Calling
A Spade
By Solita
Collas-Monsod
I RECEIVED a copy of Juan Ponce Enrile A Memoir last Sunday afternoon, for "early review," whatever that means. And I must say that I got hooked from the very beginning, by Nelson Navarro’s Introduction and Ponce Enrile’s (JPE) Prologue. So much so that for the next two days, the book was with me wherever I went, to be read at every opportunity, particularly while in the car in between appointments (no, I don’t get dizzy reading in a moving vehicle). Which is why I was able to finish the 740-page volume (including appendix, but excluding the intro and the prologue) in two and a half days.
Reading about what JPE had to go through in order to get an elementary and high school education moved me to tears. His family wasn’t just poor, it was dirt poor. His mother went to great lengths to ensure that he would be able to go to school -- and because there was no school in their area, she approached distant relatives, offering JPE’s houseboy services in exchange for board and lodging. JPE’s narration is done without an ounce of self-pity: how he went barefoot to school, how he could sleep only five hours a day in order to be able to do his housework and his school work, how he had no books and had to depend on neighbors who had them, how he picked up movie leaflets in the street to use as scratch paper because he couldn’t afford ruled paper, how he was ganged up on by the "rich" classmates in his second year of high school, and stabbed, how his case against them was dismissed, and how he was then expelled from the school for being a trouble maker, and how all this strengthened his resolve to finish his studies -- he had originally wanted to be an engineer, but the oppression and injustice he experienced made him decide to be a lawyer instead.
When he finally met his father
(who apparently had no inkling that his liaison with the widow Petra
had born fruit), it was after the War (during which he was imprisoned
and tortured), and he was enrolled in a school run by the Maryknoll
sisters, where he earned his High School Diploma at the age of 23. As
a postscript, he finished his pre law (Ateneo, cum laude) and his law
(UP, cum laude), and was offered scholarships in Harvard, Yale, and
Columbia (he chose Harvard).
The account of his struggle to
get an education has to be one of the most inspiring I have
encountered, and should be widely disseminated. At this point, Ponce
Enrile is enjoying tremendous popularity, and his climb out of
grinding poverty through education will surely be an effective tool
in the campaign to reduce the very major problem of school dropouts.
Who knows? Maybe going barefoot to school will become a badge of
honor rather than a cause for shame. But because the book, which is
to be launched this afternoon, is going to be very costly, perhaps
the first 90 pages can be excerpted and distributed with the help of
some obliging philanthropist.
For the historians, and for
those who lived through the martial law years, Enrile’s insider
account of what went on from the time Ferdinand Marcos campaigned for
the presidency (JPE apparently was asked by his partners to leave his
law firm because he supported Marcos over Macapagal), through his
government service as Collector of Customs and Finance undersecretary
and Secretary of Justice and as Secretary and later Minister of
National Defense is fascinating in its delineation of how power
corrupts, and how absolute power corrupts absolutely. Marcos started
out, apparently, with very good intentions -- and Ponce Enrile’s
story outlines how those good intentions paved the road to hell.
And
many gems of information, previously unknown, are there for the
picking, courtesy of the JPE memoir: Some examples:
Very early
on in the martial law years, JPE earned the ire of Imelda Marcos --
and he and his wife Cristina were removed from the social guest
list.
The Tripoli Agreement was negotiated by Imelda and
National Defense Undersecretary Carmelo Barbero without the knowledge
or participation of JPE (does this sound familiar?) -- an agreement
which apparently was constitutionally flawed. Imelda was furious at
JPE for pointing this out, but apparently Estelito Mendoza and Jose
Roño backed him up. The Agreement had to be renegotiated.
Edna
Camcam, the lady love of Fabian Ver, who divulged Ver’s plans about
a government takeover (after allowing Imelda to sit for six months)
in the event of Marcos’ death. Why she did this is not explained,
except that Camcam and Enrile are comprovincianos. Maybe
Nelson Navarro edited it out -- the JPE book draft was 2,000 pages
long, after all. I wish I could read the original.
Danding
Cojuangco "acquired the 20% of the Ayalas in San Miguel, while
the other shares from other stockholders were acquired for the
coconut farmers and placed in the name of newly formed corporations.
The 20% of the Ayalas bought by Danding and the other shares bought
for the coconut farmers were paid out of funds borrowed from the
remaining balance of the Coconut Consumers Stabilization Fund which
by that time was deposited in the United Coconut Planters Bank in
trust for the coconut farmers and renamed as the Coconut Industry
Investment Fund (CIIF).
JPE was not aware of Marcos’s
illness. Marcos kept it from him. It was Paeng Salas who told JPE
that Marcos was undergoing an operation.
JPE tendered his
resignation to Marcos in July 1983 (a month before the Aquino
assassination) because whether he realized it or not, Marcos was no
longer in control -- Ver and his minions were. Marcos did not accept
his resignation.
Joker Arroyo told JPE that Cory asked him
(Joker) to tell JPE that he had nothing to worry about his ill-gotten
wealth. JPE asked Joker to tell Cory that he (JPE) had no ill-gotten
wealth and that if she had any doubts, not to hesitate to subject him
to an investigation. JPE, after the falling out, was indeed subjected
to nine-month investigation by BIR Commissioner Benny Tan. Nothing
was found.
Cardinal Sin, among others, lied. What about? Well,
you’ll have to read the book.
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