Toronto Community Celebrate the life of Ka Bel
Part I- KMU Tribute Part II - Tributes and Messages Part III - Tribute of Partylist groups Part IV - Hong Kong
Part V - Switzerland Part VI - Toronto Part VII - Netherlands Part VIII - Vancouver Part IX - Korea
Part X - Australia Part XI - Rome Part XII - Seattle Part XIII - San Francisco Bay Area Part XIV - New York
Part XV - Japan Part XVI - Los Angeles Part XVII - Ka Bel in Albay Part XX - Huling Paalam
May 24, 2008
| Photos courtesy of BAYAN - CANADA in Toronto and MIGRANTE - ONTARIO | |||||
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KA BEL IS DEAD. LONG LIVE
KA BEL!
We Filipinos in Canada and
Friends, who just over a month ago had the honour of meeting with
Congressman Crispin Beltran, awoke today May 20 to learn of the tragic
death of Representative Beltran, or Ka Bel, as he was known to the
millions who loved and respected him. We condole with Ka Bel’s wife Ka
Osang, their eleven children, 29 grand children, and five great-grand
children.
Around 6 am of the 20th, Ka
Bel fell from the roof of his humble house in Bulacan. He was up on the
roof to fix a leak because of the recent typhoon. While going down, he
lost his balance and fell fourteen feet headfirst. Though he went into
multiple cardiac arrest later, it was the hemorrhage from the severe head
injury that took his life.
Ka Bel was not one to order
other people around when he could do the work himself. Even as a
legislator, Ka Bel kept his simple working class life. Ever incorruptible,
Ka Bel was not one to feast on the public trough like the traditional
politicians so disdained by Filipinos. At death, he left net assets of
around P50,000, or less the $1,200. His Bulacan home was only purchased in
2004. It was a simple unpainted house in a 60-square meter lot in a
low-cost housing subdivision. He was still paying a monthly P5,000
amortization. Previously, he had lived in a depressed area in Quezon City.
Though he could have had it
otherwise, Ka Bel chose to maintain his simple working class life to
maintain touch with the lived realities of millions of Filipinos in order
to struggle hard with them for their rights and welfare. Even before his
teens, he displayed his patriotism by volunteering as courier for
guerillas against Japanese occupation. A farm hand, a janitor, a gasoline
boy, a messenger, a bus driver and finally a taxi driver, Ka Bel
eventually became a unionist and labour organizer. Putting the interests
of the country and workers first, he rose through the ranks of the May
First Labour Centre eventually to become its president in 1987 after the
military assassinated its then president, the beloved Ka Rolando Olalia.
Though loved by workers,
peasants, the urban poor and patriots, Ka Bel is hated by the enemies of
the Filipino people and workers. On August 1982, he was arrested and
detained by the Marcos dictatorship until his escape in November 1984.
Recently in February 2006, Ka Bel was again arrested, this time by the
murderous Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo regime, to suffered over one and a half
years detention including withdrawal of his medications for a long period
of time.
Ka Bel never tired in his work
serving the people. In the 13th Congress, Ka Bel was the partylist
representative with the most number of bills and resolutions filed, all
together 130, and a nearly perfect attendance until his arrest in 2006. He
was awarded Filipino of the Year and Most Outstanding Congressman for four
consecutive years from 2002-2005, and in 2006, was adjudged part of the
Congressional Hall of Fame.
We overseas Filipinos know too
well the importance of these efforts. Millions of us not only have been
forced out of the country we love because of the absence of opportunities,
we get regular calls from our relatives back home requesting more help
because of the high cost of living, to help a relative finish their
schooling, to pay for hospitalization, for help with the holidays. Now we
are asked to send rice!
Ka Bel is a beloved hero to
millions of Filipino workers, peasants, urban poor, to the middle class,
to overseas Filipinos. He may not have died the way he wished, but Ka Bel
lived his life the way we should. It isn’t the matter of death that makes
you a hero but the life you live. We grieve at the loss of this great
working class hero but cry tears of joy at his service to the people. Ka
Bel’s life was as heavy and beautiful as Mt. Mayon!
Ka Bel is dead. Long Live Ka
Bel! |
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