Wendell Capili.


Writer, poet, critic, dramatist, mentor, scholar, political prisoner, activist. Dr. Bienvenido L. Lumbera, National Artist for Literature, was all this and more.


With his passing on September 28, 2021, at the age of 89, Dr. Lumbera—Ka Bien to his friends and colleagues—left behind a distinguished body of works and a legacy of fearless activism, harnessing the power of literature and the arts for the cause of freedom, truth, and nationalism.


A writer’s childhood


Dr. Lumbera’s literary work encompasses multiple genres, from poetry to stage plays and librettos. His love for these different genres stems from his childhood. Born in Lipa, Batangas, on April 11, 1932, to Timoteo and Carmen Lumbera.  Young Bienvenido was orphaned at an early age. He and his older sister Leticia were cared for initially by their paternal grandmother, then when the war ended, by his godparents, Enrique and Amanda Lumbera.


Despite the tragedy he had experienced at such a young age, Lumbera recalled having a rich childhood. He played with the neighboring kids, played the action movies he watched and listened to his aunts read aloud from the novella series in Liwayway magazine. His childhood experiences in the historic town of Lipa formed the foundation of his writing career.  One of his renowned musical dramas, Hibik at Himagsik nina Victoria Laktaw, is set in his childhood town.


Lumbera went to Lipa Elementary School and finished high school at Mabini Academy. Initially, he wanted to attend college at the University of the Philippines. However, his guardians, who supported his education, convinced him to enroll at the University of Santo Tomas instead. It was closer to their place of work. In 1957, he earned his B.Litt in Journalism from UST.  In 1967, he obtained his M.A. and Ph.D.  in Comparative Literature from Indiana University.  His groundbreaking dissertation focused on Tagalog poetry from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. While studying in the U.S., he threw himself entirely into education in culture—film, theater, opera, jazz, and everything in between.


After coming home from the U.S., Lumbera taught Literature, Philippine Studies, and Creative Writing at the Ateneo de Manila University. This period saw his activist spirit ignite. He was involved in the Filipinization movement in the 1960s, and served as the chairman of the Panulat Para sa Kaunlaran ng Sambayanan (PAKSA), an organization of activist-writers. His activism was so well-known that when Ferdinand Marcos declared Martial Law in 1972, Lumbera knew he was among those targeted for arrest and was forced underground. He was arrested in January 1974, and released a year later after Cynthia Nograles, his former student at Ateneo de Manila University, appealed for his release. The two were married a few months later.


A nationalist writer in the time of Martial Law and beyond


In an interview with Rappler published on April 12, 2017, Lumbera shared an experience he had following his release from prison during Martial Law. He described how department stores hired people to dress up and pose in shop windows as living mannequins.


“So nandoon naka-display sila. Alam mong buhay ang mga tao na ito, pero hindi sila nakikipag-usap, hindi sila gumagalaw. Ang laki ng epekto noon sa akin. Naiyak ako,” Lumbera revealed. “Ang mga tao na ito ay mga tunay na tao, pero nagpapanggap na hindi tao. Parang ganon ang sitwasyon sa panahon ng Martial Law—na kailangan ng mga tao na magpanggap na iba sila sa tunay na pagkatao nila [So there they are on display. You know they’re alive, but they don’t speak, they don’t move. This had a profound effect on me. I wept. These are real people pretending not to be. This was how it was like during the time of Martial Law—people having to pretend that they are not who they are].”


Photo from UP AVP Jose Wendell Capili.


For Lumbera, this experience and imprisonment only cemented his commitment as a truth-teller and nationalist writer. In 1976, through Professor Petronilo Bn Daroy, Lumbera began teaching at the Department of Filipino and Philippine Literature, UP College of Arts and Sciences (CAS). A year later, UP CAS Dean Francisco Nemenzo appointed him to become editor of the Diliman Review, which was critical of the Marcos dictatorship.


Lumbera began writing librettos for musical theater, starting with the Philippine Educational Theater Association’s (PETA) request to create a musical based on Carlos Bulosan’s America Is in the Heart. Eventually, Lumbera wrote several highly acclaimed musical dramas such as Tales of the Manuvu, Rama: Hari, Nasa Puso ang Amerika, Bayani, and Noli me Tangere: The Musical. He counts his adaptation of Dr. Jose Rizal’s novel, Rama Hari and Hibik at Himagsik nina Viktoria Laktaw, a tribute to Filipino revolutionary women during the revolution of 1896, as his most successful plays. In 2004, De La Salle University-Manila Press published Sa Sariling Bayan: Apat na Dulang May Musika, an anthology of Lumbera’s musical dramas.


