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Home arrow Columns arrow Editorial and Opinion Page arrow The Last Battle of Our Fathers
The Last Battle of Our Fathers
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Written by Romeo P. Marquez - Jul 07, 2007 at 08:36 PM   

The News UpFront: (Commentary in lieu of the TOP STORY) Dateline San Diego, CA, Saturday, 7 July 2007, as reissued on Veterans' Day of 2007 

Perhaps, this struggle for equity rights and benefits by our old-and-ailing Filipino veterans of World War II is the longest epic battle being waged in history. It's already sixty-one years this year, and the fight for respect and dignity is far from being won in the halls of the US Congress.

THE FILIPINO-VETERANS ISSUE

           

There is no chance, no destiny, no fate,

            Can circumvent or hinder or control

            The firm resolve of a determined soul.

                                        -- Ella Wheeler Wilcox

By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ

I t's taken two generations and now on the brink of a third before some members of the United States Congress finally gazed at the inevitable sunset of the declining years of our beloved veterans of the Second World War.

The long and interminable fight for skimpy benefits has made mendicants out of these valiant men and women who, without question or foreboding, had answered the call for help to stem the tide of the Japanese invasion in the Pacific.

After everything is said and done, slavery had not been totally stamped out, for no sooner had the war ended than the US government reclaimed in the Rescission Act of 1946 what it had so generously given to others, non-Filipinos, who had bravely fought in the same war.

In the fighting and dying against the Japanese, Filipino soldiers waved Old Glory, not their motherland's tricolor that an earlier generation of proud warriors had proudly unfurled and raised against the mighty imperialist Spaniards.

In the gruesome counting of lives lost in the many battles that Filipinos had joined in as ardent supporters of democratic ideals under the American flag, Filipinos accepted the realities of war, thus freeing themselves from the ghastly task of assigning blame for the grief and misery that thousands of soldiers had left their families with.

Yet the rich and powerful US government was not equal to the task; it counted nickels and dimes as if every Filipino life wasted by war was measurable only by dollars and cents, cheapening the man's worth and reducing him to penury.

The proud Filipinos fought the war head-on without hesitation and with a fearlessness inherently theirs not because the vast opportunities for material gain presented themselves, as some idle talk now goes.

They fortified themselves with raw courage knowing that no amount of gold would afford them the priceless chance to show the world that they too deserved a place in the universe of nations and in their own peculiar way, they could let the sun shine on their land with every hope for peace and a little prosperity.

The bullets of war pierced layers of steel and hordes of men, but not their resolve, not their indomitable spirit. Yet the US government, for what little justice it owes, would try to break that will and put them to a test again and again and again in the last one-and-half decade for what they rightfully deserve in respect and dignity.

The proud Filipinos fought the war head-on without hesitation and with a fearlessness inherently theirs not . . . 

Yes, respect and dignity, the poor man's most valued treasures in a world soaring with false adoration, indecency and apathy. Yet what these Filipino veterans so richly have in their persons are mocked by what they may lack in earthly possessions and creature comforts.

How much have a people accomplished in the march to progress but only decadence? To continue to trample on the rights of our Filipino veterans over another, to let them suffer in ignominy and want while others wallow in opulence, who is the richer and the stronger if not these Filipinos themselves?

From the ruins of war the US emerged victorious, at what cost to Filipinos? The savage destruction of Manila was beyond words. The number of deaths was incomprehensible. And when the peace settled on the islands, the real picture revealed itself.

Manila's sorry situation could only be seen in the worst comparable light -- the devastation of Warsaw. The Polish capital was pulverized by the same wrecking machine of mass slaughter that leveled Manila to the ground.

And now, the US fiddles with nickels and dimes whose totality would not even touch the depths of our veterans' eternal misery.

Sixty-one years of utter helplessness, waiting for the gracious soul to acknowledge a mistake, praying for the last miracle of genuine goodwill, grasping for understanding, relying on humanitarian greatness -- our Filipino veterans have not lost hope in the goodness of America.

They would breathe their last soon. Age and disease have ravaged their bodies and their numbers have gone down to a few hundreds.

If this current battle for respect and dignity could not be won by their indestructible will, let them fade into the sunset knowing that "there is but one pleasure in life greater than winning, that is, in making the hazard."

BREAKING NEWS - Commentary
Issue No. 43 NEWS WITHOUT FEAR OR FAVOR

A community service of San Diego's Philippine Village Voice ( or at 619.265.0611) for the information and better understanding of the public.


