English 13 Readings
English 13 Readings
English 13 Readings
AIN'T I A WOMAN?
by Sojourner Truth
That man over there says that women need to be helped into
carriages, and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place
everywhere. Nobody ever helps me into carriages, or over
mud-puddles, or gives me any best place! And ain't I a woman?
Look at me! Look at my arm! I have ploughed and planted, and
gathered into barns, and no man could head me! And ain't I a
woman? I could work as much and eat as much as a man -
when I could get it - and bear the lash as well! And ain't I a
woman? I have borne thirteen children, and seen most all sold
off to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother's grief,
none but Jesus heard me! And ain't I a woman?
Then they talk about this thing in the head; what's this they call
it? [member of audience whispers, "intellect"] That's it, honey.
What's that got to do with women's rights or negroes' rights? If
my cup won't hold but a pint, and yours holds a quart, wouldn't
you be mean not to let me have my little half measure full?
Then that little man in black there, he says women can't have
as much rights as men, 'cause Christ wasn't a woman! Where
did your Christ come from? Where did your Christ come from?
From God and a woman! Man had nothing to do with Him.
If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn
the world upside down all alone, these women together ought
to be able to turn it back , and get it right side up again! And
now they is asking to do it, the men better let them.
Obliged to you for hearing me, and now old Sojourner ain't got
nothing more to say.
Rage
They put you in a cage four feet by one foot small, the height of an average
man. There are hollow blocks to the side and iron grills in front. You sit with
three other men, crouched in a line. There is no other way to fit.
Your brother is in the same cell. The door opens, more of them come in. More
of them like you—beaten, bruised, helpless. They are put inside the next cell.
This time there are two men and a married couple. The woman has burns all
over her body. She was raped, they tell you. She was raped and beaten until
she soiled herself. They say she has gone mad. They take her away.
This is where you shit, where you piss, where you wash if you still care. You do
not feel the wind; you do not see the sun. Your food comes rarely, and what
comes is rotten, leftover pig feed. Three men arrive, from Nueva Ecija. They
are tortured. One of them has both arms broken. Bleeding.
Sometimes, when the soldiers are drinking, they take you out of your cage and
play with you. The game varies, but it is usually the same. Two by fours, chains,
an open gardening hose shoved down your nose. You crawl back to your cage,
on your hands and knees. You wake up to screaming, to the sound of grown
men begging, and you wonder which one it is this time. Sometimes, one of
your cellmates will disappear. Sometimes, they don’t come back.
Then they take you away, and there is a doctor, pills, antibiotics, a bed. They
tell you they are taking you home to see your parents. You meet the man they
call The Butcher, and he tells you to tell your parents not to join the rallies, to
stay away from human rights groups, that they would ruin your life and your
brother’s. He tells you, this small man in shorts, that if you can only prove
you’re on his side now, he would let you and your brother live. He gives you a
box of vitamins, and tells you that they are expensive: P35 per pill.
They put a chain around your waist. The military surround your farm. Your
mother opens the front door crying, and hugs you. You tell them what you were
told to say. You hand them the money Palparan told you to give. Then you are
told you must go.
Always, you keep thinking of escape. You make yourself useful, to make them
trust you. You cook. You wash cars. You clean. You shop. No task is too
menial. And one day, while you sweep the floor, you see a young woman,
chained to the foot of a bed. Her name is Sherlyn Cadapan, she tells you,
Sports Science, University of the Philippines Diliman, the same Sherlyn who
disappeared from Hagonoy, Bulacan on June 26, 2006. She says she has
been raped.
Later, you meet Karen Empeño, also from UP, and Manuel Merino, the farmer
who rushed to save the two girls when they were abducted. Karen and Sherlyn
are in charge of washing the soldiers’ clothes, you and Manuel and your
brother Reynaldo wash the car and carry water and cook.
The five of you are taken from camp to camp. You see the soldiers stealing
from villagers. You see them bringing in blindfolded captives. You see them
digging graves. You see them burning bodies, pouring gasoline as the fire rose.
You see them shoot old men sitting on carabaos and see them push bodies
into ravines. And in April 2007, you hear a woman begging, and when you are
ordered to fix dinner, you see Sherlyn, lying naked on a chair that had fallen on
the floor, both wrists and one tied leg propped up.
You see them hit her with wooden planks, see her electrocuted, beaten,
half-drowned. You see them amuse themselves with her body, poke sticks into
her vagina, shove a water hose into her nose and mouth. And you see the
soldiers wives’ watch. You hear the soldiers forcing Sherlyn to admit who it
was with plans to “write a letter.” You hear her admit, after intense torture, that
it was Karen’s idea. And you see Karen, dragged out of her cell, tied at the
wrists and ankles, stripped of her clothing, then beaten, water-tortured, and
burned with cigarettes and raped with pieces of wood. And it is you who are
ordered to wash their clothes the next day, and who finds blood in their
panties.
