ANGELES CITY, June 15, 1991 – Once waken, Mount Pinatubo gave vent to
centuries of pent-up fury with a series of powerful eruptions, the biggest of
which spewed a deadly cloud of ash and gases 25 kilometers into the sky on June
13.
“That is already the big bang. I can’t see any other eruption that will
exceed this. What we are seeing now are phenomenal eruptions,” Director
Raymundo S. Punongbayan of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and
Seismology reported.
He cautioned though that: “The story of Mount Pinatubo is not quite over
yet.” Mount Pinatubo proved Punongbayan wrong – on the first assertion, and
right – on the caution.
June 14 saw the dark clouds like the wings of a monstrous bird casting
trembling shadows across Angeles City during the day and a strange gloomy spell
that dimmed the lights of the city’s tourist district in Balibago.
Residents, confused as to the real danger became expectant of a distant
calamity. Frightened by the frequency of mild quakes and the smell of sulfur in
the air, they braced themselves for the inevitable.
The people with foresight started to leave; the fearful began long
prayers at home and inside churches; the ignorant, as usual the powerless,
waited in trepidation, ready to accept anything, even danger and destruction in
sordid acceptance.
That was how the Mount Pinatubo eruption of June 15, 1991 came to
Pampanga: with deathly fear, unfathomable anxiety, and widespread confusion
that only plagues, war and the other scourges of the Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse could have wreaked anywhere.
Like an epic, graphic accounts of the Great Eruption varied in their
dramatic and incredible description. Real life narrations and first-hand
experiences of those who remembered the event are reinvented in every
retelling.
Newspapers of the day were unanimous on the congruent conclusion that
the volcano had awakened from a 600-year slumber, with accurate forecast of
vast devastation, widespread socio-economic dislocation, and a heavy toll from
the volcanic fury.
At the Zambales side was a group of media workers who quoted witnesses who
said the skies darkened momentarily after the volcano erupted in the early
morning of 15 June.
Newsmen reporting from Clark said Mount Pinatubo vomited scorching
volcanic material in a violent outburst, then acrid ashes and gases oozed out
of the volcano’s active vents. Like the explosion of the first atom bomb in
Hiroshima which was timed officially by the US military, the Phivolcs placed
the Great Eruption at 8:15 in the morning of 15 June 1991. And thereafter, day
turned into the blackest of night.
A tropical storm spotted a distance away from Central Luzon as early as
10 June moved in for the “kill” after the major explosion and developed into a
full-blown typhoon.
Thus, Typhoon Diding blew volcanic ash around Central Luzon. It spread
and swirled the debris up to Metro Manila, and as far away as several countries
that affected air travel for some time.
The midday darkness, the rumblings of the volcano, frightening quakes
and aftershocks, lightning and thunder, howling winds and a torrential rain of
pumice stones as big as golf balls, mud and ash did indeed presage an
apocalyptic end of days.
Panic
Panic broke out in all the
districts of Angeles City, its 180,000-populace caught in pandemonium.
Thousands of vehicles
scampered out of the city carrying frightened families to San Fernando and
nearby towns. The most opulent residents opted to seek safety in Metro Manila.
The families that stayed
behind had no alternative places to make their sanctuary.
Those who panicked walked
on foot or used every available transport to vacate their abodes in the city. Workers
left their posts from factories, markets, shops, clinics, offices, and private
occupations, to reach home as fast as they could to prepare for an evacuation. Even
policemen on duty rushed home to secure their households.
Crying infants, mothers
shouting instructions to members of the family, neighbors hollering for their
straying children drowned out church bells that rang incessantly in warning and
as notice to leave areas within the 30-kilometer radius from the spewing
monster…
Phivolcs officials had
earlier warned residents living within the danger zone to immediately abandon
their places…
When the 1,500 US Air
Force security unit who earlier declared they would abandon Clark “only when we
see lava at our doorsteps” raced out of the abandoned base, Angeles residents knew
it was time to do likewise.
Exodus
Thus, started the biggest
exodus of evacuees and refugees that only a war could generate. All main
thoroughfares leading out of Angeles, even those of San Fernando, were jammed with
motorists.
Heavy pedestrian traffic
clogged narrow roads with frightful people carrying and bundles of clothing. Infants
nearly choked in the miasma of sulfuric fumes and steady ash. Every frightened
Pampango thought it was the coming of doomsday.
At the North Luzon
Expressway, traffic grounded to a standstill as thousands of men and women
occupied all lanes in their rush to get out of Pinatubo’s way to wherever. “Kung
saan kami maihahatid ng aming mga paa,” the refugees would say.
“We met wave upon wave of
panic-stricken people. Kung saan sila pupunta, hindi nila alam,” said Quezon
City Mayor Brigido Simeon Jr., a Kapampangan native. He brought some buses to
help in the evacuation right at the Angeles City exit ramp of the expressway.
The Amoranto Stadium and public and private school houses in Quezon City were
designated evacuation centers.
Faces
Public places looked like
an open sanitarium with people’s faces covered by surgical masks against ash
inhalation. Acquaintances barely heard each other, their speech muffled by heavy
gauze masks. But what need was there of distinct language when common fear and
the reality of danger made for easy communications among the distraught victims?
In the Metro Clark areas,
pumice stone pelted rooftops. A mud rain, then a mighty shower of ash fall
covered the premier community as it did towns all over the province.
All through the day and
night, sulfuric fumes engulfed Pampanga as pebbles kept falling in malevolent
fury. Leaden ash and sand caused building to collapse, first the rooftops
buckling down, then the whole structure keeling over like a boxer pummeled by
knockout punches.
Two were killed and dozens
of commuters were injured when the roof of the Philippine Rabbit Bus terminal
in Angeles City collapsed due to heavy ashfall…
Mute agony
Thus, the day of terror
began. The nighty ashfall turned day into night while earthquakes shook the
region…Mute agony, unimaginable horror, and certain pain, had been written. And
equally visible on both the faces of the rich and the poor.
As if to add force to
nature’s punitive and merciless wrath, a powerful tropical storm appeared
across Central Luzon. Its winds and rains unleashed millions of tons of
pyroclastic materials from the slopes of the volcano, sending torrents of
smoldering mudflows to Pampanga and Zambales lowlands, burying houses, scouring
riverbanks, collapsing bridges, destroying roads, and causing massive
destruction in infrastructure and private property unmatched even by the
scourge of World War II.
Seven bridges in Pampanga,
including the three main spans in Angeles City – Abacan, Friendship and bridges
– were destroyed by rampaging mudflows. Churches, markets, schools, public
buildings, hospitals including the Ospital ning Angeles collapsed.
The Biggest Bang that was
the June 15 eruption would segue to the succeeding blasts with more devastation
to follow.
(From Chapter 3, The
End of Days, of the book Pinatubo: Triumph of the Kapampangan Spirit edited
by Bong Z. Lacson and published in 2008 by the San Fernando Heritage Foundation.)
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