Lumbera authored numerous books on literary criticism, textbooks, and anthologies such as Revaluation: Essays on Literature, Cinema, and Popular Culture; Pedagogy; Philippine Literature: A History and Anthology; Rediscovery: Essays in Philippine Life and Culture; Filipinos Writing: Philippine Literature from the Regions; and Paano Magbasa ng Panitikang Filipino: Mga Babasahing Pangkolehiyo. He once admitted he preferred writing poetry rather than short stories because he disliked using a typewriter for more extended periods. Most of his poems are collected in Likhang Dila, Likhang Diwa, published in 1994. These include “Ka Bel”; “The Yaya’s Lullaby,” “Servant,” “Sadness,” “Jamborzkie Light,” and the frequently anthologized “Eulogy of Roaches.”


Bayan at Lipunan: Ang Kritisismo ni Bienvenido Lumbera, edited by UP Professor Emerita Rosario Torres-Yu, was published and launched by the UST Publishing House, and celebrated by UP in January 2006.


Aside from UP, Lumbera also taught Literature, Philippine Studies, and Creative Writing in the Ateneo de Manila University, De La Salle University and his alma mater, the University of Santo Tomas. He also served as Visiting Professor of Philippine Studies at Osaka University from 1985 to 1988. He is also the first Asian Scholar-in-Residence at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa.


He mentored generations of outstanding Filipino writers and scholars, including the highly-acclaimed critic Doreen Gamboa Fernandez, UP Professors Emeriti Teresita Gimenez Maceda, and Nicanor G. Tiongson, Ateneo de Manila University Professor Emerita Soledad S. Reyes, De La Salle University Professor Emeritus Isagani R. Cruz, University of California at Berkeley faculty member Joi Barrios-Le Blanc, University of Hawai’i at Manoa Indo-Pacific Languages and Literatures Department Chair and Center for Philippine Studies Director Pia C. Arboleda and National Artist for Literature and UP Professor Emeritus Virgilio S. Almario. He also taught undergraduate students who became distinguished academics, such as UP Professors Glecy Cruz Atienza, Galileo S. Zafra, and Alwin C Aguirre.


Legacy of a writer, dramatist, and activist


In the end, Lumbera lived true to his belief that writers should immerse with the masses and help to improve society. He remained actively involved in progressive organizations fighting for social justice and true equality, from the Philippine Comparative Literature Association in 1969 to the Pamana ng Panitikan ng Pilipinas in 1970, to the progressive poets’ group Galian sa Arte at Tula (GAT) during Martial Law. Other writers’ organizations he helped lead include the Kalipunan para sa mga Literatura ng Pilipinas, the Philippine Studies Association of the Philippines, and Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino.


Lumbera is also the founding chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the multi-awarded media group Kodao Productions. He was an active member of the Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP) and the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan). He also served as president of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT), a national organization of more than 40,000 teachers and employees in the education sector.


He earned numerous awards and accolades throughout the years, including the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Journalism, Literature, and Creative Communication Arts, the Pambansang Gawad Pambansang Alagad ni Balagtas from Unyon ng mga Manunulat ng Pilipinas (UMPIL), the National Book Awards for Literary History/Literary Criticism from the Manila Critics’ Circle, the Carlos Palanca Memorial Award for Literature, the Philippine Centennial Literary Prize for Drama, and the Cultural Center of the Philippines Centennial Honors for the Arts. He became Professor Emeritus of the University of the Philippines and, in 2006, was named National Artist for Literature.


Dr. Lumbera’s legacy lies not just in his immense body of works and in the generations of writers and artists he taught. Most importantly, he is noted for his abiding commitment to nationalist writing and to his belief that a writer must, above all, write the truth of their experiences.



Source: https://up.edu.ph/a-writers-truth-the-legacy-of-national-artist-bienvenido-lumbera/

Atty. Romeo C. Cruz, 77

Photo from the family of Atty. Romeo C. Cruz


Lawyer and former UP Police commissioner, Romeo C. Cruz, passed away on Sept. 17. He was 77.


