Skip to main content

Capital ‘S’ or small ‘S’?

“Here comes everybody’s feast,” author James Joyce wrote of Sunday’s festival. “All Saints’ Day”.  Our forebears called that   “Todos los Santos”.

There are the capital “S” saints. Their names ring out, whenever the Litany of Saints is chanted. Mary, mother of Christ with Joseph; Francis of Assisi, Teresa of Avila, Ignatius of Loyola, Therese of Lisieux; Lorenzo Ruiz of Tondo, Manila  and Pedro Calungsod the Visayas’ Pedro Calungsod. 

There are, also small letter “S” saints   maids, teachers, barbers to priests and market vendors. Despite their flaws, these obscure men and women serve God in neighbors.

And perhaps, the Capital S list may soon include late Bishop Teofilo Camomot of Cebu?  He often hocked his bishop’s ring to bail out the needy.  Dawns, he’d wait for penitents in the confessional.  He served as auxiliary bishop of Jaro (1955) and Cagayan de Oro (1958). Poor health compelled his return to Cebu.

“Msgr. Lolong’s ring is here again, pawnshops would call,” Gunmen held up Camomot in Bukidnon after a confirmation rite. All Camomot had was P20. He had given away his money to needy parish priests. The bishop called back the frustrated gunmen and gave them his ring. A Cagayan de Oro pawnshop returned it.

Camomot died in a 1988 car accident, clad in simple worn out clothes. Twenty-one years later, Daughters of St. Teresa nuns exhumed Camomot’s coffin. They jettisoned the urn when Camomot’s body was found intact. It was re-sealed in a hurriedly procured new coffin after Cardinal Ricardo Vidal “identified the remains,” Sun Star reported. 

Now, the process for Camomot’s beatification has started on Sept. 27, 1985.  Camomot and priest-secretary were boarding their car to Cebu City 40 kilometers away for a meeting. A   woman said her father was critically ill in the mountain barangay of Bolinawan. Could Msgr. Lolong bishop administer Anointing of the Sick?  He promised to visit.

On return, Camomot and secretary found the woman waiting. “After your visit earlier today, Tatay was able to get up,” she said. ” “How could you have gone,” the puzzled secretary asked. “From 8am to 3pm we were in Cebu.” Camomot laughed: “Just keep that to yourself.”

One of the two thieves crucified with Christ seemed the least likely to be as Capital S member  scholars note the  Greek word for them  was kakapuorgos, or one who commits gross crimes. Other gospel writers use the term lestes.  That translates to meant bandit or highwayman, 

“Don't you fear God,” he screamed at the other thief who was mocking the crucified Christ. “We are punished justly, for we are getting what our deeds deserve. But this man has done nothing wrong.”

Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” And Jesus answered him, “I tell you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise.”

“Pope Gregory IV, in 837 AD, broadened this to honor, not only to Capital S members but all who’ve passed on in grace, whether known or forgotten. The basic message of “Todos Los Santos” message persists: A community of believers share, across the divide of death, grace that surges into eternal life.

Often, we overlook them. These include lay people who spend time, without fuss, in a parish charity clinic to serve the poor. There are housemaids or servants who do their duties. And some take the “road less traveled” challenging an unjust social order where cash means right.

Back in July 11, 1985, a white Cortina sporting a government license plate, blocked Redemptorist Father Rudy Romano. Armed men on two other motorcycles swerved in. They bundled the priest inside the car, then sped away. 
There has been no trace of Father Romano since, like most other of the “disappeared”. None has been convicted. Filipino communists also shrug aside pleas from relatives of victims in their pogroms.


Other desaperecidos or “disappeared” include activist Jonas Burgos, Benedictine deacon Carlos Tayag, UP students Erlinda Capdapan, and Concepcion Empeno Levi Ybanez, among others.

What does this all mean in 2014 “All Saints Day”?

“A nation in search of Father Rudy, is a nation in search of itself,” Mary Aileen Bacalso of the Asian Federation Against Disappearances wrote earlier. Over 1,716 similar cases, spanning five administrations… is a wounding reminder of our callousness.

Forgiveness, does not extinguish accountability. “Men are unable to forgive what they cannot punish,” Hannah Arendt stresses in her essay on Nazi terror.

