Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category

HOMETOWN SNAPSHOT: Pangasinan town places bet on broiled corn

(The following article was published in the Feb. 1, 2008 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer.)

By Gabriel Cardinoza
Northern Luzon Bureau

STO. TOMAS, PANGASINAN – If Dagupan City grilled milkfish in 2003 and Villasis town barbecued eggplants in 2005, this small eastern Pangasinan town will broil corn ears on Feb. 10 in its bid to break the Guinness World Records’ longest barbecue.

Vice Mayor Timoteo Villar III, chair of the first Corn Festival here, said his town would build a 5-kilometer barbecue along the highway to break the world record held by Hermosillo, Mexico, when it built a 1,290.4-meter barbecue on Nov. 20, 2006.

The Mexican effort toppled Dagupan’s 1,007.56-meter record set during the Bangus Festival on May 3, 2003.

“With the outpouring of support from our town mates and residents of neighboring towns, we are very confident that we will achieve our goal and that is to make Sto. Tomas get a world record,” said Mayor Vivien Villar.

The longest barbecue event will be among the highlights of the town’s centennial celebration, which began on Feb. 1. Sto. Tomas was founded on Feb. 10, 1908.

FULL STORY


Finally, Pangasinan honors first senator

The following article was published in the January 30, 2008 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

By Gabriel Cardinoza, Inquirer Northern Luzon 

URDANETA CITY – To the Urdaneta City government, honoring an illustrious son was never too late. And on his 123rd birth anniversary on Jan. 18, city officials and residents gathered at a park to unveil a memorial for the late Sen. Pedro Ma. Sison, Pangasinan’s first senator.

Mayor Amadeo Perez Jr. said the one-hectare park, now known as the “Balikbayan Park,” would be renamed after Sison. A life-size bronze bust will also be erected there.

This will be the first time that a public place in Pangasinan will be named after the late senator. “Personally, I’m both sad and happy [about the memorial],” said lawyer Luis Sison, the senator’s grandson.

“[I’m] sad because it’s only now that we are coming out with a tribute for our grandfather. I’m happy because Mayor Perez gave us this opportunity to erect a memorial for Senator Sison,” he said.

Like many people in the province, Luis said he did not know much about the life of his grandfather because even in their family, they did not talk much about him. It was only when he read a book written by an uncle, Pedro Ma. Sison Jr., that he learned about the senator’s accomplishments as a public servant.

“I only learned of what he accomplished [from the book] and how his peers regarded him. In fact, [then Senate President Manuel] Quezon himself was a very close friend of Pedro Ma. Sison’s,” Luis said.

Well-known lawyer

He said his grandfather was a practicing lawyer before he joined politics. “He was very well known as a lawyer. He served indigents, those who could not afford to hire lawyers. That’s why he was a pauper,” he said.

The late senator also served in the provincial government as assistant treasurer during the American occupation.

Historian Rosario Mendoza Cortes, in her book “Pangasinan 1901-1986: A Political, Socioeconomic and Cultural History,” said Sison was first elected assemblyman in the 1912 elections, representing Pangasinan’s fourth district that included Urdaneta, his birthplace.

With the passage of the Jones Law in 1916 that created a bicameral, all-Filipino legislature, Sison ran for a Senate seat and won, making him the first senator from Pangasinan. He was reelected in 1919 and served until 1922.

Local historian Restituto Basa said Sison was one of the only two senators then who traveled to Washington D.C. to lobby for early Philippine independence. The Philippines then was an American colony following the defeat of the Spaniards.

Luis said his grandfather was among the first legislators who fought for women’s suffrage in the halls of Congress. It was only in 1937 that Filipino women were allowed to vote.

Sison town

One of the memorable legislations that the late senator sponsored was the merger of the two Spanish townships of Alava and Artacho into what is now known as Sison town (pop: 40,955) in northeastern Pangasinan.

But how the town got its name had conflicting historical accounts. According to Cortes, the town was named after Perfecto Sison, the first Pangasinan governor under the American regime.

The official websites of the provincial government (www.pangasinan.gov.ph and Sison town), however, said that when the resolution was approved by Congress, then American Governor General Leonard Wood “decreed that the fusion be made on May 1, 1918 –and the town was named Sison after its sponsor, Senator Sison.”

But according to Luis, other documents will prove that the town was named after his grandfather. He said former Vice Gov. Nancy Sison, now in her 80s, had executed an affidavit saying Sison town was named after the senator.

“When my grandfather died [on June 12, 1938], one of those who spoke in his funeral was then Pangasinan Gov. Servillano de la Cruz. And he mentioned in his speech that Sison town was named after Sen. Pedro Ma. Sison,” Luis said.

