UNHAPPY IS the land without heroes. So, some wag wrote.
Happiest then is the Philippines with its surfeit of heroes.
“Who are the persons whom you consider a
genuine Filipino hero? You can name up to five persons.” So – with neither
prompting nor proffered list – the Social Weather Station asked 1,200
respondents nationwide in early March 2011.
Emerging on top: Jose Rizal. Andres Bonifacio.
Benigno and Corazon Aquino. Rightly so, the national hero is numero uno with 75
percent. Bonifacio had 34 percent. Ninoy had 20 percent and Cory 14 percent.
In a tie with Cory is the “Sublime Paralytic”
Apolinario Mabini, followed by four Presidents – Emilio Aguinaldo (11
percent), Ferdinand Marcos (5.1 percent), Ramon Magsaysay (4.3 percent) and
Manuel Quezon (3.8 percent).
The very first Filipino historical hero
Lapu-Lapu was named by 3.7 percent.
Just out of the Top 10 were Melchora Aquino
(3.2 percent) and Marcelo H. del Pilar (3.0 percent).
President Noynoy Aquino at 2.9 percent edged the
“Brains of the Katipunan” Emilio Jacinto (2.8 percent), who was followed by
pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao at 2.6 percent.
More historical heroes followed: Gabriela
Silang (2.6 percent), Gregorio del Pilar (2.2 percent) and Juan Luna (1.9
percent), capped by President Manuel Roxas (1.8 percent).
Even former President Joseph Estrada figured
with 1.8 percent of the respondents, followed by President Diosdado Macapagal
(1.6 percent) in tie with presidential candidate actor Fernando Poe Jr.
(1.6 percent) whom his daughter Gloria bested in 2004.
Alas, seemingly erased from the collective
memory of the Filipino people are some other national heroes: the martyred
priests Gomez-Burgos-Zamora, the propagandist Graciano Lopez-Jaena, military
genius Gen. Antonio Luna, Diego Silang, Francisco Dagohoy, Macario Sacay, and
Jose Abad Santos.
That the Dictator earned an honoured place in
the Top 10 and the disgraced and convicted plunderer merited a place at all in
the survey manifest some reconsideration in our general understanding of
heroism.
Yeah, how did Marcos and Estrada ever become
heroes?
Some symptoms of a damaged culture patently
manifest there. Unhappy is the land with a surplus of pseudo-heroes.
A DIGRESSION…
So what does it take to be a hero?
A debate had long focused on the question: Are
heroes born or made?
Is heroism inherent in a person or does it
rise out of circumstance? The latter has traditionally been the preferred
position buttressed by historical epochs.
Without the American Revolution would there be
a Washington? Without the Civil War, a Lincoln?
Could Turkey’s Ataturk have arisen without the
Ottoman persecution? Or Lenin sans the Romanov’s enslavement of Russia?
If memory serves right, I think it was Arnold
Toynbee that provided the synthesis to hero-born versus hero-made
contradiction, to quote liberally (from faded memory): “When he has in him to
give, and the situation demands of him to give, he has no other recourse but to
give.”
The essence of heroism inheres in the person
and is drawn out from him by the circumstance. Both born and made is the hero
then.
Even if one possesses all elements of heroism
in him – generally thought of as intelligence, honor and integrity, courage,
selflessness and commitment to a cause, self-sacrifice and love for others, if
there is no situation that will warrant the extraction and expression of these
elements – a triggering mechanism of sort – the hero will not come out of him.
That is the lamentation expressed in Gray’s
Elegy in a church courtyard: “…Full many a gem of purest ray serene, The dark
unfathom’d caves of ocean bear:
Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,
And waste its sweetness on the desert air…”
HEROISM IS the summation of a life. Heroism is a verdict of history.
So what’s Marcos doing in that list of
“genuine heroes”? Estrada too, and for that matter P-noy and Pacquiao?
Ah, yes, I remember reading someone writing
somewhere: “Anyone is a hero who has been widely, persistently over long
periods, and enthusiastically regarded as heroic by a reasonable person, or
even an unreasonable one.”
Yeah, I can only think of the “unreasonable”
ones getting them there.
Shame.
(Reprinted from Zona Libre/Punto!, 11 April 2011, on the
occasion of National Heroes Day, 28 Aug. 2023)