Not a one-man army

By Alex P. Vidal

“The readiest and surest way to get rid of censure, is to correct ourselves.”—Demosthenes

DID Fr. Maximo Gatela, O.P., former school director of the Angelicum School Iloilo (ASIL), overlap the power of the school board when he solely issued a closure order for ASIL on May 27?

Was his immediate “resignation” an offshoot of the gaffe?

This became apparent now after Gatela was overruled by the Board of Trustees which issued a “corrective statement” on May 29 recalling the notice of closure.

ASIL, located in Tabuc Suba, Jaro, Iloilo City, will stay open, according to the school’s board of trustees, as reported by CBCPNews.

The statement, signed by the head of the Filipino Dominicans, Fr. Napoleon Sipalay, O.P., read: “The Board of Trustees, as well as the Provincial Council of the Dominican Province of the Philippines, didn’t approve any cessation of operation.”

If there is smoke, there is fire, definitely.

Gatela’s “resignation” as director of Angelicum School Iloilo had been accepted.

The statement read further: “The Board of Trustees accepted the resignation of Fr. Maximo Gatela, O.P., as Director of Angelicum School, Inc., Jaro, Iloilo City.”

ASIL, which occupies the magnificent Lizares Mansion, was founded in 1978 by Fr. Rogelio Alarcon, O.P., first prior provincial of the Filipino Dominicans.

Before Gatela’s censure, members of the board probably decided that the COVID-19 pandemic “wasn’t enough reason” to justify the closure of the 42-year-old historic educational institution.

Gatela, who cited “the difficulty that the COVID-19 has created” in his announcement for ASIL’s closure, wasn’t ASIL’s one-man army, after all.

 

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POTOTAN Councilor Paolo Magalona Guanco, one of the Iloilo convenors of Save Our Languages Through Federalism Foundation, Inc. (SOLFED), said the late Willie Andrew “The Devil” Branum had been amputated because of a disease two years before he died of cardiac arrest on May 26.

Branum, 58, was a prominent political strategist who worked with former President Fidel V. Ramos as his Iloilo political organizer, and with former Senator Serge Osmena as the latter’s liaison field officer for Western Visayas.

According to Guanco, “Wille was a good friend of mine. We were both hispanophiles and we used to converse in Spanish during our drinking sessions. We both admire Gen. Francisco Franco. We both sang “Cara al Sol” together. We were both tobacco lovers. Our topics ranged from politics to history. He was a learned man, owning over a thousand books. There are even books in his bathroom! We were also both advocates of federalism for our country. The last time I saw him in his house, he had part of his foot cut off due to some disease. I likened him to Jose Millán Astray, the one armed, one-eyed founder of the Spanish Foreign Legion dubbed as the ‘Glorious mutilated one’. Farewell my friend. As we always said to each other before we parted ways, Hasta Luego, Mi Amigo!”

 

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The only difference between the 1992 riot and the ongoing violence that escalated in about 30 states (as of May 30) in the United States is that Rodney King Jr., the African American driver manhandled by four Los Angeles Police District (LAPD) cops on March 3, 1991, didn’t die.

The riot that erupted following the acquittal of the four white cops in April 1992, killed more than 50 people and injured 2,000 others. Estimated losses during the six-day violence and looting in Los Angeles reached $1 billion.

In the case of George Floyd, street rally and violence occurred a day after the spread of a viral video, where Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin kneeled on Floyd’s neck while he was pleading, “I can’t breathe” for eight minutes and 46 seconds.

Floyd, 46, a forgery suspect, died in the hospital.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo)