con't... (message board
14)
Name: Cesar Torres
Email:
Cesar1185@aol.com
Date:
12 June 2005
Kan Intoy Tomo Magdadalos:
Ayaw pag tagui hin diri tama
nga kahulugan an akon guin
surat ha? Adi an akon guin sering: "...bangin ka masugad
hiton aton mga kablas ngan mga inocente nga mga sundalo nga intawon
ignorante ngan inocente hiton ira binubuhat nga nahitatabo ha Pilipinas ngan
kalibutan."
An akon gadla pagsurat hadto,
kay pareho hin guin bibilngan mo kami kon ano an aton nabuhat na, para pag
pakita han aton "Gugma Han
Samar", ini nga kablas nga Isla, pero dako iton paglaum kay tungod
han aton kaisog ngan mga bahandi ha bug-os nga
Samar.
Basaha na la denhi, hini nga
kan Ray Gaspay susgaranan nga website, upod an iya mga peryodista ha
Samar nga diri nahadlok nga guin hahalad nira an ira kinabuhi.
Pero maaram hira nga guinkukulba gad ito hira.
Haros magbakho ngan
magngoy-ngoy iton mga kababayen-an hiton aton cyberspace group kon
nahinunundom nga puede patayan hi Ray Gaspay ngan iton iya mga kaupod ha
media tungod hiton ka waray balaud na ha Samar ngan Pilipinas, ngan tungod
hiton waray na gamit iton pag respeto hiton kinabuhi hit tawo, labi na ha
Samar.
Mayada panahon nga
matatalwas kita ha kalibutan, hini nga aton kinabuhi nga puros na la pa-ngandoy
ngan pag-ungara. Hinaot unta nga matuman ini nga aton pangamuyo hin
kamorayaw. Peace in our lifetime.
In the meantime, pagburublig
kita. Igupod naton han panhuna-huna adton mga sundalo nga diri maaram kon
ano nga kinahanglan nira patayon an igkasi nira mga Samarnon ug kablas nga
mga Pilipino. Diri gad ini hira mapipirit pagsugad hini kon may-ada nira iba
nga pakabuhi.
Ngatanan nga may pag higugma
han Samar ngan Pilipinas, adton nasuka na hini nga mga TRAPO, bisan ha Samar,
bisan diin ha Pilipinas, ngan bug-os nga kalibutan basta may Pilipino nga
minakuri an kinabuhi, pagurosa kita pagtindog hin BAG-O NGA KATIPUNAN, a
"Broad Front" (puede guihapon "United Front"), a "Frente Amplio", sugad han
binuhat didto han mga rebolusyonaryo ha Uruguay.
Pumahuway hira hin
purugsilay. But they organized themselves to form a powerful political
group, the "Frente Amplio". Yana hira na iton nakapot hiton responsibilidad
ngan autoridad ha Uruguay: Presidente, Senado, ngan General Assembly.
Pasagadi ito hira ha Este
kon magu-unay hira para intawon kan Gloria. Pero hulata naton hiton sunod
nga pini-li-ay.
Pag-abot hini nga takna,
pagdara kita hin bulo, binalhag, hin kawil, barang, nga Kalashnikov ngan
Armalite (nga mulayan).
Of course, pag-andam nga an
aton kinabuhi diri igsasak-krifisyo han waray hinungdanan.
(Pssst...ba-a ma-aram ako
guihapon magdalos -- diri la ikaw -- mangawil, bisan pag-bari, pagsaka han
lubi -- maaram ako kon
usa
la nga tuktok, an lubi silot o diri -- panlurop ha kadagatan (labi na kon
mabaysay an guin lulurop wink, wink.)
Padayon Tomo!
Pagdalos kita hadton mga
angay daloson ha Samar ngan Pilipinas!
