MERELY PAYING tribute to Rizal and Bonifacio, Mabini and Jacinto, Jaena, the Lunas and the del Pilars, Sakay, onto Abad Santos and Aquino, and all those who consecrated their lives to this nation hardly draws out the meaning of the National Heroes Day celebrations.
To take the full measure of the day, it is not enough that we commemorate what
our heroes did. It is a requisite that we imbibe their spirit. It is a must
that we match their deeds with our own.
No, I do not mean we should all die like them. As a smart-aleck once said:
“There is one thing about heroes and saints that I don’t aspire to be – that is
their being dead.”
Aye, heroism has since become the subject of humor, even the object of
derision, in these unheroic times. As that common caution to the heroic
goes: “Huwag ka nang magpakabayani. Binabaril yan sa Luneta.”
We don’t have to die, if only to emulate our heroes. They have done the
fighting and the dying for our country. Our task is to live for our country.
The song of our heroes for the Motherland is “ang mamatay nang dahil sa
iyo.” Our song for her is “ang mabuhay para sa iyo.”
Dying for the country is the stuff of heroism. Living for the country is the
essence of civic responsibility. Living for the country is our sacred call to
duty.
Yes, Ninoy Aquino was right: “The Filipino is worth dying for.”
So are we equally correct: “The Filipino is worth living for.”
So how well have we responded to that call? How well have we served, and still
serve our people?
For those in government, that call to duty assumes an even greater magnitude.
It is not uncommon to find in government people who value themselves as
privileged by virtue of a padrino’s influence imposed on their behalf.
Consequently, they feel no obligation to serve the public, or if they do so,
they seek additional consideration as an entitlement.
It is not uncommon among government people to see a government post as a
sinecure, an office that requires no work but pays off most handsomely.
It is not uncommon for government leaders to value themselves as
Providentially-appointed and thus bequeathed with divine rights to wrong their
constituencies.
With such misgiven commonalities in government, what service can still be
rendered to the public?
For the public at large, the so-called civil society most specially,
living-for-the-country goes beyond the perfunctory relief-giving in times of
calamities, way beyond the routinary round-table discussions of issues
besetting the people, way beyond the television soundbytes of commitment to the
poor and the marginalized. Living-for-the-people is pure will found manifest in
the act of tangibilities: of real service.
No, we are not called upon to render the supreme act of heroism. We are called
to be true and faithful to our civic responsibility.
Good citizenship is the
essence of heroism.
A DIGRESSION…
So what does it take to be a hero?
A foremost exercise in dialectics of my makibaka-‘wag-matakot youth was
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? Or Napoleon absent the excesses of the French Revolution? Could
Turkey’s Ataturk have arisen without the Ottoman persecution? Or Lenin sans the
Romanov’s enslavement of Russia?
At times, the heroic
situation even reduced to the clash of human representations: Mao to Chiang,
Farouk to Nasser, Batista to Castro, and yes, Marcos Sr. to Aquino Jr.
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…”
Or Whittier’s grief: “For
all the sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, ‘It might have been.’”
(Extracts from past Zona columns on heroism)
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