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BOOK REVIEW
The Other View
by Elmer A. Ordonez
Sunday Times Magazine
August 15, 2004
Book Review of Jose Maria Sison: At Home in the World (Portrait of a
Revolutionary), Conversations with Ninotchka Rosca
AT HOME IN THE WORLD
Ninotchka Rosca, internationally acclaimed Filipino novelist now based in
New York, will launch her sixth book with the above subtitle on August 19 at
the PowerBooks in Greenbelt, Makati at 6 pm.
The subject of the book is Jose Maria Sison, chief political consultant to
the National Democratic Front now in the process of resuming peace talks
abroad with the Philippine government. He is also the founder of the
re-established Communist Party (1968) and the author of several documents on
party rectification, Struggle for National Democracy (1967), Philippine
Society and Revolution (1971), and other books including two on poetry. He
is listed in A Bibliographical Dictionary of Marxism (London, 1986) as among
the most important 210 Marxists since the 1848 Communist Manifesto.
Historian Teodoro Agoncillo himself acknowledged Sison as one of the three
most influential revolutionary leaders after Andres Bonifacio and Crisanto
Evangelista.
As Rosca puts it, Sison "based his leadership on changing the way people
look at the world, look at themselves, and their relationship to that world.
He has done this and does it through his poetry and political analyses and
through the way his own life has been lived: in the organizing of, and in
leading and guiding, every significant Filipino activist group, as well as
the entire revolutionary movement itself."
What is less known perhaps is the fact that Jose Maria Sison is an
acknowledged poet, receiving the Southeast Asian WRITE award conferred by
the King of Thailand in 1986 for his book Prison and Beyond: Selected Poems
from 1958 to 1983. He continues to write poetry while on exile in
Netherlands. This latest book includes some of his poems.
Sison graduated from the University of the Philippines, cum laude, majoring
in English (not political science as most people think). I remember Sison as
one of the entering freshmen when I left for study abroad in 1957.
Sison suffered incarceration and torture in a Marcos jail for ten years (18
months under solitary confinement and chained to his cot). His poem
"Fragments of a Nightmare" detailing the tortures he underwent is one of the
poems in Prison and Beyond. His best known poem "The Guerrilla is Like a
Poet" is a favorite in poetry readings held by activist groups here and
abroad – along with the revolutionary poems of Andres Bonifacio, Carlos
Bulosan, Amado Hernandez, and younger activists, living and martyred.
Today Sison is branded as a terrorist by the U.S. and the European Union and
as a result has lost the benefits such as housing, health care, and a meager
allowance, of being a political refugee since his passport was cancelled in
1988. He is in a kind of limbo, under constant threat of assassination here
and abroad, living on support from comrades and friends. He has remained
steadfast in what he does best – writing political analyses and poetry and
giving interviews.
Rosca’s book gives us a summary biography of Sison (known variously as JMS,
Joma, Joe Mahoma, or to close friends Marya) but the bulk of the book is the
interview where Sison provides substantive answers to the in-depth questions
asked – including those about the Plaza Miranda bombing (hearsay) and
Kampanyang Ahos which led to the second rectification movement led by Sison.
What comes through is a remarkable portrait of the revolutionary, steeled by
relentless struggle, suffering in prison, and faith in the ultimate positive
outcome of the national democratic and socialist revolution. As Rosca says,
the revolutionary is not a terrorist.
Sison is "not despondent over being unjustly denied asylum" for he "enjoys
doing research, writing, participating in conferences and seminars. . .and
being with many compatriots and Dutch friends."
He tells Rosca: "I have enjoyed abundant political support from many
thousands of signatures gathered over the years by the International
Campaign for the Asylum of the Sison Family. Supporters include prominent
personalities and ordinary people in various fields of activity. With their
kind of support, I feel at home in the world."
He has given up smoking because of threatening emphysema but in a light note
he says that all the aggravations and provocations of the US and the
Philippine government (e.g. unjustly accusing him of Col. Aguinaldo’s
killing and calling him a terrorist) could not make him reach for a
cigarette.
Come around and get your autographed copy, the author of which is a
recipient of the American Book Award for Excellence in Literature.
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