Wednesday, June 17, 2026

In celebration of Fathers' Day June 21, 2026: The Return of the Prodigal Son in Our Troubled World

 In celebration of Fathers' Day June 21, 2026

The Return of the Prodigal Son
in Our Troubled World

"When the world is being ripped by conflicts or pampered with material progress, when mankind shudders at the splitting of the atom,  the breaking of the code of life, when the future is viewed with high rise edifices, clouded by greenhouse gases... "

I am a postmodern day Prodigal Son. I spent 85 long years searching for a place I may call my own in the whole wide world ... until I found my way back home." - avr

Dr Abe V Rotor

I am a postmodern day Prodigal Son. I spent 85 long years searching and searching for a place I may call my own in the whole wide world. Yes, 85 long years of childhood, youth and old age – more than four times longer than the fiction character Rip van Winkle did sleep – and now I am back to the portals of my hometown, to the waiting arms of my father.

The Return of the Prodigal Son by Rembrandt van Rijk.  Are you the repentant prodigal son, or his proud brother?

The proverbial Lamp I still hold flickers, but it is but embers now, for it had spent its luminance in the darkness of human weakness and failures, it beamed across the ocean of ignorance and lost hope, it trailed the path of many adventures and discoveries, and it kept vigil in the night while I slept.

And what would my father say? He meets me, embraces me, and calls everyone. “Kill the fattest calf! Let us rejoice.”

San Vicente is my home. It is the bastion of my hopes and ideals. At the far end on entering the old church is written on the altar, faded by the elements of time and pleading hands of devotees, Ur-urayenka Anakko – I am waiting for you my child.

When the world is being ripped by conflicts or pampered with material progress, when mankind shudders at the splitting of the atom or the breaking of the code of life, when the future is viewed with high rise edifices or clouded by greenhouse gases – my town becomes more than ever relevant to the cause for which it has stood through the centuries - the sanctuary of idealism in a troubled world, home of hundreds of professionals in many fields of human endeavor.

“Kill the fattest calf,” I hear my father shout with joy. It is celebration. It is a symbol of achievement more than I deserve. But my feelings is that I am standing on behalf of my colleagues for I am but an emissary. Out there in peace and trials, in villages and metropolises, in all endeavors and walks of life, many “Vincentians” made their marks, either recognized on the stage or remembered on stone on which their names are carved. I must say, it is an honor and privilege that I am here in humility to represent them that I may convey their unending faith and trust to our beloved hometown.

The world has changed tremendously, vastly, since I passed under the town arch to meet the world some fifty years ago. I have met wise men who asked the famous question “Quo vadis?” - where are you going? I can only give a glimpse from the eye of a teacher, far for the probing mind of Alvin Toffler in Future Shock, or those of Naisbitt and Aburdane, renowned modern prophets. Teachers as I know, and having been trained as one, see the world as it is lived; they make careful inferences, and take a bird’s eye view cautiously. They are conveyors of knowledge, and even with modern teaching tools and communication technology, cannot even qualify as chroniclers, nay less of forecasters. I have always strived to master the art of foretelling the future, but frankly I can only see it from atop a misty mountain. How I wish too, that I can fully witness the fruits of the seed of knowledge a teacher has sown in the mind of the young.

Limited my experience may be, allow me to speak my mind about progress and developments in the sixty years I was away from home, but on the other side of midnight, so to speak.

1. We faced an invisible enemy, mean and deadly - the Coronavirus Pandemic disease or COVID-19 - respecting no nation, race, belief, ideology, economic status, etc., reminiscent of the Black Plague that plunged the world into the Dark Ages for almost ten decades.

2. The monster that Frankenstein made, lurks in nuclear stockpiles today loosely in the hands of  superpowers following the end of the Cold War.  Lately, newly industrialized nations are building their own nuclear bombs, like Iran and North Korea.

3. Like the breaking of the atom that led to the discovery of nuclear power, and the building of the atomic bomb, biologists have succeeded in breaking the Code of Heredity, and through genetic engineering succeeded in creating new life forms - the GMOs.  There are dozens of Genetically Modified Organisms - plants, animals, drugs - in the market today, and more in the laboratory phase.   It is believed that the corona virus to be a product of genetic engineering, so with its variants.   

