Sunday, June 2, 2013

Flores de Mayo and other Popular Marian Devotions


     May is usually the month dedicated to Mother Mary. I learned this early in my childhood because of the Flores de Mayo organized in our parish, in the province. Together with my young relatives and friends in our neighborhood, I remember preparing for its daily activity early afternoon. We would scour the gardens within our street looking for flowers to offer Mama Mary to culminate each day’s Flores activity. We usually get red & white kalachuchi from lola Ester Palec’s place. Tiyay Nena Yoro’s garden has roses and orchids and Manang Amy Sereno has santan. They have other nice looking flowers, their names I couldn’t identify now. On some days, we can also gather cadena de amor by the road side. Often, we take pains of stringing these flowers into garlands or arranging those flowers using walis tingting on a cutting of young banana tree trunk. Then, off we go to the church where we are taught catechism, prayers and songs. The afternoon’s highlight is the offering of flowers to Mama Mary. The best garlands are placed on the outstretched hands of Our Lady while the beautiful arrangements are placed at her foot. Afterwards, snacks are served. Every day a sponsor feeds us – freshly baked bread, ice candy, etc. We also look forward to this treat as well as the games outside the church and the “attendance stubs”. We collect these stubs and make sure we try our best to have complete attendance because at the end of the month, after the town-wide procession, we get to claim our reward – a rosary, a stampita or some other religious object.
            
       

      A few decades have passed since my childhood and I have learned other ways of honoring Our Lady during the month of May. Those daily offerings of flowers are transformed into the recitation of the rosary and pilgrimages to churches and shrines in her honor. This year, I was able to visit three of her shrines – Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Baclaran, Our Lady of Candles in Jaro, Iloilo and Our Lady of Good Voyage in Antipolo. In each place, I am impressed by the piety and devotion of the people I see. For example, a pregnant woman with her husband paused to pray in front of her image in Baclaran. I and my friend are sure that they were asking Our Lady’s help for the baby who will be added to their family. I can’t help but be amused by a couple, who after saying their prayers silently, kissed in front of Our Lady and us who were also praying there. I can almost hear their prayer – please ask your Son to bless our relationship. There are also students praying for their exams and maybe people who are looking for work. I have observed several persons, that before praying, were knocking at the image of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and wiping it with their towels or handkerchief.  The first gesture is like calling her attention: “Dear Mama Mary, hear me”. The second one, I’m sure, is a gesture of love. Even if it’s just an image, wiping it is like touching her. I understand how they feel and I don’t think it’s superstition. I remember clinging on to a shirt given to me by a loved one. For some days, I wouldn’t want to wash it because that shirt was held on by my beloved. The Jaro pilgrimage was quite nostalgic. I said yes to my vocation on the feast of Our Lady of Candles and I remember going to her there, whenever I could not understand the matters of my heart. This time, I brought a friend who because of love, is incorporating Iloilo into her life. When I and another friend reached Antipolo, there were already several people queuing to kiss Our Lady's veil. We joined the line and had our chance to kiss her veil and recite a rosary in front of her image. That pilgrimage was filled with prayers of petition. So much to pray for, with so little time. But I’m sure Our Lady hears.


            “Remember of most gracious Virgin Mary that never was it known, that anyone who fled to your protection, implored your help or sought your intercession, was left unaided...”

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Flying Voter


        
image from thebloggingjuan.blogspot.com

              It has been two weeks since I flew to Iloilo so that I can exercise my right of suffrage. I was too busy during the registration period last year that I was not able to transfer to a voting precinct nearby. Besides, I have four relatives and a friend running for local government positions and I would like to add one vote -- my vote -- to each of them. I also wanted to support my partylist and senatorial candidates. These points and my desire to visit my aging parents who have been living on their own, without any house help, I thought were good excuses to be a flying voter.
         Taking the bus to Passi is always relaxing. In this trip, I was on the lookout for the sunset. It didn’t show itself that long because of the clouds but I was still able to feast on its beautiful colors.  Since the province has vast farm lands, I also liked the smell of farm soil from rice paddies and the sweet scent of the sugarcane plantations. It indeed brought in clean air from my usually pollution-irritated lungs. It is dark as we near Passi and it also began to drizzle. Closing my eyes, I enjoyed the feeling of cool air and bits of rain shower touching my face. It is good to be home! Except for a brief moment, I didn’t pay much attention that the trip home took much longer than usual.
            Monday, May 13, I cast my vote for my favored candidates. Fifty percent of those I voted made it to both the local and national positions. As I listened to and read people’s reaction to the proclaimed winners, I made my own considerations:
  • Personal dealings is still more effective than virtual. Many people still vote because a candidate did a specific personal act to them – a smile, a wave, a handshake, a hug, a photo op can win you votes sometimes more than your qualifications
  • Utang na loob has more influence than the integrity and honesty of the politico. 
  • There is still a lot of work to be done in educating the voters so they choose candidates according to principles and their conscience and not just because of popularity or worse, because of their notoriety, or because their amo told them so.
  • In politics, it is not enough to have the best qualifications, intention and spirit of service. One needs to have enough machinery and the cunning to fight for a post.
  • Money still talks. It is disheartening to note that corruption continues.
            At the end of the day (senator elect Nancy Binay’s favourite line. hehehe), the truth is, our newly elected leaders will be running the country for the next 3 to 6 years. Thus, I hope and pray that our leaders fulfill their promises. For the incoming provincial, district and town officials of my palangga nga Iloilo and Passi, I just have three requests:
  1. Please work on the roads and bridges faster. The trip from Passi to Iloilo is taking us forever because of the re-routing and the rough roads. Despite at least 3 hours of lead time travelling, I still feared that I’d be missing my plane back to Manila because of the roads and unfinished bridge.
  2. Please solve the problem with floods. I spent a good part of my short Christmas trip last year cleaning our house because water now enters it when there is flood. Think about the loss of property and the fear for our lives every time it rains heavily. Don’t use the calamity to gain pogi points and gain utang na loob from your constituents through the relief goods and funds that you will be distributing.
  3. Those first two requests, I know, are quite gargantuan. That is why, my third request is that you cooperate and work together. Such huge projects need a concerted effort from each one. Please don’t block or make it difficult to carry out, noble projects initiated by another official simply because you are coming from opposing parties or you didn’t get his or her support during the elections. Enough of these nonsense and prove to us that you deserve being in your position.