Name: Tomo Magdadalos
Email:
RickySamar@yahoo.com
Date:
June 10, 2005
Imo Mano Cesar,
Tama ka kablas gadla ako,
ignorate liwat siguro, inocente? Diri ada kay waray nagad ha aton mga idad
an inocente!? lalo na kun tugod han mga paghitabo ha Samar and ha Pilippinas.
I'm sure updated ka ha news
ha Pilipinas nakita ka han Gov and Congman han eastern Samar busying busy ha
mga radio and t.v. program defending GMA. Tikang ako matawo waray pa ada
election nga waray limbongan pero yana la magkakamayda maupay nga evedinsia
nga an presidente mismo nanlimbong tapos an aton mga taga Samar nga mga Gov
official defending her imbis magtrabaho para hit ka upayan hit aton
provincia. Kay ano? kay they are protecting thier protector para diri hira
makasuhan hit ira pangawat dinhi aton provincia. Dako nga intremis it coming
nga independence day June 12, kay mayday kami presidente nga limbogan waray
ligitmate mandate, she came into power thru a coup d'etat and nanlimbong han
last election.
Hala, pag kaurusa kita
mabago ito nga aton sistima han politika ha
Samar para pag balik mo gadi diri kana parapamanti at diri na ako
mag dinalos, Kinahanglan mayda kita mapa preso nga congressman , Governadora
ug hino man hira nga mga KAWATAN (pero "kagalangalang" dont you love that
title? PATHETIC!)
Maaram gad ako maupay it imo
kasingkasing kay miskan maupay na imo kinabuhi dida han America it imo gugma
adi la gihapon ha Samar. I hope that someday magkikita kita and really do
something so that we could all have a better Samar to live in.
"All you need is love" is
simply not true, we also need the truth we are supposed to have compassion,
mercy and forgiveness towards sinners (makakasala liwat ako mano, what I
mean those who kill, steal from the people in our province) but we must not
use "compassion" as an excuse to deny the existance of sin against our
people. JUSTISYA! JUSTISYA! JUSTISYA! an guliat han mga kalag pati han mga
kablas.
Maupay nga adlaw ha imo mano
Cesar.
Name: Ian Baldomaro
Address:
Cajurao St., Calbayog,
Western Samar 6710, Philippines
Email:
ianbaldomaro@gammaepsilon.com
Date:
June 9, 2005
Calling all ALUMNI Brethren of Gamma Epsilon Fraternity and
Gamma Lambda Epsilon Sorority particularly those who came from Samar chapters like
Catbalogan, Gandara, San Jorge, Calbayog, Catarman, Borongan
and other parts of
Samar. There is a move to reorganize the GE & GLE Visayas
Alumni Council and your participation is highly needed for
the success of this activity.
For more details, you may reach us at:
http://www.phikappa.tk or send your email at:
ianbaldomaro@gammaepsilon.com
Thanking you ahead and may the force be with you! SOAR HIGH TWO HEADED EAGLES!
Name: Cesar Torres
Email: Cesar1185@aol.com
Date:
8 June 2005
Kan Tomo Magdadalos aka Ricky:
Hoy, bangin ka masugad hiton
aton mga kablas ngan mga inocente nga mga sundalo nga intawon ignorante ngan
inocente hiton ira binubuhat nga nahitatabo ha Pilipinas ngan kalibutan.
Agui, diri gadman kami sugad
hiton iba nga Samarnon ngan Pilipino nga sigue la iton fiesta, irignom, ngan
hinagpis nga "waray kita mahihimo" kay kanan Diyos, or kan Bush, o kan Osama,
o kan Gloria, or kan Rumsfeld ini pagboot ngatanan.
Panginsayod nala dida ha?