4. Our blue planet has an ugly shade of murk and crimson – fire consuming the forests, erosion eating out the land, polar ice shrinking, rising sea flooding the shorelines, and gas emission boring a hole in its jacket.

Dead planet, wooden chandelier by AVRotor 2019

5. One race one nation equals globalization. How we have taken over evolution in our hands. We are playing God, is Paradise Lost Part 2 in the offing?

6. The world is wired, it travels fast on two feet – communication and transportation. The world has shrunk into a village. Homogenization is the death sentence amid a bed of roses for mankind.

7. Man-induced phenomena are too difficult to separate from those of nature. We take the latter as an excuse of our follies, a rationalization that runs counter to be rational. Only the human species has both the capability to build or destroy – and yet we love to destroy what we build.
Our living world gone wild. 
Painting by AV Rotor 2020  

8. The dangerous game of numbers is a favorite game, and our spaceship is getting overloaded. Man’s needs, more so man’s want, become burgeoning load of Mother Earth, now sick and aging. Will Pied Piper ever come back and take our beloved young ones away from us, as it did in Hamlyn many years ago?

9. Conscience, conscience, where is spirituality that nourishes it. Where have all the religious teachings gone? Governance – where is the family, the home? Peace and order – Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan – another Korea, another Vietnam, only in another place, in another time. And now social unrest is sweeping over North Africa and the Middle East.

10. Janus is progress, and progress is Janus. It is Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. It is The Prince and the Pauper. Capitalism has happy and sad faces – the latter painted in pain and sadness on millions all over the world. It is inequity that makes the world poor; we have more than enough food, clothing, shelter, and energy for everybody. What ideology can save the world other than capitalism?

As I grew older I did not only learn to adjust with the realities of life as I encountered it but to grasp its meaning from the points of view of famous philosophers and writers. I studied it with the famous lines from William Blake’s famous poem, Auguries of Innocence. 
  
To wit.

To see the world in a grain of sand;
     And a Heaven a wild flower;
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
     And eternity in an hour.”
          
       - William Blake, Auguries of Innocence

If ever I have ventured into becoming a redeemer of sort, armed with a pen in hand, I too, have learned from Blake’s verse of the way man should view the world in all its magnanimity yet in simplicity. If ever I have set foot to reach the corners of the Earth, and failed, I am consoled by the humble representation of “a grain of sand” that speaks of universal truth and values.

And beauty? If I have not found it in a garden of roses, I dare not step on a flowering weed. And posterity and eternity? They are all ensconced in periodicity, a divine accident of existence – to say that each and every one of us is here in this world by chance – an unimaginable chance – at “a certain time and place” which - and I believe - has a purpose in whatever and however one lives his life. But I would say that a lifetime is all it takes “to see the world” and be part of it. It is a lifetime that we realize the true meaning of beauty, experience “infinity and eternity”. Lifetime is a daily calendar of victories and defeats.

While the world goes around and around . . .

The world like in Aristotle’s time continues to struggle with the preservation of values; the species will continue to evolve as postulated by Darwin; culture will express itself more fully since the first painting of early man dwelling in the caves of Lascaux in France.

Trade and commerce will continue to progress, reaches a plateau and declines - a normal curve that goes with the rise and fall of civilizations. Yet leaders do not see it that way. Not even the Utopia of conquerors like Alexander the Great whose global economic vision two thousand five hundred years ago is basically the same in concept as that of the great powers of today - United States, European Union, ASEAN.

The Four Horsemen of Apocalypse. The Book of Revelations in the New Testament lists the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse as conquest, war, famine and death, while in the Old Testament's Book of Ezekiel they are sword, famine, wild beasts and pestilence or plague.

The great religions will continue to bring man to his knees and look into heavens amidst knowledge revolution and growing complexity of living, Man’s infinitesimal mind continues to probe the universe. Never has man been so busy, so bothered, so confused, yet so determined than ever before, trying to fill up God’s Seventh Day.

As I go on reflecting I came across the book of Pope John Paul II, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, 1994. He warns us succinctly.

“This world, which appears to be a great workshop in which knowledge is developed by man – which appears as progress and civilization, as a modern system of communication, as a structure of democratic freedom without any limitations – this world is not capable of making man happy."
                 - Pope John Paul II, On the Threshold of Hope

Now I am home, my father, in my hometown. I do only wish for comfort. I just want to thank you for you have taught me and instilled in me the spirit of virtue and fortitude. Thank you for making me a Vincentian.

Let me rest now in your arms. ~

Fathers' Day June 21, 2026: A Tribute and Reminder of Fathers' Role in these Critical Times

 A Tribute and Reminder of Fathers' Role in these Critical Times

Father's Day is a celebration honoring fathers and celebrating fatherhood, paternal bonds, and the influence of fathers in society. Father's Day 2026 in the Philippines falls on Sunday, June 21, celebrated on the third Sunday of June each year.

Excerpt of TV interview of Dr Abercio V Rotor Ph.D.
In celebration of International Fathers Day
June 16, 2019 , Manila Hotel

Ulirang Ama Awardees: PM GENERAL GUILLERMO ELEAZAR 

and DR ABERCIO V ROTOR 


Hi! This was taken during the Ulirang Ama Awarding last June 16 2019 held at The Manila Hotel. My grandpa, Dr. Abercio Rotor, was one of the awardees together with another ulirang ama. I always pretend to play as a super-agent, that is why, when I met NCRPO PM General Guillermo Eleazar, i was so happy! Someday, I want to be like him! And I was also happy because I got to play and spend some time with my grandpa, grandma (photo), tita ann  and tito mac, tito carlo, and my cousins; mackie (photo) and markus. It was a very happy Father’s Day. HAVE A GREAT DAY! Mateo Laurencio Vicente M Rotor, 8

 
                                 AVR - Ulirang Ama Awardee for Education 2019

 
29 Ulirang Ama awardees 2019 in 11 sectoral categories pose with Ulirang Ama/Ina Foundation officers after the awarding ceremonies at the Manila Hotel.  (Dr Rotor is shown standing, extreme right)

I am honored to receive this prestigious award Ulirang Ama for Education 2019.
While I am an individual named by your Foundation, I must insist of sharing this award with all fathers.

Father's Day brings back sweet memories of the man in particular who was father to me. The inspiration he provided and the moral values he instilled are very much alive in me - in my children and hopefully with their children, ad infinitum. To my late father, “To the world you are a dad; to our family you are the world."

Father's Day bespeaks the unity and continuity of the Filipino in particular that the Family is the central element in our national life. The role of the father carries responsibilities as well as the joys and rewards of fatherhood. 

“If the father's responsibility and authority break down, the family is in trouble. If the family is in trouble, the Nation is in trouble.” Said United States VP Gerald Ford 1974 Father of the Year Awardee)

I congratulate the organizers of this yearly event in keeping this beautiful bond of love blooming with kindness and love. This is one of the most important bonds a person can share. It affirms the greatest gift of the Omnipotent Being the sacredness of man-woman union in matrimony and procreation and in establishing the nucleus of society. 

Robert Browning has very rightly stated that “Take away love and our earth is a tomb”. God had sent to us love in various forms and one of them is your Father. He is a person who stands by our side no matter what. He loves his children unconditionally and the beauty of the relationship is that he does it all without demanding anything in return.

Before I get carried away with my role of the father and recipient of this award, let me point out that my wife Cecille deserves the same if not, greater recognition, because  a father cannot be a father without a mother for their children.

The concept of Father's Day is one that celebrates human relationships built on love and family unity while inspired by the love of country and humanity with the moral values instilled by the Supreme Creator.

Again, I thank you for selecting me for this cherished award. I wish all the fathers Happy Fathers' Day. But let us not forget the mothers, the uncles, the aunts, the grandparents, and the children themselves who make it all possible.  
---------------------
"We never know the love of a parent till we become parents ourselves."
—Henry Ward Beecher 


Dr Abercio V Rotor Family
Front, seated: Dr Abe V Rotor, Sister Venie Valdez Rotor (religious), spouse Cecilia Rojas Rotor.  Standing L-R, Daughter Anna Christina Rotor-Sta Maria (with grandson Markus Andrei), neice Jules Rojas; son Leo Carlo Rotor (with granddaughter Michaela Adrianna);  Dr Charisse Mendoza Rotor (MD); Matthew Marlo R Rotor. (Not in the picture is son-in-law Mac Sta Maria who took this photo)

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Apo Baket' - Keeper of Time-Honored Tradition and Values

Apo Baket'
Keeper of Time-Honored Tradition and Values

“Apo Baket, keeper of tradition in the garden,
Reminds us the values of old, now and then.”