And you are there, on the night they take away Manuel Merino, when you hear
an old man moaning, a gunshot and the red light of a sudden fire.
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Retribution
By: Conrado de Quiros - @inquirerdotnet Philippine
Daily Inquirer / 12:06 AM August 19, 2014
The Association of General and Flag Officers want fairness. Jovito Palparan,
they say, is being unduly subjected to trial by publicity. “Let him have his day in
court and defend himself against his accusers. Our justice system presumes
that he is innocent until proven otherwise in a court of law.”
Why should calling him berdugo get in the way of justice? He didn’t
particularly mind being called that when he was running Bulacan and environs
like a concentration camp, presuming students and peasants guilty until they
could prove themselves innocent. He reveled in the notoriety, being singled out
by his commander in chief, Gloria Arroyo, for promotion precisely for it.
As to his being a professional soldier, that is an insult to the rank and file of the
Armed Forces. Palparan was not alone to carry out the campaign against the
communists, he was alone to be charged with committing atrocities, or crimes
that cannot and may not be justified by being done in the line of duty. The
charges weren’t just filed by the “communists,” they were filed by government.
Abducting students like Karen Empeño and Sherlyn Cadapan is not doing
things in the line of duty. Making students like Karen Empeño and Sherlyn
Cadapan disappear is not professional.
You want to see professional soldiers who “faced hardships and risks and put
their lives on the line,” cast your gaze on people like Danilo Lim, not on
Palparan. Lim in particular was one soldier who took risks and underwent
sacrifices, not the least of them foregoing becoming chief of staff during
Arroyo’s time (he was the most senior then), not the least of them being
incarcerated. All to do his duty as a Filipino soldier and oppose Arroyo’s
tyranny .
Which brings me to something that seems to have escaped notice here, which
is that it’s not just Palparan who ought to face retribution for his crimes, it’s
Arroyo too. It was Arroyo who unleashed Palparan, it was Arroyo who made
Palparan possible.
From the start I had been saying repeatedly that Arroyo unleashed a cynical
war. That war wasn’t meant to end the communist insurgency—let alone in two
years’ time, which was her vow, another one of those vows she had no
intention of fulfilling—it was meant to give her a new lease on life, preferably
indefinitely. She declared it in 2006 amid mounting protests about her
legitimacy in the wake of the revelation of the “Hello Garci” tapes.
The point of the exercise was patent. It was to give free rein to the military,
particularly those of it loyal, or at least closest, to her. The better to put the fear
of God and/or her not on the communists but on the oppositionists. Especially
with berdugos like Palparan at the helm of it. A cynical war naturally
produces cynical, and vicious, methods. A cynical war naturally produces
cynical, and vicious, butchers. Protest at your own risk: That was the message
the putting of Palparan at the heart of the “counterinsurgency” campaign sent
to the nation.
In the end, Palparan was just a blunt instrument, the one who wielded it was
Arroyo herself.
But of course she never ended the communist movement, least of all in two
years’ time, to no one’s surprise. She only ended the lives of scores, if not
hundreds, of activists, along with dyed-in-the-wool revolutionaries, wide-eyed
idealists along with narrow-eyed ideologists. No, it’s not just Palparan who
ought to pay for his crimes here.
TheQuitangons understood that she was an only child and that her
parents were, therefore, over-zealous inlooking after her. Her father
usually took her to school and fetched her after classes, and had
been known to threaten to arrest young men who stared at heron
the streets or pressed too closeagainst her on jeepneys. This
high-handedness seemed natural enough, for Pablo Cabading,
Lydia's father was a member of theManila Police Depatment.
After Lydiafinished her internship, Leopardo Quitangon became a
regular visitor at the house on Zapote Street: hewas helping her
prepare for the board exams. Her family seemed to like him. The
mother Anunciacion,struck him as a mousy woman unable to speak
save ather husband's bidding. There wasa foster son, a little boy the
Cabadings had adopted. As for Pablo Cabading, he was a fine
strapping man, an Ilocano, whogave the impression of being taller
than he was and looked every inch an agent of the law: full of brawn
andguts and force, and smoldering with vitality. Hewas a natty
dresser, liked youthful colors and styles, decorated his house with
pictures of himself and, at50, looked younger than his inarticulate
wife, who was actually two yearsyounger than he.
Lydia took the board exams and passed them. Thelovers asked her
father'spermission to wed. Cabading laid down two conditions: that
the wedding would ba a lavish one and that was topay a downy of
P5.000.00. The youngdoctor said that he could afford the big
wedding but the big dowry. Cabading shrugged his shoulders; no
dowry, nomarriage.
