BY CALAMITY defined.
No, not for having caused the
calamity but for facing it, taking its full brunt, and rising above it.
Thus, Mayor Roy David found
his defining moment in the Mount Pinatubo devastations.
Buried in the volcano’s vomit,
besieged by the onslaught of lahar rampages, Porac turned into a ghost town,
ready to be consigned by the national government as catch basin for all pyroclastic
flows from Pinatubo. A sacrifice worthy of a holocaust to appease nature’s
deity, in this case the Aetas’ Apo
Namalyari, for the salvation of the rest of Pampanga.
But no, Mayor David would have
none of all the talks to “let nature take its course,” and with it, abandon all
hopes for Porac.
“To dike is to die.” Came the cry that
reverberated across the province, reaching Imperial Manila, in spirited
opposition of the townsfolk against the enclosure of Porac within a diking
system that would have buried the whole town. (In the struggle for the construction
of the colossal FVR megadike, that cry morphed to “To dike or to die” impacting that dike’s imperative to the province’s
survival).
Cut off from its then-principal
economic lifeline that was Angeles City by the chasm that the Pasig-Potrero River
had become, Mayor David made the impossible passable in a variety of ingenuous
means as the truck-mounted metal contraption
euphemized as the “London Bridge” (as in the song, “falling down, falling
down”); the lined-up, sandbag-filled container vans serving as bridges; the
sugarcane trucks providing piggy-back rides to smaller vehicles; as well as the
immediate scraping and dredging of the riverbed after each lahar passing.
Earning for the mayor the moniker “Lahar Fighter” he so proudly carried until
his untimely death in 2002, when Porac has not only risen from the volcanic
debris but prospered from it.
It was but over a week ago
that Porac was ground zero anew in a natural disaster, a 6.1 magnitude temblor far
less in expanse than Pinatubo’s fury but as terrifying in impact – as much with
the mortal toll in the collapsed Chuzon Supermarket, as with the religious
sense in the destruction of the belfry of the church of Apung Tali.
No happenstance but Fate
perhaps, that a David again occupies a seat in the local government of Porac. Two
Davids there in fact – Vice Mayor Dexter Albert, and councilor Olga Frances,
better known as Fritzie, who also sits in the provincial board. Right there in
the thick of the action.
Even as Dexter treads the trail
blazed by his father onward to the Porac mayorship and greater service to his
people, in times of calamity and in times of plenty, Fritzie has long hewed closely
to that taken by their mother Edna, a sterling legislative record at the
provincial board, and a stint as acting governor at the time of the Ombudsman’s
suspension of Gov. Lito Lapid for graft and corruption arising from the now storied
quarry scam that deprived the provincial government of hundreds of millions in revenues
– finding indubitable proof in the daily P1 million collection at the time of
Gov. Ed Panlilio, even raised to over P1.2 million a day in the era of Gov.
Lilia G. Pineda.
In the crucible of natural
disasters. The father in the son, the mother in the daughter. The David family
heirloom of public service bequeathed.
We are seeing destiny…fulfilled,
hopefully. For Porac’s sake.
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