Life size concrete icon of an old woman, keeper of time-honored traditional values, 
enshrined at the Living with Nature Center,  San Vicente Ilocos Sur.  In memory 
of the late local sculptors Francisco Boy Peralta and Bhoy Adora, the latter 
completing the unfinished artwork some time in 2022.

She is mother, grandmother, guardian, of countless children through generations throughout the world, teaching them the true values of growing up, to adapt to the ever changing environment, save those values that must NOT change.

She leads the community, church, school, in fact all facets of life, side by side with men, and behind their struggle, in the likes of Tandang Sora, Fe del Mundo, Gabriella Silang, Leona Florentino, along with Florence Nightingale, Saint Mother Teresa.

She is the ever-loving mother in the Pieta, symbol of universal love and compassion, dedication, and asceticism on the highest level; the ever-loving partner in marital life vowed "till death do us part," core of the family as the primordial social institution.

She is the widow of honored men in the battlefield, or by circumstances beyond her control, accepting such fate and bravely taking over the responsibility not only for her own sake, but for those under her care, and society itself.

She keeps the kitchen of old alive and invitingly delectable as ever - pinakbet, kare-kare, ginatan, sinigang, bulalo, la-ing, papaitan, kilawin, surpassing fast foods, extravagantly labelled foods, culinary preparations lavishly advertised.

She is the storyteller Lola Basyang, pen name of Severino Reyes, around her, children gather to listen to folktales and make-believe stories, including versions of stories from the Grimm Brothers, Hans Christian Anderson, and Scheherazade in One Thousand and One Arabian Nights.

She is the mother or grandmother of overseas workers who leave behind their families to secure a better socio-economic status of their families; and under her care their children grow up properly in spite of the absence of father and mother.

She is the yaya, the traditional nanny, who other than taking care of the nursery and growing children, does varied household chores - cooking, cleaning, laundry, errand, marketing, making housekeeping light on the part of parents and children as well.

She is the weaver of abel' (Ilocano blanket), and many household items made of pandan, buri, and tikiw; maker of the finest dress and formal wears made of pina; maker of fine pottery and china wares; and keeper of the old aparador of antiques and memoirs.

She is the grandmother in Johanna Spyri's novel Heidi; Madame Curie, greatest woman scientist; Mary Shelly, author of Frankenstein, world's scariest bedtime story; Florence Nightingale, the Lady with a Lamp who kept vigil on the sick in the wee hours.

She is Basang, my auntie-yaya from the time my mother died when I was only two until I went to Manila for college; Lola Usta who painstakingly applied all local remedies to revive me born a blue baby amidst extreme danger of WW II breaking out.

She is the First Lady of a president of state; queen beside a king, or head of state; saint of the church; on the other hand, victim at the gallows; maligned old woman, the butt of jokes and unkind stories, yet she stands her ground brave and perseverant as the world goes round. ~

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Armageddon in the Making in Our Postmodern Time

Armageddon* in the Making 
in Our Postmodern Time
Dr Abe V Rotor

* The Book of Revelation is often interpreted as a symbolic and apocalyptic work, with Armageddon representing the final cosmic battle between the forces of good and evil.

1. Fiery Serpent at Sunrise 

A streak of fiery cloud hangs on the Eastern horizon as seen
from the author's residence at Lagro, QC. 

It hangs menacing over the empty horizon
     this streak of fire in the sky;
where it came from it's hard to deny,
     but from the dreaded land of Armageddon.

It came from the home, car and furnace;
     factories and burning forests;
little volcanoes thought harmless
     scorching our Mother Earth's face.

I stood there to say my morning grace,
     Hello sun! Hello New Day!
Now, now, what have I to pray?
     Would my Creator accept my praise? 

