You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Showing posts with label Nick J. Lizaso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick J. Lizaso. Show all posts

Thursday, October 19, 2023

A country that hardly knows its heroes

How much do our young—and even the older generations—know about the great sacrifices many Filipinos have made for love of the Philippines?


AT A GLANCE

  • How much do our young—and even the older generations—know about the great sacrifices many Filipinos have made for love of the Philippines?


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HEROES OF THE NATION From top clockwise: General Gregorio del Pilar , Josefa Escoda, Apolinario Mabini, Leon Kilat, Chief Justice José Abad Santos, Brigadier General Vicente Lim, General Antonio Luna,  and Diego Silang

“Unhappy is the land that needs a hero” is a famous line from the play Galileo written by Bertolt Brecht, a German playwright. This is not the case with us. Our nation has bred many heroes. The problem is we don’t know our heroes fully well. 

Ask any young Filipino student to enumerate names in our pantheon of heroes, he will probably stop after Rizal, Bonifacio, and maybe Tandang Sora. If you’re lucky he will probably remember General Luna and Gregorio del Pilar because he was required to watch their respective biopics as a school assignment. So how can we expect our young generation to feel a sense of reverence for them?

Even if they can name names, do young Filipinos appreciate what makes them heroes? What exceptional deeds did they accomplish? What was so noble about the causes they died for? What is their relevance to us? 

This sad realization came to my mind when recently my good friend and National Artist Fides Cuyugan-Asensio sent me a Viber message relating how she was appalled to discover that the portraits of national martyrs, namely, former Chief Justice José Abad Santos,  Josefa Llanes Escoda, and Vicente Lim, have been replaced by the “face of an eagle with a punk hair-do”(sic) on the new 1,000 peso bills. She was, in her own words “very, very angry!”(sic). To her, this development is an act of “perverted consciousness... to erase the heroic sacrifices of our martyrs” and amounts to “historical bankruptcy” (sic).

 I could see where she was coming from. Reading her message, I nodded in agreement and told her so in response.

Indeed, we lack historical consciousness. We don’t have a deep sense of our past. 

Is it because we are a relatively young nation compared to China, Egypt, Japan, Iraq, or Iran? So young that we never had grand empires in our history to speak of? Is it because we don’t have Great Pyramids, a Great Wall, a Machu Picchu, or even an Angkor Wat or a BorobudurTemple or similar magnificent ancient structures to give us a reason to be proud.  

I remember that in our history subjects in high school and college, we had textbooks that we never bothered to read. Our teachers failed us by not being able to inspire us to be interested in history, much less our own Philippine history. 

My theory is that part of the reason is that our culture is not a reading culture. We are more visual than textual. We prefer pictures. Give the student a booklet in comics form about Diego Silang or Apolinario Mabini and he will most likely read it from cover to cover. 

The problem is compounded by the fact that the Millennials and Gen Z-ers are now immersed in what is called “digital space,” which is a dominantly visual world. The digital screen is where they live, play, and get their information. 

This is where the visual and performing arts must come in. We need artists who can make history come alive through the technique of storytelling in the various digital art forms, such as film, anime, and even video games. Let’s craft plays and musicals that will depict the lives of great Filipinos and significant turning points in our history.

It must be a whole-of-country project, involving all regions. Let’s tell our budget allocators to set aside funds for grants to have special classes in history writing and spur young writers to compose well researched biographies of our heroes or even engrossing historical fiction as long as they are factual. These can be later be adapted into popular TV drama series. Maybe we can hold a college festival of short plays on unknown regional heroes. For crying out loud, why not an exhibition of paintings portraying historical events and historic characters?

If we can persuade the Department of Education, the National Commission on Culture and the Arts, and the National Historical Commission to join hands and contribute to a common fund to be solely used to produce professional digital videos—live action or anime format—of great historical events and persons and then put them on streaming and social media platforms, imagine what this will do to make our history come alive within the hearts and minds of the Filipino youth. 

For heroes, I recommend giving special focus on heroes from the Visayas and Mindanao who have been long overlooked. It’s time we bring them into the light.  Off hand, I can name Leon Kilat, the Visayan hero of the Philippine Revolution, and Apolinar Velez of Maguindanao who led Filipino natives to resist the invading American forces during the Phil-American War. 

