This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 50, January 29-February 4, 2006
CULTURE
Youth Activism Extolled in
FQS Mural
January 26, 1970. A throng of protesters consisting mainly of youth and students
gathered around the Old Congress building as President Ferdinand E. Marcos
delivered his State-of-the-Nation Address. When Marcos emerged from the
building, a makeshift coffin symbolizing the death of democracy was shoved
towards him. It was this protest that triggered the series of mass actions now
known as the First Quarter Storm of 1970. A mural depicting the FQS was
recently launched in memory of this historic period. BY
VANESSA CORSIGA Thirty-six years after the
First Quarter Storm (FQS) of 1970, former and present activists launched a mural
to commemorate the historic period characterized by intellectual ferment and
patriotic fervor. Bonifacio Ilagan,
chairperson of the First Quarter Storm Movement (FQSM), said the mural speaks
for itself. Ilagan said everything that can be seen in the mural were the exact
slogans and activities they did, that “every element in the mural had been a
reality”. The mural, said Ilagan,
captures the high points or the important elements of FQS. The project was
conceptualized long ago but materialized only recently. FQSM members wanted to
launch the mural at the exact spot where the FQS started. The project was
carried out in partnership with the city government of Manila. Ilagan said the
significance of the mural lives through and for the youth, otherwise, it would
just be a walk down memory lane. It shows among others a
group of youth protesters carrying a black coffin on which the word “Democracy”
is painted. It was the cardboard coffin thrown at Marcos as he stepped out of
the Old Congress building, now the National Museum, after delivering his State
of the Nation Address (SONA). There are also images of
youths in teach-ins, of student activists preparing placards for a rally, and of
a protester wielding a copy of Amado Guerrero’s Philippine Society and
Revolution. Using acrylic on canvass,
the artists who made the mural were a mixture of young and FQS veterans and are
members of Nagkakaisang Progresibong Artista at Arkitekto (NPAA or united
progressive artists and architects), Alay Sining-Karatula, Tambisan sa Sining
and Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP). They are Boy Dominguez, Art
Castillo, Orly Castillo, Babes Alejo, Erwin Pascual, Pedro Alejo, Flon Faurillo
and Betsy Alejo. The mural took five days to
finish. Ramon Magsaysay awardee and
University of the Philippines’ professor Bienvenido Lumbera shared his
experiences during the tumultuous years of martial law, after he and Manila Vice
Mayor Don Bagatsing unveiled the enormous and colorful painting. Bagatsing on his part said
that even though he is a politician and not an activist, he believes the youth
should not be indifferent to the call of the times. “In any healthy democracy,
there should always be student activism,” Bagatsing said. He further enjoined the
youth not to be afraid to speak out when they see that there is something wrong
with what the elders are doing or with the whole system. The youth, he said,
have to get their hands dirty to promote their rights and to fight for what is
just. If they turn a blind eye to what is happening to the nation, said
Bagatsing, the country will remain poor and stagnant. The FQSM hopes that the
mural will serve as an inspiration for the youth to get involved in issues the
country faces. It is optimistic that the youth will learn from the lessons of
the past and will keep the fire of the First Quarter Storm burning. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
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