2. A Piece of Armageddon

 Overcrowded Earth, Manila.  Photo by the author c. 1990
                                                                 
Armageddon in human hands released,
     piece by piece ticking with the clock;
innocence denied, sanity defied
     to the final shock.

Time capsules all into infinity:
     pleasure and pain, evil and goodness -
all that is on planet earth,
     into emptiness.

It's Sodom revived, so with the Flood
     and Vesuvius a thousand times;
and in war none but the innocent
     is the price.

And the god in man and man in God
     in futile struggle comes to end
the earth shall be no longer,
      so with a heaven.

Fabled paradise shall be no more,
     lost and regained, and finally gone;
Then a new world shall rise - perhaps
     without man. ~ 

3.Armageddon Shroud
   (Dirge over a Burning Sky)

A sugar mill furnace at night in Batangas.  
Photo by the author c. 1989

The night has a thousand eyes,
     bright and twinkling in song;
but one dreary night one cries
     out, the cry of Armageddon.

No song can bring back the moon
     and the stars - they've died out
under a blanket of doom
     where spirits roam about.

No other but his own death,
     and the earth's, man is doomed;
masked by power and wealth, 
     softly he digs his own tomb. ~

4. Armageddon in Art
Colors of Armageddon
Two Faces of Armageddon in acrylic by the author

When red is fire, black is death,
     romance no longer in the air
and black a tragic beauty
     of ultimate warfare.

Suffer the artists to capture
     in vivid imagination, 
scenarios ahead of time,
     ahead of others' vision.

They are at the frontline  
     before the Armageddon.
with colors, brush and pen 
     into the night 'til dawn.~

 5. Dirge of a Dying Creek

The afternoon sun casts an aura of the creek's once beautiful state with trees and shrubs lining its banks. Now the creek is virtually dead - biologically. Note highly polluted water and dumped quarry materials blocking the natural waterway. (Parallel Aurora Blvd, QC)

Once upon a time, so the story goes, clouds gather
     from the sea and land, cumulus to nimbus,
falling as rain, drenching the trees and grass and all,
     and down the lake and river and field it goes.

I was born this way, like my kin, many miles away,
     children of Pasig River, seat of a civilization,
the artery of vast Laguna Lake and historic Manila Bay,
     and I, a tributary of this magnificent creation.

I lived in the stories of Balagtas the poet laureate,
     in Rizal's novels, Abelardo's Kundiman song,
I throbbed with the happy heart of a living system,
     like the Rhine, Danube, Nile and Mekong.

I am part of history, obedient to man and nature's will,
     I gave him clean water and fish, I sang lullaby;
laughed with the children at play under my care,
     through generations and time sweetly went by.

Seasons come and go, the story goes on - ad infinitum -
     but where are the birds that herald habagat?
where have all the children gone after class, in summer?
     reflection on my water, green carpet on my rock?

I am dying, dear mother, I long for you and my kin,
     I choke with debris, laden with waste matter,
my banks are no more, concrete walls have taken over,
     I am dying mother - but my mother doesn't answer;
my mother doesn't answer. ~

Balete or Strangler's Fig clings on an adobe rock cliff.
Views of middle stream, and upper stream to the east. 
The creek is now an open sewer, ugly, obnoxious
Outgrowth extends over the creek as if to hide its pathetic 
condition and man's indifference from public view.
Just across the creek to the north lies a man-made pond of 
the Oasis - serene and aesthetic, except the foul air of 
Carbon Dioxide, Hydrogen Sulfide, methane, ammonia 
and other gases,  being emitted by the nearby creek. ~

Past lessons on Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air)
with Ms Melly C Tenorio 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]

Thursday, June 11, 2026

In Celebration of the 128th Anniversary of Philippine Independence (June 12, 2026): "Kalayaan, Kinabukasan, Kasaysayan"

Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid 
738KHZ Radyo Pilipinas
Theme - KKK
 "Kalayaan, Kinabukasan, Kasaysayan"

Originally, Inseparable Duo: Patriotism and Cultural Values 

 In celebration of the 128th Anniversary of Philippine Independence (June 12, 2026), and National Heritage Month (May 2026)

Patriotism is the feeling of love, devotion, and sense of attachment to one's country. This attachment can be a combination of many different feelings, language relating to one's own homeland, including ethnic, cultural, political or historical aspects.