Natahod,
Cesar Paropamangti
Name: Adelbert S. Batica
Address:
207 West 31st St.,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55408, USA
Email: abatica@hotmail.com
Date:
June 6, 2005
Mano Profesór –
Salamat hini nga imo balos
han akon mga surat tikang didto ha Argentina. Kon huhuna-hunaon, di gad unta
makuri ini nga pagbag-o hit Filipinas, kon tutuyo-on gud. Kon hi kita
ngatanan, ang mga Filipino, makakapanhuna-huna hin tuhay, ngan magkakaurusa
ha aton pagtuo nga uusa la it aton Iroy: An Iroy Tuna. Unta, asya na gad ini
an aton unahon, an aton tagan bis namanla guti-ay nga kalipay ngan kalinaw,
nga hingalimtan nala anay an aro-araway. Labaw han ngatanan, makahuna-huna
unta kita ngatanan nga damo it nagkukuri nga aton igkasi-Filipino, ngan hira
intawon di la haromamay it gin-aantos - ma didto hira ha Sapang Palay, ha
Payatas, o kon ha Pingkian ba.
Some I'm led to believe that
in the end, it was nationalism that pushed Uruguayans to shape up and wake
up and make a commitment to change. It was not an easy process for them, but
when they saw an opening - they moved as one body. And for good reason - had
they been overcome by apathy, they would have looked forward only to hard
times. As ex-Tupamaro and current Senate President Jose Mujica would put it,
"If we can't improve the lives of ordinary Uruguayans, then we might as well
walk all the way to Africa." If only our leaders would come to realize that,
with massive corruption, massive poverty, and massive hopelessness on the
part of our citizens - we are only facilitating the "africanization" of our
society, characterized by total chaos and disorder. We can't possibly go the
way of Rwanda. Somewhere, sometime, and somehow - some resolution should be
arrived at.
And to those of us who have
taken an interest in developments in Uruguay, let's not forget that, even if
what we see there is a new face of the Left - let's understand that Frente
Amplio is anchored on the high ideals of: Peace, Democracy, and Human
Rights. They successfully presented themselves as the moral alternative to
an inept and corrupt leadership.
We can only wish them the
best of luck. More than that, we hope to learn from their experience. It's
never too late to learn.
Name:
Elizabeth Rama Carlson
Address:
Lincoln, Nebraska 68521,
USA
Email: chabeth1@yahoo.com
Date: June
6, 2005
Karuyag ko ig pasabot ha iyo
ngatanan nga mga waraynon nga nag bibiling ako hin sangkay. Gin panganak ako
ha Catbalogan, Samar. Bugto ako ni Butch Rama nga aadto na ha
Canada.
Hi ako naman aadi na ha Nebraska. 10 yrs. na ako dide. Duro nagud akon
kamingaw han biko, kurukod, latik og "kinamutay" nga pagkaon han sinugba nga
buraw, litson nga may pades nga kamote, og bilanghoy.
Nag papasalamat ako kan Ray
Gaspay nga nag kamay ada hin sugad hine nga website. Maiha na ako nag
pipinamiling hin mga online nga waraynon labi nagud han mga taga Catbalogan.
Kumusta na batch "86" namimingaw na ako ha iyo ngatanan. Kun may ada man
igkasi batch ko, pag e-mail ha ak.
Name: Cesar Torres
Email:
Cesar1185@aol.com
Date:
5 June 2005
Addi,
Everyday that you share
something on Latin America, especially on the Uruguayan Experiment, I, and I
am pretty sure many others, learn a lot.
In the late 60's and the
70's Che Guevarra was the romantic hero of the oppressed of the world. Of
course, there was MTT and his baggy pants and the patrician Lin Pao, and
Victor Corpuz, and Ericson Baculinao and Nilo Tayag, and of course the
Beloved Warrior.
But what you are sharing
with us on the Uruguayan Experiment, on the "Frente Amplio", "the Broad
Front", a modified strategy and perhaps the most logical one for "national
liberation", of vanguishing hunger and oppression, of doing away with our
garbage subsisting Samarnons in Payatas, of the Filipinos who are living on
their caritons in Metro Manila, of the Samarnons and other Filipinos
residing under the bridges, of the Aetas, our Muslim brothers and sister and
the Badjaos who are begging, in short of regaining our pride and dignity as
a people is mind-boggling.
