KA POPOY REMEMBERED | Inspiring Filipino workers 12 years after his death
InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5
The online news portal of TV5
Mentioning the name Popoy Lagman will draw mixed reactions from people who know him or of him.
To those he led and influenced, he was maverick master of polemics
who never minced words in attacking the political follies of his party
and comrades. He was fear-inspiring leader of the Alex Boncayao Brigade
(ABB), the dreaded Manila-based communist militia known for its
vigilante operations against “enemies of the masses." He was also the
tireless and feisty working-class leader who fought for socialism as an
alternative to capitalism.
The man headed the communist movement in Metro Manila during Martial
Law and later defected from the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP)
after rejecting its Maoist and Stalinist orientation. He then formed an
alternative Marxist movement that put premium on the emancipation of
the working class and the formation of a workers-led government. He was
felled down by an assassin’s bullet 12 years ago.
A dozen years hence, it is still uncertain who ordered his murder.
But for his close comrades at the Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino
(BMP), the labor federation he formed immediately after the split from
the CPP in the early 1990s, who killed him does not matter anymore.
“Hindi makakamit ang hustisya para kay Ka Popoy sa simpleng paghahanap sa kung sino-sinong pumatay sa kanya (There
will be no justice for Ka Popoy in the simple search for those who
killed him),” explained Victor Briz, a long-time leader of BMP from
Southern Metro Manila.
“Wala tayong inaasahang pagpupursigi mula sa ating gobyerno para
makamit iyan. Ang tunay na hustisya para kay Ka Popoy ay makakamit
lamang sa paglaya ng uring manggagawa (We cannot rely on any effort
from the government to get that. The real justice for Ka Popoy will
only be achieved in the liberation of the working class),” he said.
Here lies the Filemon “Ka Popoy” Lagman’s indelible legacy in
history: He fought for neither his personal nor organizational gains per
se. He stood for the class interest of the Filipino workers, and the
workers of the world in general. He was not content in merely serving
the people, or fighting merely for the liberation of the Philippines
from US imperialism, or even in simply toppling a corrupt and
incompetent president only to be replaced by other members from the
elite class. He pushed for socialism, a system wherein political and
economic power lies in the hands of the workers.
Prescience
Despite being “abrasive, harshly polemical, and brutally frank” (as
his close companions described him), and much to the chagrin of the Jose
Ma. Sison-led CPP, Ka Popoy was a Filipino revolutionary with a
profound ideological sharpness and sincerity. At the risk of being
“disciplined,” including the penalty of death, he did not shirk from
criticizing the dogmatic strategy and tactics of the CPP, and later the
adventurist tendencies of the post-split ABB.
He may not have had the biggest number of followers in the Philippine
Left, but history has proven that the political line of his bloc has
been consistently correct and prescient. These included the
participation of the Manila-Rizal unit of the CPP in the 1978 Interim
Batasang Pambansa elections, when the CPP central leadership called for
boycott; the participation of CPP-led forces in the first EDSA
Revolution, when the CPP insisted on its militarist strategy; the
campaign against economic globalization in 1990s which resulted in trade
liberalization, labor contractualization, and privatization of key
industries in the Philippines and which in 2007 resulted in the
still-raging global financial crisis; and at the tail end of his life,
the “Resign All” call in EDSA II at a time when everybody called for
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to replace the beleaguered Joseph Estrada.
Spending more than 30 years in the revolutionary movement, Ka Popoy’s
prescience was founded not on whims but was a result of his vigor in
mastering scientific socialism and dialectical materialism, his tool of
analysis in assessing local, national, and even international
situations. He did not parrot or copy-paste abstract dogmas and set them
as solutions for all situations.
His ideological wizardry culminated in the publication of the Counter
Thesis documents that unmasked the CPP’s dogmatic and unscientific and
unrealistic program of protracted people’s war and the struggle for
national democracy -- a document that has never been officially answered
by the CPP up to this day.
Renewal and redemption
Under Ka Popoy’s leadership, a new batch of activists were recruited
to the Left after the split and a renewed call for radical change
ushered in what Sonny Melencio, Ka Popoy’s long-time comrade and current
chairman of the Partido Lakas ng Masa, termed as the “Second Period” in
the Philippine Left.
This new batch, popularly called “Rejectionists” (or RJ, although the
RJs would later further divide into more contending blocs), primarily
defined themselves as revolutionary socialists, combined various forms
of struggles and revolutionary tactics, and opened its doors to various
forces in society, thus eschewing the sectarianism of the old.
After Ka Popoy’s death, the Philippine revolutionary movement may
still be divided, and people may say that it has weakened, but the
worldwide crisis of the capitalist order has worsened. As Ka Popoy
predicted in 1999, “Globalization by its very nature transforms the
economic turmoil in one nation into a world crisis.”
Despite the political ebb of the Philippine Left under the PNoy
administration and the continuous backwardness of Philippine society, Ka
Popoy's forecast offers a word of hope for those who desire for
systemic change to usher in a humane world: “The first decade of the new
millennium will be the eve of the socialist revolution in the era of
globalization.”
Currently, the socialist movement is gaining strength in Latin
America, with the establishment of socialist-led governments in
Venezuela and Bolivia, the popularization of Left politics in other
Latin American states, and the increasing protests in the United States,
Europe, and the Middle East against the bankruptcy of the rule of the 1
percent.
The struggle for radical change might be far from over, and Ka Popoy
would never have the chance to witness what he called “the Armageddon of
capitalism,” but for as long as the exploitation of the many by the
elite few exists, Ka Popoy’s determination and tenacity for change will
continue to inspire the powerless.
No comments:
Post a Comment