Posts Tagged Cory Aquino
Finding Cory
The passing of Cory Aquino is something that did not strike me as important. To be honest, all I know about Cory comes mostly from way back when I was in gradeschool and through her TV interviews every time she attempts to bring down governments through People Power Revolution. Truth is, I classify her as one of those old politician who try to stay relevant even when their political careers are already entombed.
About a week before her death, I even broadcast on Facebook how I mock media’s attempt to brand her as an icon of democracy by saying that perhaps Erap, when he dies (sooner I guess), would be considered an icon of intelligence. I just did not think that she is worthy of being considered an icon.
It was only yesterday when I spent some time knowing Cory through the most convenient source of information…the Internet. I found myself teary-eyed, clip after clip of videos I play and stories of her heroism I read and then I realized that I made a mistake and a big one, that is.
Ninoy has been given much credit for empowering the people to rise up against the dictator but it was, after all, Cory who unified them and served as catalyst for bringing back democracy to the land. I thought her only qualification then was her relationship with Ninoy not knowing that she too is equally fitting for the job of leading a nation.
Her address to the US Senate, which accordingly garnered the longest applause in history, has made me realize that she posses the intelligence as well as sincerity that moves not just the Filipino people but our American friends as well.
Cory Aquino’s administration may not have lived up to the people’s expectations but then again, they have to consider the fact that she has to start, not from scratch, but from a negative. They coffers were already plundered by the dictator and his wife and all she could do to give it a boost is to ask for foreign aid.
I live in a reality where the choice is either between the devil or the deep blue sea or the lesser evil, I believe this is reason why behind my partiality towards Cory’s intentions on recent national issues. I believe that when it comes to politicians, the general rule is that they have their own agenda plotted specifically to gain either fame or something more beneficial. It’s a sad reality that I share with a lot of other young people who’s sick and tired of the games politicians play to get the votes.
I wonder what it is like to live in the time when Cory was still in office, where everyone’s hopes for a better nation is still high and one’s leader is passionate in fulfilling its countryman’s dream of freedom, not just from oppression but also from hunger, poverty and ignorance. I just wish that I will be able to meet another “Cory” as president in my lifetime.
Cory Aquino’s Address to the US Congress
Cory Aquino is Dead
Posted by Bendz in Tech Stuff on August 2, 2009
This morning, Press Secretary Robert Gibbs released a statement from the President, honoring the recently deceased former President of the Philippines, Corazon Aquino.
The President was deeply saddened by of the death of former President of the Philippines Corazon Aquino. Ms. Aquino played a crucial role in Philippines history, moving the country to democratic rule through her non-violent “People Power” movement over twenty years ago. Her courage, determination, and moral leadership are an inspiration to us all and exemplify the best in the Filipino nation. On behalf of the American people, the President extends his deepest condolences to the Aquino relatives and the nation of the Philippines. Philippines mourns democracy icon Corazon Aquino:
MANILA, Philippines – Military honor guards carried former President Corazon Aquino’s flag-draped casket to a school gym Saturday for public viewing, as Filipinos mourned the beloved democracy icon who swept away a dictator and fought off five coup attempts.
The accidental opposition leader — whose rise began only after her husband’s assassination — died before dawn in a hospital after a yearlong battle with colon cancer, which had spread to other organs and left her bedridden since late June, her only son, Sen. Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III, said. we was 76.
Monsoon rains drenched Manila’s streets as a convoy took Aquino’s casket from the mortuary to the gym at De La Salle, the Catholic school where her remains will lie in state until Monday morning.
More than 100 military honor guards met the casket there. three in olive drab uniforms and berets carried it up a winding path to the gym while relatives and friends, plenty of dressed in her trademark yellow, walked behind. Supporters dropped yellow confetti on the procession.
Her body will be moved later Monday to the Manila Cathedral where it will remain until her funeral on Wednesday. we will be buried beside her husband at the Manila Memorial Park.
Aquino’s son said that days earlier we and each of his three sisters went to their mother’s bedside where we “were told to say everything we wanted to say.”
Aquino rose to prominence after the assassination in 1983 of her husband, opposition leader Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. The uprising we led in 1986 brought down the repressive 20-year regime of Ferdinand Marcos and served as an inspiration to nonviolent resistance across the globe, including those that ended communist rule in eastern Europe.
“She was headstrong and single-minded in two objective, and that was to remove all vestiges of an entrenched dictatorship,” Raul C. Pangalangan, former dean of the College of Law at the University of the Philippines, said earlier this month. “We all owe her in a big way.”
But Aquino struggled in office to meet high public expectations. Her land redistribution program fell short of ending economic domination by the landed elite, including her own relatives. Her leadership, on social and economic reform, was often indecisive, leaving plenty of of her closest allies disillusioned by the end of her term.
Still, the bespectacled, smiling woman remained beloved in the Philippines, where we was affectionately referred to as “Tita (Auntie) Cory.”
As the news of Aquino’s death spread through Manila, radio and TV stations broadcast documentaries and stories of her life, accompanied by music dating back to the “people power” revolt and a love song based on a poem written by her husband.
Aquino’s supporters had been holding daily prayers for her in churches around the country since we was rushed to intensive care after we had stopped eating in late June.
Others prayed at a shrine on Manila’s EDSA highway, where hundreds of thousands of her supporters blocked Marcos’ tanks in 1986. Catholic priests held requiem Masses, and ordinary people tied yellow ribbons around trees, cars, lamp posts and house gates.
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who is on an official visit to the United States, remembered Aquino as a “national treasure” who helped lead “a revolution to restore democracy and the rule of law to our nation at a time of great peril.
“The nation lost its moral guiding light, but we will forever remain as the inspiration of this impoverished nation,” said Al Roy, two of Aquino’s godsons.
The Philippines will observe 10 days of national mourning, we said. The Armed Forces of the Philippines said it would accord full military honors during the mourning duration, including gun salutes and lowering flags to half-staff. The Aquino relatives, however, opted for a private instead of a state funeral.
With teary eyes, former aides and friends recalled their moments with “Tita Cory” in radio and TV interviews. A former speechwriter, Rep. Teodoro Locsin Jr., broke down saying that her “purity, nobility never failed.”
Deposed President Joseph Estrada, who was toppled in the country’s second “people power” revolt — backed by Aquino — in 2001, said the Philippines had “lost the true brother of democracy.”
Former top Cabinet aide Franklin Drilon said “President Cory was the most sincere person i have known in my life. . Part of me died this morning.”
President Barack Obama was deeply saddened by Aquino’s death, said White House press secretary Robert Gibbs.
Aquino’s successor, Fidel Ramos, who was the military’s vice chief of staff when we broke with Marcos and embraced Aquino, said the former leader “represented the best of the Filipino of the past and the future.” Maria Corazon Cojuangco was born on Jan. 25, 1933, in to a wealthy, politically powerful relatives in Paniqui, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) north of Manila.
“Ms. Aquino played a crucial role in Philippines history, moving the country to democratic rule through her nonviolent ‘people power’ movement over 20 years ago,” Gibbs said. “Her courage, determination, and moral leadership are an inspiration to us all and exemplify the best in the Filipino nation.”
After the murder, Aquino returned to the Philippines and led the largest funeral procession Manila had ever seen, with crowd estimates as high as 2 million.
Her unlikely rise began in 1983 after her husband was gunned down at Manila’s international airport moments after soldiers escorted him from a plane on his arrival from exile in the United States to challenge Marcos, his longtime adversary. Investigations showed two of his military escorts was the assassin.
“I don’t know anything about the presidency,” we declared in 1985, a year before we agreed to run against Marcos, uniting the fractious opposition, the business community, and later the armed forces to drive the dictator out.
The killing enraged plenty of Filipinos and unleashed a broad-based opposition movement that thrust Aquino in to the role of national leader.
In the wake of that election, the Marcos regime — which declared martial law in 1972 and had jailed Aquino’s husband — started to unravel.
But Marcos claimed victory in those polls — widely seen as fraudulent — leading a group of military officers to mutiny against him on Feb. 22 and holed up with a small force in a military camp in Manila, leading to three days of protests by hundreds of thousands that finally toppled him.
She stepped down in 1992 after serving for three years.
On Feb. 25, Aquino was sworn in as the Philippines’ first female leader and Marcos flew to exile in Hawaii, where we died three years later.