Dr Abe V Rotor

Image result for Philippine independence 119 anniversary photos

Patriotism is a sacred temple founded on four pillars:

· love and compassion,
· support and defense of ones country
· national loyalty
· universal principle for peace.

Patriotism has undergone a long historical evolution. 


To children patriotism and heroism are tied up, say in Superman comics and in the classics. Here the protagonist prevails over the villain and circumstances while building the moral of the story. Heroism is a result of strife, sacrifice, guts and Providence. In tragic stories, death is justified by a cause, such as freedom. At the end it is always the human spirit that triumphs.

Our children therefore must be guided to inculcate in their mind and heart the sense of patriotism and
heroism and as they grow up will understand their common grounds and differences, whether fiction or true story.

To scholars, patriotism has many faces. In the age of colonization the master was the patriot, the self-proclaimed civilizer as he “brought the subjects – the natives into the folds of civilization and converted them into a new faith.”


First Philippine Republic: Asia's First 

Going back to June 12,1898, proudly the Philippines proclaimed independence from Spain, the first to break away from colonial rule in Asia. Though short-lived, the First Philippine republic, nonetheless catapulted the Filipino nation onto the world’s consciousness carving not only a place among the family of nations but also a distinct niche as the first republic in Asia. 

The birth of new nations in post-colonial era spawned a new breed of heroes and patriots, hardline nationalists building a glamorized image as benevolent dictators. while they were trapped to allegiance to either democracy and socialism polarized during the Cold War which lasted for 45years until 1989.

Racism, apartheid, anti-Semiticism, extreme fundamentalism, and the like, have faded from the limelight of enlightened societies. Walls dividing ideologies were knocked down. Divided countries like Germany and Vietnam were reunited. USSR was dissolved back to Russia we know today, liberating its union members into independent states.  


Today the concept of patriotism is again at the crossroad. For one, the indigenous peoples have found a place among former colonial masters in government and in various fields, and even excel in many of them. Indigenous leaders considered before as enemies are now recognized as heroes like Lapu-lapu in the Philippines, and   Montezuma of the Aztecs (early Mexicans). Many aboriginal leaders in Australia, Africa, the US and other parts of the world have been brought to fame and bestowed honor. Patriotism brings back the pride and dignity of ancestors, aborigines and indigenous people: Mac-liing of Upper Chico River in Kalinga Apayao, Wangari native of Kenya led the planting of millions of tree, Barack Obama and Luther King led the once maligned Negro to international respect, redeeming him from freedom to equality. 

Patriotism in Postmodern Era

Patriotism grows with the times. But it must stand firm, it should not be engulfed by the current of change. On the contrary, patriotism must serve as anchor against rapid and chartless change, especially in our new era we call postmodernism, which means “living tomorrow today.”

The electronic age has “wired” the globe. Today we are just a dial away from each other. Communication satellites loom in the sky.  We are now subjects of the cyberspace empire. Today we ask what is patriotism in social media, in the Internet? To Google, Facebook, Twitter et al

No one should live in the future. It is too dangerous, lonely and uncertain. Out there is a battlefield where the enemy is no other than us – ourselves, having drifted away from

· time-tested tradition,
· valuable lessons of history,
· the primordial institutions of family and community,
· honored values and tradition, and
· man’s harmonious relationship with nature.

Where does patriotism come in - in this scenario? In this battlefield that covers practically all human societies linked by a network of communication and transportation, commerce and industry, the so-called progress has been found to have miserably failed to bring true prosperity, peace and happiness. It has undermined the true meaning of The Good Life. It is taking man away from the realities of life, much less its challenges and conditions that make life exciting, fulfilled, and worth living, that ensures the sustainability of these attributes in future generations.

One unique characteristic of Patriotism is its humbling effect, contrary to popular notion. It brings man to his knees to reflect and meditate. And to gather courage and strength for change. But it is a change against, and away, from futurism. Away from the brink of Armageddon, from a cataclysmic consequence of a global conflict that is not remote from happening.