"I built this house for Lydia," said Cabading,"and I want her to live
here even when she's married. Besides, her mother couldn't bear to
beseparated from Lydia, her only child."
Therewas nothing. Leonardo could do but consent.
Leonardo became anxious to take his wife away from that house.
He talked it over with her, then they went totell her father. Said
Cabading bluntly: "If she goes with you, I'll shoot her head before
your eyes."
Hisbrothers urged him to buy a gun, but Leonardo felt in his pocket
and said, "I've got my rosary." Cried his brother Gene:"You can't
fight a gun with a rosary!".
When Lydia took heroath as a physician, Cabading announced that
only he and his wife would accompany Lydia to theceremony. I
would not be fair, he said, to let Leonardo, who had not borne the
expenses of Lydia'seducation, to share that momentof glory too.
Leonardo said that, if he would like them at least to use his car. The
offer was rejected.Cabading preferred to hire a taxi.
Afterabout two months at the house on Zapote Street, Leonardo
moved out, alone. Her parents would not let Lydia go andshe herself
was too afraid to leave.During the succeeding weeks, efforts to
contact her proved futile. The house on Zapote became even more
closed tothe outside world. If Lydiaemerged from it at all, she was
alwaysaccompanied by her father, mother or foster-brother, or by all
three.
Whenher husband heard that she had started working at a hospital
he went there to see her but instead met herfather coming to fetch
her. The very next day, Lydiawas no longer working at the hospital.
Leonardoknew that she was with child and he was determined to
bear all her prenatal expenses. He went to Zapote oneday when her
father was out and persuaded her to come out to the yard but could
not make her make themoney he offered across the locked gate.
"Justmail it," she cried and fled into the house. He sent her a check
byregistered mail; it was promptly mailed back to him.
The last act of this curious drama began Sunday last week when
Leonardo was astounded to receive anearly-morning phone call
from his wife. She saidshe could no longer bear to be parted from
him and bade him pick her up at a certain church, where she was
with herfoster brother. Leonardo rushed to the church, picked up
two, dropped the boyoff at a street near Zapote, then spedwith Lydia
to Maragondon, Cavite where theQuitangons have a house. He
stopped ata gasoline station to call up his brothers in Sta. Mesa, to
tell them what he had done and to warn them that Cabadingwould
surely show up there. "Get Mother out of the house," he toldhis
brothers.
At about ten in the morning, a taxi stopped before the Quitangon
house in Sta. Mesa and Mrs. Cabading got out andbegan
screaming at the gate: "Where'smy daughter? Where's my
daughter?" Gene and Nonilo Quitangin went out tothe gate and
invited her to come in. "No! No! All I want is mydaughter!"
shescreamed. Cabading, who was inside the waiting taxi, then got
out and demanded that the Quitangons produce Lydia.
Vexed,Nonilo Quitangon cried: "Abah, what have we do with where
your daughteris? Anyway, she's with her husband." Atthat,
Cabading ran to the taxi, snatched a submachinegun from a box,
and trained it on Gene Quitangon. (Nonilohad run into the house to
get a gun.)
"Produce my daughter at once or I'll shoot you all down!"shouted
Cabading.
Gene, thegun's muzzle practically in his face, sought to pacify the
older man: "Why can't we talk this over quietly,like decent people,
inside the house? Look,we're creating a scandal in the
neighborhood.."
Cabading lowered his gun. "I give you till midnight tonight toproduce
my daughter," hegrowled. "If you don't, you better ask the PC to
guard this house!"
Then he and his wife drove off in the taxi, just a moment before the
mobile police patrol the neighbors had calledarrived. The police
advised Gene to file a complaint with the fiscal's office.Instead,
Gene decided to go to the house on Zapote Street,hoping that
"diplomacy" would work.
Tohis surprise, he was admitted at once by a smiling and very genial
Cabading. "You are a brave man," hetold Gene, "and a lucky one",
And he ordered a coke brought for the visitor. Gene said that hewas
going to Cavitebut could not promise to "produce". Lydia bymidnight:
it was up to the couple to decide whether they would come back.
Back in Sta. Mesa, Gene and Nonilo had the painful task of telling
Leonardo, when he phoned, that Lydia was backin the house on
Zapote. "Why did you leave her there?" cried Leonardo. "He'll beat
her up!I'm going to get her."Gene told him not you go alone, to pass
by the Sta. Mesa house first and pick up Nonilo. Gene could not go
along; hehad to catch a bus for Subic, where he works.When
Leonardo arrived, Gene told him: "Don't force Lydia to gowithyou. If
she doesn't want to,leave at once. Do not, for any reason, be
persuaded to stay there too."
When his brother had left for Zapote, Gene realized that he was not
sure he was going to Subic.He left too worried. He knew he couldn't
rest easy until he had seen Lydia and Leonardo settled in theirnew
home. The minutes quickly tickedpast as he debated with himself
whether he should stay or catch that bus. Then, at about a quarter to
seven, the phonerang. It was Nonilo, in anguish.
