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There are three months in a calendar year when Filipino history, community legacy, contributions and accomplishments are highlighted and well celebrated. We have June to celebrate the Philippine Independence Day (June 12, 1898 from Spain), and the birthday of Dr. Jose Rizal. October, since 1992, is celebrated as the Filipino American History Month while May is celebrated as the Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.


I spent my Saturday morning walk by visiting the SFMTA transit shelters to see the installation of Finding Filipino, the second of four poster installments that have been commissioned for the 2023 Art on Market Street Poster Series program by the San Francisco Arts Commission.

Finding Filipino features 9 illustrated vignettes by Oakland-based artist Rina Ayuyang that commemorate the history and contributions made by the Filipino community in San Francisco. The works will be on view along Market Street between 7th and Steuart streets at 15 SFMTA transit shelters through June 2023.


"The second poster series in our 2023 Art on Market Street Poster Series program is a poignant tribute to the rich legacy of the Filipino community in San Francisco,” said Ralph Remington, Director of Cultural Affairs. “The artist’s stunning artwork and personal storytelling helps spotlights the numerous contributions of Filipino Americans and offers a glimpse into the many facets and traditions of their community."


The nine posters in Finding Filipino highlights various San Francisco neighborhoods, landmarks, and annual events around the City as they relate to Filipino American history, culture, and community. As one of the largest Asian groups in California, the Filipino community has faced a constant struggle for representation, especially in media and politics. Ayuyang believes that the Poster Series is an ideal platform to raise awareness of the Filipino community's stories of adversity, while also celebrating its triumphs.


As historian and a community strategist, I find the Finding Filipino poster series as a good introduction in learning and understanding the history of our people and the designation of SoMa Pilipinas as Filipino Cultural Heritage District in San Francisco and in California. I encourage and invite you and your relatives and friends to visit San Francisco to see these Finding Filipino art works.



 
  • Apr 15, 2023
  • 5 min read

On a sunny afternoon of April 13, 1973, exactly fifty years ago today, the graduating class of Jose Abad Santos High School bade goodbye to their Alma mater.

While I was preparing my notes in conjunction with our Golden Anniversary Grand Reunion and homecoming, this message from the Assistant Principal Mrs. Soledad A. David printed in The Pampangan 1972-73, caught my attention:


“To this year’s graduates, congratulations and continued good luck. Today you join the legions of young boys and girls who leave the protective roofs of their Alma Mater to venture toward a broader, more complex world.”


What I pondered about her message are these two phrases - “continued good luck” and “a broader and more complex world.”


In many ways, the Class of 1973 has the most unique experiences among graduating batches in the post war educational system in the Philippines. We consider our JASHS’73 batch exceptional. Naiiba and katangi-tangi.


We share with other schools’ Class of 1973 the conjunctures of our nation’s history.

First, we were the first high school students to graduate under Martial Law. It also meant that we were the high school seniors when Martial Law was declared and imposed in September of 1972 in the Philippines. We have batchmates who were arrested, jailed, and even disappeared when Martial Law was imposed.


Second, President Ferdinand Edralin Marcos was the president when we had our commencement exercise. He was re-elected for his second term in 1969 when we were Freshmen. After 50 years and many historical dramas in between our nation’s history, including his ouster by a people power EDSA uprising in 1986, and as we, the Class of 1973, are celebrating our Golden Anniversary, we have his son Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos JR (BBM) as president of the Republic. In other words, our bookends are Marcos - Marcos Nuon, Marcos Pa Rin.


Third, most of the graduates of high school class of 1973 are just a year older than BBM (1957), although I am very sure we have a different experience dealing with our later teen years under Martial Law. To name a few, we invented the term and party protocol “stay-in.” We are a generation that grew up with the music of the Beatles, Motown, Rock and Roll, The Carpenters, Burt Bacharach, Simon and Garfunkel, Don Maclean, and many more great and timeless pop music. And yet, to hold dance parties, we must consider the restrictions brought about by the imposition of curfew in our community. It was either you start late afternoon and have partygoers leave the place an hour before the 10 o’clock curfew or have them stay safely at the party place and just leave after the curfew, which was usually at 4 am. Hence, such terms as “stay-in party” and “pa-morningan” became our secret code in holding dancing parties.


This is perhaps what Mrs. David’s message inferred fifty years ago as we face our life’s challenge in venturing into a broader and more complex world.

And what about Mrs. David’s message of “congratulations and continued good luck” to JASHS ’73?


It should be noted that the 1972-73 school year was extended due to two “no school” or “school closed” episodes. The first was the suspension of classes for several weeks in July and August in Pampanga (most of Luzon and Metro Manila) due to the massive floods, heavy rainfall, and storms, while the second time was when all schools were closed in compliance with the Letter of Instruction from Department of Education following the order of the martial law administration.


Also, the Class of 1973 was the Senior class who underwent the pilot test for the National College Entrance Examination (NCEE), which was abolished in 1994. The test conducted was called FAPE. FAPE stands for Fund for Assistance to Private Education, which also played a part in the development of the first National College Entrance Examination (NCEE). The Class of 1974 took the first NCEE.