Let us seriously consider these disturbing global events that threaten world peace and security:

· US-Iran conflict in the Middle East
. Israel-Lebanon conflic
. genocide in Gaza by Israel
. Russian war in Ukraine
. rise of organized terrorism,
· continuing Syrian conflict 
· the sudden diplomatic row between and among countries in the Middle East.
· breakup of the European Union,
· nuclear threat by North Korea and Iran
  (and the unaccountable nuclear stockpile during the Cold War.)
· unabated pileup and emission of wastes on land, sea and in the air
· global warming, climate change, induced force majeure and other consequences
· runaway increase in population (8 billion today)
· eroding values and tradition 
· greedy capitalism and consumerism,
· maverick science and technology (Frankenstein syndrome)
· extremism and fundamentalism leading to separatism and alienation.
· Mindanao conflict, renewed New People's Army threat to peace and security
. crisis in leadership at the Philippine Senate 

 We must be soldiers to defend none other but ourselves, the human race. No species on earth is as self-destructive as Homo sapiens, ironically the “thinking man,” the only rational organism on earth. 

"We are soldiers ourselves to protect ourselves."

If we are soldiers ourselves for our own sake what then are we fighting for or against? Remembering the great Mahatma Gandhi, we must renounce the seven Deadly Sins defined by this great leader, acclaimed Man of the Millennium (the greatest man who ever lived in the last one thousand years) by starting with and in ourselves. 

Gandhi said, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” Aristotle who lived 2500 years before, qualified such change, said, “It is not always the same thing to be a good man and a good citizen.”

These sages meant that a good man has higher attributes than just being a good follower, law-abiding, and conscious of his rights and privileges. Patriotism surpasses tenets and doctrines; it sets inviolable principles. It prods us to renounce

· Wealth without work
· Pleasure without conscience
· Science without humanity
· Knowledge without character
· Politics without principle
· Commerce without morality
· Worship without sacrifice.”
― Mahatma Gandhi, Seven Deadly Sins

Patriotism is committed to preserve tradition. 

Declaration of Philippine Independence June 12 1898, Kawit Cavite

It is a conservatory of values that have guided our ancestors for eons. In fact one writer said, “Primitive people were more patriotic than we are today.” The liberty of the individual is no gift of civilization. It was at its greatest before there was any civilization. On the road of change let’s look back and see the beacon that has guided man's aspiration and goal.

“A love for tradition has never weakened a nation, indeed it has strengthened nations  in their hour of peril” said the great British hero, Winston
Churchill. 

"We have reasons to cherish life which nature provided us free and plentiful. Theodore Roosevelt said, “Cherish these natural wonders, cherish the natural resources, cherish the history and romance as a sacred heritage, for your children and your children's children.

Tradition is the saving grace of a dangerous postmodern world. We are living in a bubble that can burst anytime. As a consequence economics over the world is likely to collapse. We are sitting on a social volcano which may erupt in Gaza, Ukraine, Pakistan, Syria, Middle East, Mindanao, Europe, North Korea and elsewhere. We don't have to go far - own country is in crisis today.

Among us are heroes and patriots in their own way: senior citizens still active, still contributing to the welfare of our society;
teachers dutifully attending to their duties as vocation; media men and women truthful to the code of journalism even as they face the risk of the profession; "doctors in the barrio" as how the late Dr Juan Flavier described them; widows, orphans in great resolve to go on in life - these and 1001 others are the unknown heroes in our midst. They are like the Unknown Soldier, who only God is witness to his deed. And that there is no deed, however small, is insignificant.

Yes, patriotism is a way of life. So with loyalty. Both must live in and with us always. ~

Originally published with revision and update  on the 120th Philippine Independence June 12, 2018,  
Guest Editorial (Greater Lagro Gazette
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* By virtue of Presidential Proclamation No. 439, s. 2003, the month of May has been annually celebrated as the National Heritage Month. This observance aims to create among the Filipino people a consciousness, respect, and love for the legacies of the nation’s cultural history.

This 2022, the National Heritage Month banners with the theme: “PAMANANG LOKAL: Binhi ng Kulturang Pilipino” which highlights the importance of preserving and promoting local heritage within a community and its impact in shaping the Philippine cultural identity. It calls on each and every Filipino to return to our cultural roots and appreciate the rich legacies passed on from different generations.