Youngest daughter

Only the late senator’s youngest daughter, Gracia Ayers, attended the Urdaneta celebration on Jan. 18. Her only living brother, Jesus, is now bedridden. The late senator had nine children.

Luis said no one among the senator’s descendants followed in his political footsteps. Three of the senator’s sons, including Sison’s father, Carlos, became lawyers. Among the grandchildren, only Luis became a lawyer.

“I’m the last lawyer in the Sison line and I don’t have a child who is a lawyer. I’m old, I’m already 65, so when I die, there’ll be no lawyer in our lineage,” Luis said.

The late senator was also Mayor Perez’s grandfather. Perez’s grandmother, Doña Trinidad Sison, was the senator’s sister.


Pangasinan natives meet in cyberspace

(The following article was on the front page of the Dec. 22, 2007 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer. Unfortunately, this was not posted in the paper’s online edition.)

By Gabriel Cardinoza
Inquirer Northern Luzon

DAGUPAN CITY — Somewhere in cyberspace, Pangasinenses around the world converge. 

Pangasinan Online (www.pangasinan.org) has allowed them to connect and interact with their loved ones, find long lost friends, and organize help for the poor in their hometowns.

Thanks to Fernando Mariñas, a San Diego-based network system administrator of a US government agency, who created the website six years ago. Mariñas is from Tayug town in Pangasinan.

“This site is dedicated to the people of Pangasinan, Philippines and those who trace their roots, or who have studied, worked, lived in there or just simply love the place,” said the website’s home page.

To date, Pangasinan Online is the most visited Pangasinan website in the World Wide Web. Its hit counter has registered more than 3.3 million visitors.

“Many more are going through the backdoor, meaning they create a shortcut going straight to their hometowns or school pages, by-passing the site’s counter,” Marinas said.

According to Alexa (www.alexa.com), a website that provides web traffic information, Pangasinan Online visitors far exceeded those that visited the Pangasinan provincial government website (www.pangasinan.gov.ph), which was launched in 1997.

‘Bridging the distance’

Marinas said he started the website in 1999 as Tayug.com, a site “with the sole purpose of bridging the distance” that separated his town mates around the world.

Inspired by the growing Internet technology in 2001, Marinas said he created Pangasinan Online that included all towns of Pangasinan. He adopted a simple, easy-to-navigate web design.

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Pangasinan Day, anyone?

There has been a raging debate over Aksyon Radyo Pangasinan on the need to have a Pangasinan Day. Since time immemorial, Pangasinenses had not had a real Pangasinan Day celebration. A listener even phoned in to say that what he thought as Pangasinan Day was the Pistay Dayat.

Others said that what they thought as Pangasinan Day was the provincial non-working holiday every Nov. 13. Of course, Nov. 13 is Speaker Eugenio Perez Day. Historian Rosario Mendoza Cortez said Pangasinan became an alcaldia mayor in 1580. An article in the Wikipedia said Pangasinan was declared a province in 1611. 

But to date, no official documents yet have been found that would indicate the exact date. Lawyer Gonzalo Duque has suggested that the provincial government should declare a temporaray date as Pangasinan Day until such time that the founding day of the province is finally established. Local historian Resty Basa agrees.

What do you think?  


German resident of Dagupan helps promote RP in his land

A GERMAN national, now a long-time resident of Dagupan, is lending his hand in promoting the Philippines in his own country, hoping to entice German and European investors and tourists.

The good thing is Professor Manfred Ollik of Kassel City in Germany is doing this for free, just for his love of the Philippines, which he now calls his second home.

Ollik is a Knight Commander of Rizal in Germany, who now lives in Bonuan Gueset Centro in Dagupan. He said he has an endearing love for the Philippines and will do everything he can to improve its image in Germany and Europe.

Read full story in Philippine Information Agency website


Restoring Dagupan’s most treasured heritage

After years of neglect, Dagupan’s most treasured heritage site – the Home Economics building at the West Central Elementary School – will soon be restored to its old glory.

The building was used as headquarters by American Gen. Douglas MacArthur after he landed in Pangasinan with Allied Forces on Jan. 9, 1945, to eventually liberate the Philippines from Japanese occupation during World War II.

Now its wooden beams are termite-eaten, and the building itself has sunk several inches into ground because of the July 1990 earthquake. Dagupan City Mayor Benjamin Lim said the need to restore the building has become urgent and necessary. “This is an important heritage site so we are making sure that this is protected,” he said.

Read full story in Philippine Daily Inquirer


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