This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 5, March 4-10, 2007
Roman Polintan: A
Farmer at Heart
After
earning the ire of the country's most dreaded army general, Roman Politan may
soon be a party list representative in Congress. But if he had his way, this
militant leader in Central Luzon who has been marked by the military, would
rather go back to what he loves most - farming.
BY ABNER
BOLOS
Gitnang
Luzon News Service
Posted
by Bulatlat
After earning the ire of the country's most
dreaded army general, Roman Politan may soon be a party list representative in
Congress. But if he had his way, the chair of Bagong Alyansang Makabayan-Central
Luzon (Bayan, New Patriotic Alliance) would rather go back to what he loved
most—farming.
In August last year, after more than 100
left-wing militants in Central Luzon had either been killed or abducted, the
52-year old farmer-leader from Barangay (village) Tangos, Baliuag, Bulacan was
leading protests and was often quoted in media blaming the military and then
Maj. Gen. Jovito Palparan for the killings.
At that time, media reports told about Palparan,
speaking in anti-communist rallies in Pampanga often singling-out Polintan and
Anak Pawis party regional coordinator Joseph Canlas as "communists and
non-persons."
"Mas mabuti kung mawala na ang dalawang iyan
(It's better that these two are gone)," Polintan, in an interview with GLNS last
week, recounted Palparan as saying.
Survivor
But the two leaders survived the veiled threats
and Polintan saw himself recently named the 7th of 12 nominees of the
Bayan Muna (people first) party in this year's run up to the May 14
congressional elections.
In May 2006, after Manuel Nardo, a Bayan Muna
leader and a close friend of Polintan was murdered by motorcycle-riding masked
men, all the regional and provincial offices of organizations affiliated with
Bayan-CL were closed and abandoned to evade further attacks.
"We had to adapt to the tight security
situation," Politan said. "Our leaders were being killed almost everyday. We
would not wait for the killers to come to our offices." By this time, aside from
the killings and abductions, Bayan offices in Angeles City and Tarlac City and a
people's center in Aurora province had either been set on fire or robbed by
armed men suspected to be military agents.
While Polintan took precautions for his safety
before the decision to close Bayan offices in the region took effect, he
believes that the move, aside from ensuring the safety of leaders, prevented
further farm to the organization branded by the military as a "front" of the
Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and the New People's Army (NPA).
When Palparan retired in September last year as
commanding officer of the 7th Infantry Division that covers the seven
provinces of the region, some 120 civilians had died in extrajudicial executions
and at least 50 were abducted and remain missing. The killings and abductions in
the region did not stop after Palparan's retirement but tapered off
considerably.
Peasant roots
As a boy, Polintan recalls, he started to work
in his grandparents' farm when he was just 13 years old up to when he finished
high school in 1976. At a young age, he said, he had been imbued with a strong
sense of love of country and for his peasant roots.
His grandfather Nicasio Labao, owner of a
two-hectare rice farm in Tangos village was known in the community as "Hapon"
for his exploits in engaging the Japanese occupation forces in Baliuag town and
elsewhere in Bulacan. In high school at the St. Augustine' College, Polintan
supported himself by working in his grandfather's farm.
After his grandfather died in 1976, he went to
Manila to enroll at the Far Eastern University as a working student; he took a
job in a brokerage firm. After earning a degree in Political Science, his
relatives goaded him to be employed even as a teacher but he chose to go back
and tend the farm left by his grandfather.
"Wala ka nang hahanapin pa sa bukid. Andito
ang lahat ng kailangan upang mabuhay ng matiwasay " (In the farm, you have
everything you need to live peacefully), Polintan said.
But his love for the soil will also bring him
into political activism. During the martial law years in the late 1970s to early
1980s, students from Manila universities went to their village and held meetings
with the farmers. He joined the activities as a matter of course, he said, since
their community is a known bailiwick of the Hukbong Mapagpalaya ng Bayan
(People's Liberation Army), the forerunner of the NPA.
Reluctant
Polintan was with the Bulacan farmers'
delegation in Mendiola, Manila when the
massacre occurred on January 22, 1987. Since then, from being a spokesperson of
the village chapter of the Alyansa ng Magbubukid sa Bulacan (AMB or Bulacan
Peasant Alliance) he rose to become chairperson of the district chapter and in
1989 was secretary general of the provincial chapter and a member of the
regional council of the Alyansa ng Magbubukid sa Gitnang Luzon (Central Luzon
Peasant Alliance).
In September 1997, he was appointed spokesperson
and deputy secretary general of Bayan-CL, assuming a role he was at first
reluctant to accept.
"It's an entirely different thing being a leader
of Bayan which is a multi-sectoral alliance from being a peasant leader that I
originally was. I was not used to talking with politicians and personalities. I
am a farmer at heart," Polintan said.
In 1999 he was elected chairperson of Bayan-CL,
a position he still holds today. "I have to take up the challenge because this
is not for myself but for the people," he said.
He expressed the same reluctance when he was
named a nominee of the Bayan Muna party, but with the same selfless confidence.
Threats
He recalls the past two years with undisguised
horror. "So many of my friends and comrades were killed. At some point I shed
tears even in public because of the inhumanity occurring all around," he said.
The last time he visited his home and his family
was in January 2006. He was forced not to go back to his village because of
numerous threats to his life. He was told by his family that armed men
frequently cased their home looking for him. His family also witnessed intense
surveillance in their neighborhood all meant to locate and possibly attack him.
Today, he stays with friends and relatives when
busy with desk work and comes out in public only in specific occasions that
demand his presence as the region's Bayan leader.
Asked on the military's perception that Bayan
and its affiliates are communist fronts Polintan said: "That is an old story
used to discredit legitimate people's organizations. They should charge us in
court if we are doing anything illegal. If ever (the charges) were true, then
people will understand and maybe even be proud if that is what it takes to serve
the people completely and wholeheartedly."
Target
Polintan explains that the region's proximity to
the national capital region is one of the reasons why Central Luzon bore the
brunt of human rights violations in the past two years.
"The Arroyo government wants to silence the mass
movement against her rule. Since a bulk of the mobilizations comes from the
region during mass actions, it will be for the interest of authorities to
paralyze the source of protests, even to the extent of killing civilians," he
said.
Another reason, according to Polintan, is the
growing number of supporters Bayan and Bayan Muna enjoys. In the 2001 and 2004
elections, Bayan Muna emerged No. 1 in Central Luzon.
"If ever I will have the chance to serve in
Congress, I will serve willingly and remain faithful to the people. My dream of
becoming a farmer again can wait," he said. GLNS/Posted by Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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