Unveiled in November 1992, “Bantayog ng mga Bayani” (Monument to the Heroes) honors victims of martial law. Cambodia’s Choeung Ek contains the graves of 8,895 in what were once its killing fields. “Nations are constructed on the basis of great rememberings and great forgettings,” Ernest Renan wrote.

The Redemptorists have forgiven Fr. Romano’s abductors. So has Edith Burgos, whose son Jonas is still missing. “The weak can never forgive,” Asian statesman Mahatma Gandhi said. “Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong… (Even when violence appears) to do good, the good is only temporary. The evil it does is permanent….”

A culture of impunity does not emerge full-blown overnight. It builds up incrementally, stoked by official support, tolerance, and silence. “A man begins to die the moment he remains silent about things that matter,” Martin Luther King warned.


The Protestant National Council of Churches titles its 83-page report that documents 836 politically motivated killings:  “Let The Stones Cry Out”. 

Comments

  1. Oh, it was an excellent read and experience to me. You did a great job really. The title of the post actually turn me into your reader. I was happy to find some inspiring and interesting information in this post. I was so much charmed and curious that I could not but trailed to the end of the details. Thanks for sharing online.
    bishop rings

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Empanada festival: A celebration of good taste and good life

By Dominic B. dela Cruz & Leilanie G. Adriano Staff reporters BATAC CITY—If there is one thing Batac is truly proud of, it would be its famous empanada-making business that has nurtured its people over the years. Embracing a century-old culture and culinary tradition, Batac’s empanada claims to be the best and tastiest in the country with its distinctive Ilokano taste courtesy of its local ingredients: fresh grated papaya, mongo, chopped longganisa, and egg. The crispy orange wrapper and is made of rice flour that is deep-fried. The celebration of this city’s famous traditional fast food attracting locals and tourists elsewhere comes with the City Charter Day of Batac every 23 rd  of June. Every year, the City Government of Batac led by Mayor Jeffrey Jubal Nalupta commemorate the city’s charter day celebration to further promote its famous One-Town, One Product, the Batac empanada. Empanada City The Batac empanada festival has already become an annua

PGIN honors Ilocano heroes of past, present through Heroes Walk

SPO1 Allan Lampitoc Franco of Banna, Ilocos Norte and PO2 Jovalyn D. Lozano of Adams, Ilocos Norte receive a resolution of commendation, a certificate of college scholarship grant to their family members and a P20,000 cash incentive each from the Provincial Government of Ilocos Norte represented by Governor Imee R. Marcos and Vice Governor Angelo M. Barba in recognition of their bravery and heroic acts in the Mamasapano clash in Maguindanao on January 25. Mr. Franco and Mr. Lozano were recognized on March 10 in time for the unveiling of the second batch of Ilocano heroes at the Heroes Walk located along the Sirib Mile in Laoag City.  (Lei Adriano) By Jennifer T. Pambid PGIN-CMO In honor of the heroes who brought freedom, fame and glory to the province as well as to the country in the past century, the Provincial Government of Ilocos Norte (PGIN) through the Education Department and Sirib Youth Office launched the second batch of Ilocano Heroes Walk on March 10, 2015.

Pagudpud’s tourism transformer passes away

By Leilanie G. Adriano Staff reporter LAOAG CITY—Retired Philippine Air Force Col. Ricardo Nolasco Jr., owner of Hannah’s Beach Resort and Convention Center in Pagudpud, Ilocos Norte passed away on Wednesday evening, July 11, 2018. He was 67. “He did not survive an open-heart surgery,” said Ronald Dominguez, spokesperson of the largest resort at Brgy. Balaoi in Pagudpud. Known as the architect behind the transformation of Pagudpud town as a premiere destination of the north, Mr. Nolasco put up Hannah’s Beach Resort in what was originally meant as a family vacation resort. The rest is history when it expanded into more than 300-room executive villas and cabanas, with on-going infrastructure developments and set up various amenities. As a result, hundreds of domestic and foreign tourists visit here daily. The resort is on a cliff by the beach, which provides a spectacular view of the sparkling blue lagoon. “Yesterday will go down my lifeline as one