"Somethingterrible has happened in Lydia'sroom! I heard four
shots," he cried.
"Who are upthere?"
"Lydia andNarding and the Cabadings."
"I'llbe right over.
Theentire room was spattered with blood. On the floor, blocking the
door, lay Mrs. Cabading. She had been shot inthe chest and
stomach but was stillalive. The policeman tried to get a statement
from her but all she could say was: "My hand, my hand- it hurts!"She
was lying across the legs of her daughter, who lay on top of her
husband's body. Lydia was stillclutching an armful of
clothes;Leonardo was holding a clothes hanger. He had been shot
in the breast; she, inthe heart. They had died instantly, together.
Sprawled face up on his daughter's bed, his mouth agape and his
eyes bulging open as though still staring in horrorand the bright
blood splashed on his facelay Pablo Cabading.
"Oh, I cursed him!" cries Eugenio Quitangon with passion."Oh, I
cursed him as he lay there dead, God forgive me! Yes, I cursed
thatdead man there on thatbed, for I had wanted to find him alive!"
Fromthe position of the bodies and from Mrs. Cabading's
statements later at the hospital, it appears thatCabading shot Lydia
whileshe was shielding herhusband, and Mrs. Cabading when she
tried to shield Lydia. Then he turned the gun onhimself, and it's an
indication of the man's uncommon strength and power that, after the
first shot, through theright side of the head, which must have been
mortal enough, he seems to havebeen able, as his hands dropped
to his breast, to fire at himself a second time. The violent spasm of
agonymust have sent the gun - a .45 caliber pistol-flying from his
hand. It was found at the foot of the bed, near Mrs. Cabading'sfeet.
Thedrama of the jealous father had ended at about half-past six in
the evening, Tuesday last week.
The next day, hurrying commuters slowed down and a whispering
crowd gathered before 1074 Zapote Street, to watch the policeand
the reporters going through the pretty little house that Pablo
Cabadingbuilt for his Lydia.
Quintangon and Lydia died in each other’s embrace in a corner of the room.
Their bodies were riddled with bullets. Cabading fell on his back on a bed. Mrs.
Cabading was found writhing in pain on the floor near the feet of Quitangon
and Lydia. Makati policemen rushed her to the PGH. The death gun,
Cabading’s service pistol was found on the floor below the feet of Cabading.
The four were found in the blood-soaked room on the second floor of their
newly-constructed house. Police investigators had to break the lock of the door
to get into the room. They said the room was locked from inside.
Four other persons were in the house during the shooting orgy. They were
Nonilo Quitangon, 27, a lawyer of 3996 Dangal, Sta. Mesa, brother of
Leonardo; Eduardo Cabading, 8, adopted son of the Cabadings; Normalinda
Gapuz, 15, and Corazon Verzosa, 12, housemaids. A Makati policeman was
passing by and the maids sought his aid, Gapuz said. Nonilo said he was in
the house during the rampage but got frightened and rushed out tocall for
policemen. He said he was summoned by Cabading to their house to discuss
“something important.” When he arrived at the house, Cabading engaged him
in a lively conversation, Nonilo said. Minutes later, Cabading told him to wait
downstairs as the family was going to discuss something upstairs. Five
minutes later, Nonilo said, he heard a succession of shots. Nonilo told
policemen Cabading might have been angered by their children’s refusal to
stay with them. He said the Quintangons wanted to live separately.
Quintangon and Lydia were married only last October 1960. Lydia was an only
child of the Cabadings.
Policemen who rushed to the place, surmised that the couple stood pat on thei
plan tp live separately. Police conjectured that when the father sense it the
futility of having them live with them, he got his .45 caliber pistol, locked the
room, and shot them one by one. Initial findings showed that Mrs. Cabading
had prevented her husband from shooting the two or tried to shield the young
couple from Cabading’s gun. Lydia was also covering her husband when they
were hit by the first volley of shots, police surmised.
Mayor Maximo Estrella and several Makati homicide investigators dug deeper
into the case. They wanted to know the real motive behind the killing. They
were trying to find out why the gun was found far from Cabading. (by Roberto
Cuevas)
"Kisapmata" (1981)- Stars Charito Solis, Jay Ilagan, Vic Silayan and Charo
Santos/ with Ruben Rustia, Juan Rodrigo/ Directed by Mike de Leon
This particular news item can also be read in full and in details in the article,
"The House on Zapote Street" by Quijano de Manila (or Nick Joaquin)
originally published in the Philippines Free Press magazine. It was later
compiled with 12 other articles in a book, "Reportage on Crime."
"Reportage On Crime"
by Quijano de Manila
Cover artwork and Design: Danny Dalena