I just hope that this will
not result again in the killing fields in
Mindanao, in
Leyte, in
Samar, and in the Tagalog regions to determine the "correct
political line", and to kill opponents with daggers, tabak, and other types
of patalim so that the executioners can save on bullets.
At least, what happened
during the "Ahos campaign" and the "Great Kahibangan" nuong mga kawawang
naniwala sa kanilang ginagawa ay hindi katulad ng mga psychopaths sa Samar
na perhaps nagtotorture and pumupugot ng ulo. Bakit hindi na lang binaril sa
dibdib iyong kawawang Samarnon. Marami naman ang bala sa military. Puede
pang magbigay ang Pentagon as "foreign aid".
Cesar Torres
++++++++++
In a message dated
6/4/05 5:56:02 PM,
basaynon49@yahoo.com writes:
Mano Profesór –
Much as I am elated by your
endorsement of Uruguay's
Frente Amplio (they have, by the way, published a report on their first 90
days in office), I just have this funny feeling that we're so, so behind.
You see, the Frente was founded in 1971, and by 1973 - most of the key
player were already behind bars, serving sentences of between 15 years to
life. Most of them were released in 1984, at which point they began
"rebuilding".
I had initially thought that
when BAYAN was formed in 1984, that that was the nucleus of the Philippine
version of Frente Amplio. Then it all fell apart shortly thereafter, because
nobody wanted to give way. The natdems talked about a "national liberation
front" right after EDSA1, and what we saw was a splintering of the Left in
the Philippines. But perhaps, all this splintering are just "growing" pains.
I should hope so. And yet....
What is so strange about the
Frente is that it is a coalition of 8 leftwing parties, and although the
Tupamaros form the largest bloc, they don't seem to have absolute control
over the Frente. The Tupas have reinvented themselves as the "Movimiento
Nacionál de Liberación" or National Liberation Movement. But people still
refer to them as Tupamaros, because some titles stick. Anyway, the
President, who belongs to the smaller Socialist Party - is the big cheese as
head of state and Frente Amplio chairman. Some Tupamaros (at least those who
don't hold elective positions) are in cabinet positions. The communists, who
are also part of the Frente, have been given the rural development and
social services portfolios. The christian and social democrats have finance
and foreign affairs. But it seems to me that all the members of the
coalition are happy with what they have.
Can such harmony take place
in a Filipino version of Frente? I really don't know. As late as 2000, or 4
years before the Frente was catapulted to power, they were actually facing
major problems, there was divisiveness within their ranks. Luckily enough
for them, they were able to regroup and re-strategize. Perhaps there was
something that was working in their favor: in 2003, the incumbent government
(headed by neoliberal and free market advocate Jorge Batlle), sponsored a
referendum involving the privatization of water and petroleum resources. At
that point, the Frente Amplio saw and opening and campaigned hard against
privatization. The proposal was rejected by 72% of the electorate. So, by
2004 - the Frente was already smelling like roses. Lucky guys, they were in
the right place at the right time.
Did you know that the
Philippines copied the Uruguayan "model" for the GATT in 1996 (which our
Senate passed!), you know the legislative proposal whose prime mover was GMA?
Well, some Uruguayans in Batlle's government even visited the Philippines to
"sell" this "brilliant" idea. And did you that because of Batlle's policies,
including a GATT (whose model the Philippines bought - hook, line, and
sinker!) threw Uruguay
into a massive economic crisis, giving Frente Amplio an opening?
So, we do have an Uruguayan
connection, only thing is - it's the GATT connection. If our dream is to
undo the massive poverty that's engulfing the Philippines, perhaps it's time
to try another Uruguayan model – the Frente Amplio. But how? At least in
Uruguayan, the Frente just wouldn't stop ranting and raving about the
neoliberal and free trade policies of the Batlle government. And as they
ranted and raved, they just gained ground. Can a reborn and reinvigorated
Left generate massive support that cuts across all strata of society - as
the Frente Amplio did in Uruguay? And without an armed "component" at that?
Ah, I'm just raising too
many issues here. But you know what - Unity is still something that eludes
us. Asya naman gud ini an aton problema tikang han hadto pa. There were
splits within La Solidaridad, splits within the Katipunan, even splits
within the guerrilla movement against
Japan.
Honestly, I don't have the
answers, as I'm merely a student of history who refuses to give up the
learning process. If things get tough, I'll try retreat to my world of
books. It's obvious to us by now, that we face gargantuan challenges, even
more challenges than the Frente faced in
Uruguay.
Name: Phill
Address:
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Email: koyamaguam@yahoo.com
Date:
June 5, 2005
I will be in Catbalogan and
staying on Daram Island in July.
If you see a tall foreigner on the Seawall in Catbalogan, say hello to me. Can't wait to eat the food
there and drink a few Mucho Beers. I love that place.
Name: Addi Batica
Email: basaynon49@yahoo.com
Date: 4
June 2004
Postcript on
Latin America -
Just so you know, if you go
into "Search" and key in "Uruguay", you'll come across some of our
discussions that were published in Samarnews. People in that part of the
world must be wondering what's going, why this interest in Uruguay.
This shouldn't come as a
surprise, that there's a strong interest in Frente Amplio. When we were in
Buenos Aires, we shared a tour with travelers from
Bolivia,
Ecuador, and Mexico who were attending a conference on Uruguay. A few days
ago, some activists in Buenos Aires were calling for the creation of a
Frente Amplio in Argentina,
as an alternative to the traditional parties. You see, in theory – the
Peronist movement (or Partido Justicialista) is supposed to be a working
class phenomenon. But the truth is, it has a leftwing and a rightwing (neoliberal,
pro-free market). And even the leftwing (represented by the current
President) - does not have the cojones to make bold moves. So, there is a
growing consensus in Argentina to really set up a Frente Amplio, as an
alternative to worn-out trapo ideas.
In Mexico, where
presidential elections are will be held in 2006 (or a year from now, to be
exact), the left is trying to regroup. There is a progressive movement
headed by Cardenas, the son of a former president who was considered
Mexico's most progressive head of state. However, the "young"
Cardenas
is now in his '70s and most of what he has to offer is worn-out leftie
rhetoric. Again, the "new blood" are calling for new directions, new
pathways to change, and...are discussing Frente Amplio.
Honestly, I don't know
whether a Frente Amplio framework would be workable in the Philippines,
given the fossilized positions of many left and progressive groups. Takay,
asay pa it mga NatDems. These left and progressive groups can't possibly be
harping on models and frameworks that are vintage 30's, 40's, 50's, or even
'60s. We are now in the Information Age, and we have to get a handle, and be
catapulted to the 21st Century. Some of the left rhetoric may sound good,
but they'd be better off being confined in a museum.
I'm even part of a
progressive list serve based in Manila, the Phil-Cuba Solidarity Group, but
some in the group have yet to come out of their hardened socialist shells.
No, these aren't nat-dems, but I find it incredible that some of them would
still be thinking as if we were in the 1970's. Maupay gad it rhetoric, pero
kon pirme ka liwat perdi, ano man it gamit hiton. People are already sick
and tired of rhetoric and promises, they want concrete action.
And as hard as it is for us
to translate many of the ideas that we've been floating in cyberspace -we
have no choice but to concretize them. Otherwise, people will think that we
are all puro hangin. So, if we could just get started with some of our small
programs, we can show to the world that we really mean business. Then, as
our programs continued to pick up steam, I can focus on doing more research
on the Uruguayan Experiment and on other developments taking place in other
parts of Latin America.