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User Comments
Subj: Re: BREAKING NEWS: Veterans Day Feature - The Last Battle of Our Fathers  
Date: 11/12/2007 10:16:59 A.M. Pacific Standard Time  
From:  
To:  
Sent from the Internet (Details)  
 
 
Romy, 
 
Well written. A moving tribute. 
 
Len 
Editor of Asia, the Journal of Culture & Commerce. 

Comment by Len Novarro on 2007-11-13 13:22:59 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Romy, Thanks for the superb "The Last Batle of Our Fathers," May I use it with your permission in my columns "Balitang Beterano" and my cybernet in the Philippines? 
 
Nothing can approximate it in, and wth those words that touches our hearts (veterans and compulsory heirs). 
 
Frank B. Quesada (Col. Ret. US, a World War-II POW 

Comment by Col. Frank Quesada (Ret.) on 2007-11-13 13:24:55 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Romy, 
 
Your commentary is colorful. Am attaching a copy of a 
write-up I did Nov. 10, and then discussed it at the 
meeting yesterday of the American Legion Post 509, a 
Filipino group.  
 
Mabuhay to all veterans. BTW, there is a "Maywood 
Bataan Day Organization," and last September we held 
our (I'm with its Board) 65th annual memorial rites. 
Website is www.mbdo.org or 
www.maywoodbataandayorganization.org. 
 
Regards. 
 
Lourdes Ceballos 
Chicago, Illinois 

Comment by Lourdes Ceballos of Chicago on 2007-11-13 13:26:22 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Romy M: 
 
Let me correct some misconceptions, Romy. I strongly 
feel that a lot of those supposed "brave veterans" of 
World War II in our native islands just "took up arms" 
after the Liberation of the Philippines. 
 
In other words, many are "1945 Guerillas". Even those 
who supposedly are espousing "Equity" here in the USA. 
 
 
I knew of a lot of them when I was a boy of 14 back 
then. They used to come to the USO Shows at the Rizal 
Memorial Stadium in khaki uniforms that were acquired 
from the surplus and blackmarketeers during those 
times. That how it was in Greater Manila.  
 
Back in the provinces, who knows? 
 
The US Armed Forces are not that dumb that they would 
not have gotten the rosters of the real 'Freedom 
Fighters' during 1941 through 1945. So that the real 
ones have been getting what is due them, without 
having to wait for the "Equity Bill", now still in 
limbo, even with Bob Filner, Democrat of San Diego 
supposedly championing it. 
 
Your Buddy, Riz Oades, and Bob Filner were fellow 
Professors of History at San Diego State University. 
 
You can bet that the so called "Equity Bill" will 
remain in limbo. What with trillions spent on Iraq and 
Afghanistan, soon Pakistan and Iran.  
 
Apo Satur Respicio 
Hercules, California 

Comment by Apo Satur Respicio on 2007-11-13 13:28:31 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Romy, this article is worth reading and reading. I like the approach, and the truth of the matter pierced even the metallic armour worn by GIs in the battlefield.  
 
May the members of the American Congress in the silence of their rooms learn to listen to their conscience, if ever they still have amidst their euphoric political false success. 
 
Please continue writing this article of sort. 
 
Ka Larry Pelayo 
former President, Philippine National Press Club-Los Angeles Chapter 
 

Comment by Larry Pelayo on 2007-11-13 23:21:24 Using IP: 76.171.11.152

Here's a comment from Jimmie Sober of San Diego. 
 
Subj: Re: BREAKING NEWS: Veterans Day Feature - The Last Battle of Our Fathers  
Date: 11/12/2007 3:42:32 P.M. Pacific Standard Time  
From: jimmiesober@.com  
To: ,  
CC:  
Sent from the Internet (Details)  
 
Romy, another example of your excellent writing skills. I would like to see this in several local papers, particularly the UT. This is the time to submit it for publication. Can you modify it slightly and then offer it to the UT as a contributing writer?  
 
It pains me to see what America's political element has done and continues to do against those dwindling hero's who receive the talk, but not the walk, from our congress. 
 
"This is my country, right or wrong, but still my country." However, our politicians, and government who purportedly represents all Americans continue to bring America to shame and embarrassment. 
 
In my 72 years, I have never experienced a president and vice president, so morally corrupt, as those two, currently holding those offices. 
 
 

Comment by Jimmie Sober on 2007-11-13 23:30:11 Using IP: 76.171.11.152


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