11. RIZAL @ 120
RIZAL @ 120
Dr. Troy Alexander G. Miano
30
December 2016
Today,
the country commemorates the 120th Martyrdom of Dr. Jose P. Rizal.
After attending a twin Christmas gathering of the Cabatuan Rescue 24/7 and the Municipal
Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council (MDRRMC), I passed by Rizal’s
monument in front of the MDRRMC Office and paused for a minute of silence. I
remember seeing an old photo of the edifice from the files of my maternal grandfather,
the first elected mayor of our town, being unveiled on April 19, 1954 (exactly
20 years before I was born) by Provincial Commander Major Jose Alejandro and
assisted by my grandmother, mayora
Marciana R. Gozum. The concrete statue and pedestal were donated by the
Macabebe Peddlers Association, the merchant migrants from Pampanga. We left for
Manila only to realize that I need to have a souvenir photo with the Rizal memorial
to remember the day. Cruising the AH26 or Pan-Philippine Highway, also known as
the Maharlika Highway in Nueva Vizcaya, I decided to stop at the Aritao
Municipal Hall and took a “selfie” with the Rizal sculpture and instantly posted
the photo on Facebook. This is my simple way of observing the anniversary and my
approach in reminding the netizens
especially the young that today is Rizal Day.
When
I submitted my resume to the two universities in Isabela four years ago, I
prioritize the teaching of Rizal Course. Republic
Act No. 1425, known as the Rizal Law and authored by Senator Claro M.
Recto, mandates all educational institutions in the Philippines to offer courses about José Rizal. The full name of
the law is “An Act to Include
in the Curricula of All Public and Private Schools, Colleges and Universities
Courses On the Life, Works and Writings of Jose Rizal, Particularly His
Novels Noli
Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo, Authorizing the
Printing and Distribution Thereof, and for Other Purposes”. “The Great Malayan”
is my personal favourite sobriquet for our national hero. This is the title used
by Carlos Quirino for the 1938 Commonwealth Biography contest on the Philippine
national patriot. On the numerous biographies and books about Rizal, allow me
to use the short life story in Wikipedia.
José Protasio Rizal Mercado y Alonso Realonda, popularly known as José Rizal; June 19, 1861 – December 30, 1896), was a Filipino nationalist and polymath during the tail end of the Spanish colonial
period of
the Philippines.
An ophthalmologist by profession, Rizal became a writer
and a key member of the Filipino Propaganda Movement which advocated political reforms for the colony under Spain.
He was executed by the Spanish colonial government for the crime of rebellion after an anti-colonial revolution, inspired in part by his writings,
broke out. Though he was not actively involved in its planning or conduct, he
ultimately approved of its goals which eventually led to Philippine
independence. He is widely considered one of the greatest heroes of the
Philippines and is implied by Philippine law to be one of the national heroes. He
was the author of the novels Noli Me Tángere and El filibusterismo, and a
number of poems and essays.
Since the start of my public life in 1996, I
have travelled in almost all corners of the archipelago. In every highway, my
eyes would always catch the kilometer posts situated at the road shoulder. In
front of the historic Gozum Ancestral House where I reside, a kilometer marker
once stood with the letter “C 0” and “378” were etched. “C 0” stands for “Cabatuan
Kilometer Zero” while “K 378” stands for the distance of Cabatuan from Manila. A marble marker with a
“KM 0” label across the famous Rizal Monument in Rizal Park or Luneta Park in
the capital-city of Manila is the Philippines’ “Kilometer Zero”. Known to many
as the Manila Kilometer Zero, this marker serves as the nation’s starting point
when measuring the distance going to the different towns and cities in Luzon
Island and the rest of the country. Most of the roads in the Philippines have a
marker that has a label of the distance from their local Kilometer Zero as well
as a label of the distance to the next municipality, city or province. Unknown
to many, the island of Mindanao has its own Mindanao KM 0 which can be seen at
the Islamic City of Marawi in Lanao del Sur.
Aside from the kilometer
post, another road sign can be seen prominently across the country. The most
famous of all sign post is the “AH26” symbol. The "AH" stands for “Asian
Highway”, a network of highway routes of international importance within Asia.
It covers over 141,000 kilometers of roads across 32 countries. The Asian Highway Network, also known as the Great Asian Highway, is part of the Asian Land
Transportation Infrastructure Development (ALTID) project of the United Nations
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) to improve the highway systems in Asia. It is one of the three
pillars of the ALTID project, endorsed by the UNESCAP commission at its 48th
session in 1992, comprising Asian Highway, Trans-Asian
Railway (TAR)
and facilitation of land transport projects.
AH26 is the route
number given to the 3,517-kilometer Philippine segment of the Asian Highway
Network. The main road on the AH26 route is the Pan-Philippine Highway or the
Maharlika Highway, stretching from Laoag City, Ilocos Norte in Northern Luzon,
to Zamboanga City in Southwestern Mindanao. According to Engineer Madeline
Loyola of the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Planning
Department, the AH26 route markers were first put up in 2013 by the DPWH. These
are located at every eight kilometers of the AH26 route. The number
"1" on top of the marker means that the AH26 route is the country's
primary national road.
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