This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VI, No. 35,
Oct.
8 - 14, 2006
DEMOCRATIC SPACE
Statement on the Killing of Bp. Alberto Ramento
BY
THE IGLESIA FILIPINA INDEPENDIENTE
Posted by Bulatlat
“I
KNOW THEY ARE GOING TO KILL ME NEXT BUT NEVER WILL I ABANDON MY DUTY TO GOD AND
MY MINISTRY TO THE PEOPLE”
--- A statement of Bp. Alberto B. Ramento to his family
The Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI)
has once again made a precious offering in the continuing task of proclaiming
the Gospel of Jesus Christ with the brutal killing of the Most Reverend Alberto
B. Ramento, the 9th Obispo Maximo of the church.
The good bishop was slain by faceless assassins who broke through the rectory
where he was staying at around four o’clock in the morning of October 03, 2006
in the Parish of San Sebastian, Tarlac City. He was awakened in his sleep when
the assassins had entered his room and stabbed him seven times to death. We
denounce in the strongest possible terms this barbaric and dastardly act against
a man of the cloth within the premises of his own church.
Initial police investigation reports point to the incident as a mere case of
robbery with homicide. However, the Ramento family, the clergy and the faithful
of the Diocese of Tarlac believe that the motive is much deeper than what has
come out from the spot investigation. There are glaring indications that Bishop
Ramento’s murder was thoroughly planned and politically motivated. We believe
that the brutal killing was the inevitable consequence of his principled
engagement with the people and their struggle for the fullness of life.
Bishop Ramento, aside from being a well-loved pastor by his clergy and faithful,
has earned the reputation as a social prophet, and an icon in the nationalist
struggle of the Filipino masses with his uncompromising stand for national
sovereignty and patrimony. He was a true advocate of just peace. As a matter of
fact, Bishop Ramento is part of the monitoring group in the peace talks between
the Government of the Republic of the Philippines (GRP) and the National
Democratic Front Philippines (NDFP).
He was a known figure in the ecumenical movement in and outside the country.
Bishop Ramento has served as the chairperson of the National Council of Churches
in the Philippines (NCCP). He was also a co-chairperson of the Ecumenical
Bishops Forum (EBF) which is composed of bishops from the various churches in
the Philippines.
Bishop Ramento, as the Chairman of the IFI Supreme Council of Bishops (SCB), has
strongly condemned the state of political repression and grave situation of
human rights violation in the country. He has particularly denounced the
unabated extra-judicial killings of militant leaders, social activists, lawyers,
journalists, church people and innocent civilians under the watch of the current
administration. As an outspoken critic of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, he
has consistently questioned the legitimacy of her presidency, and urged her to
step down from office. In the last pastoral letter he signed as Supreme Council
of Bishops chairman, Bishop Ramento had urged the faithful “to find courage and
confront the darkness that is engulfing the very soul of the nation and continue
to thread the path towards the establishment of a just society under a
government that genuinely serves the interest and welfare of the Filipinos.”
Honored as the “Bishop of the Poor Peasants and Workers,” Bishop Ramento has
earned the love and respect of the farm workers at Hacienda Luisita, a vast
sugar plantation in Tarlac, as he rallied support to their cause and advocated
for their struggle.
The people behind his death might think that they have silenced him and maimed
the prophetic voice of the church. They are mistaken. His death has become like
a candle in a burning incense, sparking more fire, enflaming the hearts of the
clergy and faithful of the IFI to remain faithful to her pro-people and
pro-labor heritage. Indeed, we grieved over his death, yet we celebrate his
life.
They may have taken his life by opening his body with wounds – but these wounds
have become the doorway from which Bishop Ramento’s valiant spirit has been
poured out and shared to many.
Truly, the death of Bp. Alberto B. Ramento is a great loss not only for the IFI
but also for the ecumenical movement and peoples’ organizations. The IFI
strongly urges the authorities to immediately conduct a thorough and impartial
investigation on the murder of Bishop Ramento and bring the perpetrators of this
heinous crime to justice.
We ask the prayers of the faithful for Bp. Alberto B. Ramento, a fatherly
pastor, a social prophet, an uncompromising nationalist, a peacemaker, and a
champion of the people's cause, who now joins his Creator. As we mourn the death
of a beloved member of the IFI family, may we find inspiration from his life and
death even as we commit to stand firmly for what he believed in and fought for.
Let his death find meaning in our continuing resolve to live-out the message of
the Gospel of Jesus Christ upon which Bishop Ramento dedicated his life.
Pro Deo et Patria,
† THE MOST REVEREND GODOFREDO J. DAVID
11th Obispo Maximo
04th October 2006
Obispado Maximo
City of Manila
Posted by Bulatlat
© 2006 Bulatlat ■ Alipato Publications
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