Friday, October 27, 2006
The Constitution and Presidential power
A Nation Weeps circa 1996
A Nation Weeps
Of all the graphic images on TV of the grief and suffering of the Ozone tragedy, it was his image that struck me the most. This Bembol Roco-look alike, with his strong chiseled face, bald head above the hundreds of others outside the burnt disco, megaphone in hand, was pleading with anyone and everyone for information on his missing child. He was even willing to give an instant reward to anyone with useful information; "Maawa na po kayo sa isang naghihirap (?) na ama...". The camera caught him, as he turned away, with eyes closing and the look of a strong, courageous, proud but grieving father who had just lost a loved child.
Nothing affects us more as when many young people suffer a fate as those at the ill-fated Ozone disco. The nation's future, each parent's inspiration, life's meaning is best shown in the smile of youth. And when they suffer, unnecessarily, unjustly and in this case, because of incompetence, greed, graft and corruption, then it becomes a national tragedy. Like the massacre of toddlers at Dunblane, the Ozone tragedy has left us in a state of shock and grief. Yet everyday, violence to the youth occurs in many ways and in different places because of the same reasons that caused the Ozone tragedy, as well as a distorted sense of the value of human life.