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Graeco's
justice for Haydee
By Antonio Montalvan II
Inquirer News Service
WHAT can one from Mindanao say about
the late Haydee Yorac? In the Mindanao elimination rounds
of the Ramon Magsaysay Awards Foundation national essay writing
contest, the winning college piece came from 20-year-old Graeco
Paul Antipasado of Malaybalay City, an AB International Studies
major at Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan. Graeco chose
to write about a Filipina whom he described, in his effortless
but flowing prose, as an "extraordinary woman."
Graeco's piece is as much a social commentary of our times
as it is a fitting and timely paean to Haydee Yorac. In "Doing
Justice for Haydee," Graeco writes:
"I have always believed that writing a piece about a
person whom one deeply admires carries with it the risk as
well as the fear that the finished product may not serve the
subject any justice. But looking back at the life and times
of this extraordinary woman, there probably isn't a single
piece of work that would give her any justice. But then again,
to let the story of her career and crusades go untold would
ironically be an unacceptable injustice.
"The many battles of Haydee Yorac have been exactly
just that, an often lonesome war against government inefficiency,
dishonesty and corruption, and she has waged it on many fronts.
Feisty, formidable, uncompromising, tough are only some of
the words attached to her larger than life persona. But if
we use the English dictionary, I could only come up with two
words that would serve Atty. Yorac right: public servant.
"Service has been something I've never come to associate
with government, self-service perhaps. For me, the ultimate
instrument for good had transformed into this monster on the
verge to eat our country whole. Up until I knew she existed,
the fight against the evils of government has always been
for me a battle being waged in vain. But Atty. Yorac, whose
dogged resolve coupled with nerves of steel, has demonstrated
that she's not only fighting in battle, she's actually winning
it. In 2004, the Sandiganbayan gave the PCGG an astounding
victory by awarding to the government billions of pesos worth
of shares in United Coconut Planters Bank and San Miguel Corporation,
bought using the coco levy funds. Previous to that, the PCGG
had recovered some $684 million worth of Marcos' Swiss bank
deposits...
"It's safe to say once more that Filipinos have finally
found a very likely defender in Haydee Yorac. On a more personal
level, I've once again come across someone [with] whom I could
place all my hopes and optimism, the difference this time,
is that I know she won't let me down. I don't even think she
is capable. In all her years, Haydee Yorac has always demanded
honesty from everybody inasmuch as she demanded it on herself.
Whether in public service or in private practice, Atty. Yorac
always brought with her, as her Ramon Magsaysay Award for
Public Service citation reads, an 'exceptional integrity and
rigor and her unwavering pursuit of the rule of law in the
Philippines.'
"Haydee's mother had once said that she 'always taught
her children to do the right thing.' There is elegance in
simplicity, and by those few words, Mrs. Yorac had, wittingly
or unwittingly set the path for Atty. Yorac's implacable crusade
against deceit in any form. Whether training our future lawyers
at the University of the Philippines or reforming our electoral
system as head of the Commission of Elections, or recovering
ill-gotten wealth as chair of the Presidential Commission
on Good Governance, the woman, who once understatedly called
herself 'a good enough lawyer,' has unflinchingly and without
fail, always done 'the right thing.'
"I'd give a million dollars in exchange for a memory
of a time when I was genuinely proud of my leaders. I've come
to a point where the repeated disappointments and disillusionment
have become such a way of life that I am, simply put, jaded
and numb. Yet Haydee Yorac has always sought to remind me
that government is inherently noble and that those who run
it recklessly should not be left alone to wreak their havoc
but fought with unbridled obsession and steadfast commitment.
Even from her sickbed, Atty. Yorac's dedication to the cause
of justice never wavered; on the contrary, cancer has only
doubled her resolve. When this President appointed questionable
individuals to the board of the San Miguel Corporation, the
perilously ailing Atty. Yorac was the first who rushed to
condemn it.
"Her decision to retire from the public sphere has once
again put my confidence in government in serious jeopardy.
In fact, the entire nation felt as if (it has) lost a best
friend in government. And I cannot say with certainty if there
will even be another Haydee Yorac. For now, I can only hold
out hope and optimism, because that is what Atty. Yorac has
reignited in me. I owe it to her and to every single public
servant out there, who in spite of the temptations and lures
of dishonesty and personal gain, continue in the noble and
daunting task of trying to earn the public trust our government
desperately seeks and providing for us Filipinos devoted service
we legitimately deserve.
"It would be presumptuous of me to assume that this
piece has eloquently given Haydee Yorac her due. I am not
even close. But here I am choosing to write this piece anyway.
I never meant nor have I ever thought of this work as a masterpiece
destined and built for longevity. No. Atty. Yorac would not
want me to write about her because of the prize and the promise
of prestige that comes with it but because, like her, I see
that there is something truly monumental and valuable, needlessly
to say an exhilarating sensation in not only expressing my
convictions but more importantly in living them out."
Comments to monta@cu-cdo.edu.ph
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