Name: Niño Ver Donaire Hermosa
Address:
Sydney, Australia
Email: dj.hightek@gmail.com
Date:
31/May/2005
Hello po! Kumusta na po mga
samarnon? Just wanna say hello to all samarnon lalo na ha San Isidro
Zumarraga Samar nga nag celebrate han Fiesta May 19 & 20 and nag enjoy ako
eventhough 10 days lang me sa pinas.
San isidro's
website will be updated pag hindi na ako busy. Regards to all ma relatives
in pinas. God bless.
Name: Tomo Magdadalos
Address:
487 Mindanao Ave., Brgy.
Pasong Tamo, Quezon City 1102, Philippines
Email:
RickySamar@yahoo.com
Date:
May 29, 2005
CONGRATULATION!!! Samar
News! for the courage to report and to make known of the horrible atrocities
being done in our home land of the Eastern Visayas. I heard that everyone is
scared of Mr. Palparan. I was told that we should be kasi this guy is CRAZY.
SAMARNOON! Let us not allow
this dictator to trample our basic human right, we must stand for what is
morally right and just and fight against what is wrong, oppressive and
murders. Damo aton kababayan namatay para mayda kita demokrasia let us not
allow this devil in Maulong to terrorize us again, matagal na kaming takot.
Enough please.
Name: Adelbert S. Batica
Address:
207 West 31st St.,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55408, USA
Email: abatica@hotmail.com
Date:
28 May 2005 10:05:11 -0400
We are still here in Buenos
Aires, we spent a day yesterday in La Colonia, the oldest settlement in
Uruguay. Finally, I made good on a promise I made to Prof. Torres - to set
foot in Uruguay, where many interesting socio-economic-political
developments are taking place. One can't learn a lot of things about
Uruguay
via a brief visit, especially, not from a guided tour. But here are a few
things about this small country that might interest Filipinos: the total
population is 3.5 million, population density is about 9 people per 1 square
kilometer, the literacy rate is 98%. Their foreign debt is about $36 million
(not billion), but the citizens are already and the foreign debt was a major
issue during the presidential campaign that culminated in October, 2005 and
catapulted the Uruguayan Left (including the ex-Tupamaros) to power. Public
buses in this country are 100% "worker managed". Military service is
voluntary, not compulsory, and the focus of military is on peacekeeping
missions around the world (if requested by the UN) and – civic action and
social services. In fact, during our brief visit, we saw many men in army
fatigues who were not carrying firearms, but rather - were busy maintaining
parks and streets. This is the new image of the Uruguayan military, they've
been transformed into some sort of "Serve The People Brigade". Finally, in
this small country - there is strict separation of Church and State, unlike
in many Latin American countries where the Church gets involved in many
things that are the realm of the State.
On a more trivial note: a
more popular item coming from Uruguay which we Filipinos love, is carne
norte. I must admit Uruguayan and Argentinian corned beef is the best in the
world. If only to get a better deal on corned beef, I wouldn't mind making
more friends in this part of the world. But it's interesting to note that
over here, corned beef is not a common sight, as people prefer to eat steak
or "asado". Corned beef is more of an export item, their foreign currency
exchange earner.
Have a good weekend,
friends!
Name:
Adelbert S. Batica
Address: 207 West 31st Street, Minneapolis, Minnesota
55404, USA
Email:
abatica@hotmail.com
Date:
May 26, 2005
Gugmasans –
(Buenos Aires, Argentina) - We are still enjoying our brief
visit to Argentina. Last night (Wednesday) we enjoyed ourselves at a Tango
Show in one of Buenos Aires oldest tango houses...but not before taking free
tango lessons before we escorted to the dinner-show. We were told it was SOP
to give customers tango lessons. Needless to say, the food and the show were
incredible. "Food" in Argentina means beef, which thrives on their
grasslands (but which costs $6 or more per kilo). When it was time for the
real McCoy, our eyes were glued to the stage - the tango moves were out of
this world. There was also a Gaucho (cowboy) dance. Then -Andean pipe music,
including El Condor Pasa (which many mistakenly think was composed by Simon
& Garfunkel. El Condor is an old Andean tune, hundreds of years old.)
