Free Joma Sison rallies at various Dutch embassies

 

■  Manila    ■   Hongkong    ■  The Hague    ■  Vancouver   ■  Rio de Janeiro     ■  Istanbul ■  Oslo   

■  Ottawa    ■  Sydney      ■  Vienna   ■  Toronto   ■  Jakarta     ■  Montreal    ■  Taipei   ■  Milan

■  Los Angeles    ■  New York    ■  Amsterdam    ■  Korea   ■  Washington    ■  Brussels   ■  London

 

September 7, 2007  Updated September 12, 2007

 

 

   
 
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March rally at the Dutch Embassy
           

 

Speakers from BAYAN and other people's organizations blast away at the US-Dutch-RP fascism in front of the Dutch embassy

 

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■  Dutch fascism and U.S.-Arroyo state terrorism attack Filipino refugees, destroying hopes for peace, justice and sovereignty in the Philippines - by Epifanio San Juan

■   Walk the path of peace, work for justice - statement of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente

 


THE OTHER VIEW
By Elmer A. Ordoñez
The trials of Jose Maria Sison
Manila Times 09/09/07

The arrest of Jose Maria “Joma” Sison in Netherlands recalls his capture in Pangasinan in 1976. We were in Montreal at the time, and we heard the dictator say that the “insurgency” was finished with Sison’s capture. Reports reached us that Sison was severely tortured and chained to his cot in solitary sell. A picture of his haggard and unshaven face reached the anti-martial law group and soon there were silk-screen posters made with that picture and the slogan, “You can imprison a revolutionary but not the revolution.”

Sison endured the unspeakable tortures and bartolina for 18 months (he was released along with others after EDSA by President Aquino). Out of his travails poured forth lines of poetry smuggled out of prison—recalling an earlier revolutionary Amado Henandez who also wrote in his bartolina lines of poetry secretly brought out in slips of paper by his intrepid wife Atang de la Rama. In the case of Joma his beloved wife Julie de Lima was also imprisoned in another cell. From their rare moments of conjugal meetings was conceived and born a son, now a full-grown adult, as resolute as his parents in radical politics.

“Fragments of a Nightmare” is one of the prison poems that Joma wrote. His capture is rendered in the lines:

 

“The demons burst through the flimsy door,

 Raise the din of bloodlust

 And sicken the sudden light.

 I am surrounded by armed demons

 Prancing and manacling me.

 I am wrenched from my beloved

 And carried on frenzied wheels

 Through the strange cold night.”

Dragged to the Palace for a meeting with the dictator, Sison remembered:

 

 I am brought to the center of hell

 To the Devil and his high demons

 For a ritual of flashbulbs.

 The Devil waves away his minions

 And we engage in a duel of words.

 For a start, he talks of buying souls.

 Repulsed, he shifts to setting a trap

   for fools and the innocent 

 Repulsed again, he ends with a threat

 That he will never see me again.”

After rebuffing the dictator who wanted to make a Faust of Sison, the prisoner was blindfolded and brought to “a sprawling fort, a certain compound” to a “cell of utter silence” to which he was “roughly plunged.” Sison wrote, “The demons want me to feel / Blind, lost, suffocating, helpless.” The weeks and months that followed were all types of torture worthy of the Inquisition.

 

 The torture does not cease

 But becomes worse a thousand times.”

 

But through the pain and agony,” I keep on thinking of sea gulls / Frail and magical above the blue ocean / and doves in pairs so gentle / One partner so close to the other.”

With “only bedbugs, mosquitoes, ants / cockroaches, lizards, and spiders “as companions in his cell, he wrote: “I miss and yearn for my beloved / And think of her own fate / I long for my growing children; / I long for the honest company / of workers, peasants, and comrades./ I long for the people rising / And the wide open spaces of my country.”

Those who tend to demonize or caricature the revolutionary might try a fraction of what Sison went through and see if they could stay whole as Sison did in ten years of Marcos’ jail.

After 20 years of living in exile, devoted principally to writing books and lecturing about the people’s struggle for genuine social change, Sison is once again immobilized (but only physically) with his arrest. Once again he is in solitary in a Dutch version of Guantánamo, deprived of his basic rights as a prisoner in what we thought was a civilized and humane society. The US government that has long wanted him eliminated as “communist terrorist” has offered to assist the Dutch government prosecute Sison. No less than the ambassador has made US intervention patent. Need she be reminded that her country’s Founding Fathers were seen as terrorists by the British.

On the other, former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark has offered to help defend Sison. Clark said to fellow Americans: “Sison is a great spirit that the world needs to know, a great voice that the world needs to hear. The demonization [of him] will destroy us if we permit it to continue.” He has kept faith with the libertarian ideals of the Founding Fathers. He called the Human Security Act of this country a copy of the US Patriot Act—seen universally as an instrument of state terror.
 

The equation, In internet speak:
  
fascist dot gov dot us
+ fascist dot gov dot nl
+ fascist dot gov dot ph
= us dots gloria  (fascists)

     
     
     
 
     
           

 

Dr. Carol Araullo, Chair and Renato Reyes, Secretary General of Bagong Alyangsang Makabayan (BAYAN)

 

 

(L-R): Rey Casambre of ILPS (Philippines),  Len de Guzman of Anakbayan and Rita Baua of Bayan's international desk

Download: ILPS-Philipines' statement on the arrest of Prof. Jose Maria Sison

 

     
           
           
           
           

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