Cruz started working in UP in 1968 at the UP Law Center, where he met his wife, Zenaida. He later served as an administrative division head of the said unit.


He served UP in various capacities for 41 years.  He was legal counsel of the UP Hotel and board member of the UP Community Chest. Cruz was also legal counsel and member of the UP Credit Cooperative board of directors.  He retired in 2009 as a law education specialist.


Cruz also served the University in his private practice, as legal counsel and notary public. He was the former president of the Rotary Club of Metro San Francisco Del Monte, Quezon City, and a member of the Parish Pastoral Council of the Jesus Lord of Divine Mercy Parish.


Many will likely remember Cruz as the go-to-guy when documents needed to be notarized.  Some of his constant clients were students processing their scholarship applications, job applicants finalizing their appointment papers, faculty members processing their employment papers, and retirees completing their clearance forms.


His son, Prof. Rainier Arthur P. Cruz of the UP College of Music, described him as “a friend to people from all walks of life; a person who loved to laugh, and tell his stories and jokes; a lawyer and notary public well-loved and respected by the UPD community; a very doting grandfather to his grandchildren; a generous man; and a loving father and provider to his family.”


In 2015, Cruz transferred his private law office from the Fonacier Hall (Alumni Center) on Magsaysay Ave. to its current location in the Kamagong Centennial Dorm on E. Jacinto Street.


“When he had a stroke in 2016, my wife, Atty. Tzeitel Christine DG. Cruz, continued my father’s service to the UPD community,” Rainier said in his email.


He is survived by his children and their families: Rosemarie Anne C. Salamat, her husband Derek, and children Jamie Ann and Jarod; Rio Angelo P. Cruz; and Rainier, his wife Christine, and daughter Raizelle Therese.  Cruz’s wife Zenaida passed away in 2007.


The family expressed their heartfelt gratitude for all the prayers, words of sympathy, and generosity.



Source: https://upd.edu.ph/cruz-77/

Ramon Sy passes away at 91

By Mayvelin U. Caraballo


Ramon Sy, one of the Philippine banking industry’s pillars, passed away on Thursday at the age of 91.


His death was announced by the Asia United Bank (AUB) where he served as director and vice chairman of the board from March 2012 until the time of his death.


No reason was cited for Sy’s demise.


Sy was important and very much involved in the bank’s initial public offering roadshows and public listing in May 2013, according to AUB.


The listed lender said in a disclosure on Friday that as a member of the Credit Committee and Executive Committee, Sy’s expertise and experience in credit left an impression on both new and veteran account officers at AUB.
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Sy’s expertise and insights on corporate governance, risk management, and people and organization also contributed greatly to the bank’s board of directors’ success.


Sy was a paragon of professionalism, commitment and honesty who rose from the level of messenger at the former Bank of America Manila branch to become a legend in Philippine banking, AUB continued.


“More importantly, he was known for his genuine concern and care for people. A true gentleman, indeed,” AUB President Manuel Gomez was quoted as saying. “Mr. Sy, the AUB family is grateful for the years you have dedicated and shared with us. We have nothing but respect and admiration for you, and we will always be grateful for your mentoring and inspiration.”


Sy held executive positions in various companies and received his undergraduate degree from Far Eastern University and an MBA from the University of the Philippines, according to the business website wsj.com.


Source: https://www.manilatimes.net/2021/09/18/business/corporate-news/ramon-sy-passes-away-at-91/1815165

GMA announces passing of corporate secretary Roberto Rafael V. Lucila

By: Miguel R. Camus – Reporter / @miguelrcamusINQ


Atty. Roberto Rafael V. Lucila


MANILA, Philippines — Roberto Rafael V. Lucila, the corporate secretary of GMA Network Inc., law school lecturer and public servant during the presidency of Corazon “Cory” Aquino, has died at the age of 65, the broadcast giant said on Saturday.


“The board of directors, management, and employees of GMA Network Inc. deeply mourn the passing of Atty. Lucila. We pray for the eternal repose of our beloved Kapuso,” the company said in a statement.


Lucila, a senior and managing partner at the law firm Belo Gozon Elma Parel Asuncion & Lucila, was the corporate secretary of GMA Network since March 2017. He was also the company’s compliance officer.


He earned his law degree in the University of the Philippines in 1980 and was admitted to the Philippine Bar in 1981.


Lucila soon made his his mark in public service when he joined the first Aquino administration after the dictator Ferdinand Marcos was ousted from power in 1986.


Lucila served in the Office of the President of the Philippines as assistant executive secretary for legislation from 1990 until 1992.


He took on several more roles during this period, including board member of the Civil Aeronautics Board and the Philippine National Railways. Lucila was also chair of the Presidential Staff, Philippine Retirement Authority, South China Sea Sea Fishery Disputes Committee and board member of the Special Operations Team.


In the academe, he gave lectures on Constitutional Law at the University of the Philippines, College of Law and the University of Asia and the Pacific, Institute of Law.


Lucila was also a Court of Appeals Mediator and served as a Trainor for the Court of Appeals Mediation Training Program.


He contributed legal articles for the Supreme Court Reports Annotated, The Lawyer’s Review, Integrated Bar of the Philippines and various legal publications.


He also authored the Corporate Rehabilitation in the Philippines (2007), The Benefit of the Doubt (2020) and this year, the Fundamental Powers of the State & Civil and Political Rights.


Before his death, he was director of European and American companies in the Philippines, including eMerchant Asia Inc., eMerchant Pay Asia Inc., Evonik (Philippines) Inc., Time-Life International (Phil.) Inc. and MeteoGroup Philippines Inc..


Source: https://business.inquirer.net/330932/gma-announces-passing-of-corporate-secretary-roberto-rafael-v-lucila

Former DSWD secretary Dinky Soliman dies, 68

Soliman


MANILA, Philippines


A longtime social worker and activist, the former social welfare secretary dies early Sunday, September 19


Former social welfare secretary and longtime social worker Corazon “Dinky” Soliman died on Sunday, September 19, her family said. She was 68.


“We pray for the eternal repose of her soul,” said Soliman’s husband, public interest lawyer Hector Soliman. “We will share details of the wake later, and ask that the family be given some time and privacy for grieving.”


Soliman passed away at 7:32 am due to complications from renal and heart failure.


Soliman had contracted COVID-19 in August along with Hector and several other family members, but survived the disease.


In his piece for Rappler, “The day our house stood still: My COVID memoir,” Hector wrote that his wife, who had “many comorbidities,” was already confined in the hospital when she got the infection in mid-August.


Soliman was last seen in public during the wake of former president Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III in June, and was among those who paid tribute to her former boss.


Soliman first headed the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) during the administration of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, but she later resigned, along with other Cabinet officials and heads of agencies collectively known as the “Hyatt 10,” when Arroyo was accused of fraud in the 2004 presidential elections or the “Hello, Garci” scandal, in July 2005. (READ: LOOK BACK: The ‘Hello, Garci’ scandal)


In 2010, Soliman returned as the DSWD secretary of then-president Aquino. She also headed the Human Development and Poverty Reduction Cabinet Cluster.


She steered the poverty alleviation program 4Ps, the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, which was initiated by the Arroyo administration but was boosted and further institutionalized under Aquino. Soliman also helped lead massive rehabilitation efforts in the aftermath of Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) that devastated Eastern Visayas.


On June 29, 2016, a day before the Aquino administration was replaced by the Duterte administration, Soliman said in an interview with Rappler, “If there is one good thing that we can turn over to the new administration, it is evidence-based policy making, planning, and evaluation.” 


At the time, she was referring to a study showing that the 4Ps helped perk up local economies. (WATCH: It’s a wrap: Dinky Soliman’s report card at DSWD)


Soliman, who hailed from Tarlac, obtained her bachelor’s degree in social work from the University of the Philippines Diliman, and her master’s degree in public administration at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.


She spent decades in social work and activism, and worked with various nongovernmental organizations that assisted poor communities.


She is survived by Hector, their children Sandino and Marikit and their spouses, and their three grandchildren: Tala, Gujan, and Gianluca. – Rappler.com


Source: https://www.rappler.com/nation/former-dswd-secretary-dinky-soliman-dies?fbclid=IwAR2I09-HB04zKMRNKyR32DUSgOX9SfQ2KO-AM4YiUNdcrYmPz2xSEHg6eLU