As the show went on, some
things began occurring to me: cultural symbols identified with Argentina
such as the Tango (the dance step was born in Argentina's oldest
neighborhood), the Gaucho (cowboy), and yerba mate - the herbal tea that's
intricately prepared and drank through a silver straw – are all working
class symbols. Were it not for the working class, whether urban or rural -
the outside world would not have become familiar with these symbols that are
definitely Argentinian.
Today, we did a working
class tour, visited the barrio of San Telmo where the tango was born. The
ruling elite actually frowned on the dance because of its proletarian
origins. But over the years, the ilustrados were able to ride on this
working class invention (sounds familiar, just like the way the ilustrados
rode on the Phil. revolution). We were told that the dancesteps originated
in an old building, where the men ad-libbed steps, dancing among themselves
-as they waited for a girl to pick up. And in the old days, a pick-up girl
was one who practiced the oldest profession - another reason why the elite
and the Church frowned on this proletarian "artform". But as you and I know,
it was a simple case of the pot calling the kettle black, after all, the
pretend-pure are not spotless, either.
After San Telmo, we visited
the barrio of LaBoca, located at the mouth of the river (hence the name "La
Boca"), where newly-arrived immigrants (mostly Italians) landed. These two
places are still some of Argentina`s poorest neighborhood, however, there
are things they can be proud of - La Boca has produced a world-famous soccer
player in the person of Diego Maradona (in the same league as Brazilian Pele),
has also produced world-class artists and poets. San Telmo, of course,
produced a world-class dance. Since we Pinoys have been used to listening
only to the instrumental tango music, we didn’t have the faintest idea of
what the core of the music was really all about. At the Tango show, they did
have singers plus musicians – so I could follow the songs. Tango music can
be called "Argentinian Blues", it's a harana that can be dance, because of
the faster tempo. Almost all tango songs harken about the three stories that
keep repeating themselves in the human experience (including yours and
mine): Love (that's Gugma, folks), Betrayal, and Redemption. If you want to
be profound tonight, reflect on your own life and ask yourself if these
Three Stories haven't been repeated in your own life. Chances are - you'll
agree with me.
We also went on an "Evita
Tour",to hear Evita's story from a truly Argentinian (and not a Hollywood or
Broadway) - perspective. However, I believe the details will have to come
later, sering pa ni Sangkay Quint.
I'm about to head to bed as
I had only a couple hours sleep last night. Besides, we are crossing the Rio
Plata tomorrow - to get to Uruguay via hydrofoil. Sorry, Mano Profesór - we
don't have time to go to MOntevideo, this will have to come later. Ay la
pagturaw ha akon, kay manininguha gad ako pag-"intern" didto. For now, we
will just have to content ourselves with visiting the oldest Portuguese
settlement in Uruguay
- Colonia del Santissimo Sacramento. Uruguay used to be part of Brazil, then
proclaimed its independence in the 1820's. It serves a good purpose - it is
a "buffer zone" between two of South America's largest countries -Argentina
and Brazil. Uruguayans are very independent-minded, but this small country
does get along well with both Brazil and Argentina. In fact, a traveler can
use Argentinian or Brazilian when visiting. Needless to say, hilapad gihap
it ira kamot pagkarawat hin dolyar. Now, that's "pragmatic nationalism".
We are so excited about the
short visit to Uruguay.
I don't know who I can interview once we get. But trust me, I'll be fishing
for information here and there, even if La Colonia is a favorite tourist
destination. Wish us luck. When we get back, we'll be gallivanting one more
in Buenos Aires' working class neighborhoods, which some locals have told us
are not "safe". Heck, one can get mugged in New York, LA, Chicago, even San
Francisco. Or try Dade County, Florida. But.....it doesn't hurt to be
careful.
As Quint would put it, "More
later".