There’s nothing like the performing arts and cinema to breathe life into characters and situations. Every time a high school student or an ordinary Filipino watches a digital video about the life of a hero, it inculcates a deep love of country, patriotism, justice, freedom, and all the other values dramatically depicted through the power of sight and sound.

In this way, perhaps, we will build a reservoir of respect and reverence so deep that we will avoid making thoughtless and ill-considered decisions to erase our heroes from our official money bills as well as public buildings or, God forbid, our textbooks. 

We have to preserve whatever little cultural legacy we possess right now. Let’s harness the arts to awaken a new generation of Jose Rizals, Andres Bonifacios, Josefa Escodas, and Sultan Kudarats! 

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Why we need music at hospitals

 ‘Outreach concert hall’ goes to UERMM Medical Center


AT A GLANCE

  • Scientific researchers are providing proof of how music therapy can improve the health condition of various patients, including premature infants and people suffering from depression and Parkinson’s disease.

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MUSIC HEALS String and flute quartet and The Nightingales harnessing the healing power of music

On June 2, soothing musical melodies and angelic voices in perfect harmony filled the corridors and halls of the UERM Memorial Medical Center along Aurora Boulevard in Quezon City.

For an hour or so, doctors, nurses and hospital staff members and even patients happily tapped their feet and swayed their heads to the beat and rhythm of the music. It was a delightful break from their exhausting daily routine as they were treated to a live performance by a string and flute quartet, composed of graduates of UST College of Music. This alternated with a sterling performance by a vocal duet called The Nightingales, who sang a selection of songs ranging from classical to pop to folk in perfectly blended ethereal voices echoing through the halls and corridors of the hospital.

The spirits of the audience appeared to soar with every crescendo. They hummed the more familiar melodic strains. They clapped in unrestrained delight, joy apparently filling their hearts.

During those fleeting moments, the exhaustive routine of attending to the needs of ailing patients was far from everyone’s mind. Music was all that mattered and they discovered that music could truly heal and uplift.

All this happened thanks to the enlightened mind of Wilson Young, vice-chairman of the board of trustees of UERMM Medical Center.  When Young and I broached the idea to the president, Dr. Ester Garcia, and the other members of the board, to their credit, they readily agreed to hold it.

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ART AND THERAPY The author with Wilson Young, vice-chairman of the board of trustees at UERM Memorial Medical Center

What happened at UERMM Medical Center is part of my personal advocacy called Artreach Initiatives, which aims to bring the arts closer to the people and to make art work for the people.

One aspect of this advocacy is to harness the healing power of music.
Years ago, I facilitated a similar concert during Valentine month as a project of Sining Sigla, which I head, in coordination with the Philippine Cancer Society. The young cancer patients, as well as the medical staff, were so moved and so appreciative to be able to listen to the kind of music that was usually heard only at the Cultural Center of the Philippines. The first concert was so successful that the organizers and the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra (PPO) wanted me to organize it for the next two years in a row every Valentine’s month.

Ancients intuitively used music to soothe and heal the soul, from the strumming of ancient harps and flutes to the pure voices that chanted and sang folk songs. Scientific researchers are providing proof of how music therapy can improve the health condition of various patients, including premature infants and people suffering from depression and Parkinson’s disease.

The healing effectiveness of music is now recognized even by the National Institutes of Health, which states that relaxing music has positive effects on patients, doctors, and nursing staff of hospitals. An organization called the Center for Music National Service is expanding the use of music in medical therapy.

With all these new developments, there is no denying the healing power of music, whether we can explain it or not.

Music is just one aspect of our “artreach” mission. We hope to introduce more educational and rejuvenating artistic and creative encounters for patients, their families, and healthcare professionals and workers and transform UERM Memorial Medical Center into an optimum healing environment.

I would like to see the day when every hospital will follow this the lead of UERMMMC and open their doors too to what I call “artreach concert hall” where musical artists will perform live for a gathering of patients and doctors and medical staff.  Imagine the enormous healing and uplifting force of the communal vibrations triggered by such live instrumental and vocal music.