We were fortunate as a class to experience the pre-Martial Law extracurricular activities in high school. From 1969 to 1973, the boys had options to join boy scouts training (Boys Scouts, Explorer Scouts and Air Scouts), Glee clubs, and PMT (Preparatory Military Training)., while the girls had Girl Scouts, Home Economics, and Glee Club. We did not have CAT (Citizens Army Training) while (CIVAC) Civic Action was still being developed.


This is particular to JASHS ’73. We were the last batch that was grouped into class sections that were labeled numerically. Every student is assigned a section based on students’ Grade Point Average. Those with higher GPA's were placed in Section 1 while the rest were sent to succeeding numbers which unfairly labeled students in hierarchy as from “lower sections” to “higher sections”. Thankfully, this system was terminated after our graduation.


Eventually, the system was modified for JASHS ’74 where names of flowers were used instead of numerals to designate each section.


Our Alma Mater, Jose Abad Santos High School, is the renowned Pampanga High School, which was established in 1902 following the public education campaign of American occupiers. Almost 600 American teachers, commonly known as the Thomasites, arrived in the Philippines in 1901. Our hometown was one of the recipients of these Thomasites, and classes were held in a large house in downtown San Fernando. To accommodate more students, the school was later moved to a building near the Provincial Capitol, in Barrio Santo Nino, and in 1937 the classes were once again moved to new facilities in Barrio Lourdes (Teopaco Subdivision).


It is important to note that the facilities along High School Boulevard became known as the main building while the school site near the Capitol served as its Annex. During our time, the Annex was exclusively for senior students, making our graduating batch more intact and closer to one another, and having a sense of independence from the rest of the student body and administration of JASHS.


Even during our time, JASHS was a premier public high school in Pampanga. JASHS was well represented in provincial and regional athletic meets, sporting events, academic competitions, and science fairs.


Looking at the profile of JASHS graduating class of 1972-73 as presented in The Pampangan, there were 1114 graduates spread in 25 sections with an average of 40 students per section; 562 are males and 552 are females. Our batchmates come from 14 towns and 1 city of our province just to attend our school. As expected, San Fernando has the most (60%), followed by Bacolor (12%), Sto Tomas (11%), Mexico (7%), and San Simon (3%).


I was surprised to hear from Principal Lyn Esguerra, our guest during the grand reunion celebration, that there are now more than 13,000 students and more than 500 faculty in our Alma Mater, which is now known as Pampanga National High School with six year-levels housed in almost the same land area but more buildings along High School Boulevard. There is no more Annex, and the old school building is being reconstituted as a historical and heritage museum.


What makes JASHS’73 exceptional? As members of the Class of 1973, we were exposed and very much influenced by the social and political climate of our times, 1969 to 1973. Our “continued good luck” of surmounting difficulties through our closeness and caring for each other, open to challenges and innovations. Our batch has produced very successful entrepreneurs like Alfredo Patawaran, Rosalie Naguit, Danton Dizon, and Carmelita Santos, and a number of successful professionals, teachers, those in government services and law enforcement. We also have batchmates who migrated to different parts of the world.


Our times in our Alma Mater have germinated the revolutionary spirit in us. The revolutionary spirit is expressed in various ways, but the common denominator is caring for each other, sincerely serving and helping our fellow men and women, and our faith in God.


The JASHS’73 Golden Anniversary Grand Reunion theme is Together Then, Together Now (Solid as Gold). Our batch is exceptional, and we are proud to claim, “JASHS ’73, We are One.”

 

For our Golden Anniversary Grand Reunion and Homecoming celebration on February 4,2021, I was asked by the organizers if I could provide a 15-minute presentation of our JASHS ’73 batch history.


I asked my classmates Ric and Perry to send me a scanned copy of our school paper graduation issue, The Pampangan, for my presentation. In the last minute, the organizers informed me that they preferred a slide presentation of individual old photos for nostalgia and memory lane instead of my presentation of who we are, a sort of demographic profile, of our JASHS 73 batch.


Nevertheless, I continued my research and gathering of information before my trip to the Philippines.


Our Alma Mater, Jose Abad Santos High School, is the renowned Pampanga High School, which was established in 1902 following the public education campaign of American occupiers. Almost 600 American teachers, commonly known as the Thomasites, arrived in the Philippines in 1901. Our hometown was one of the recipients of these Thomasites, and classes were held in a large house in downtown San Fernando. In order to accommodate more students, the school was later moved to a building near the Provincial Capitol, in barrio Santo Nino, and in 1937 the classes were once again moved to new facilities in Barrio Lourdes (Teopaco Subdivison).


It is important to note that the facilities along High School Boulevard became known as the main building while the school site near the Capitol served as its annex. During our time, the annex was exclusively for senior students, making our graduating batch more intact and closer to one another, and having a sense of independence from the rest of the student body and administration of JASHS.


I was surprised to hear from Principal Lyn Esguerra, our guest during the grand reunion celebration, that there are now more than 13,000 students and more than 500 faculty in our Alma Mater, which is now known as Pampanga National High School with six year-levels housed in almost the same land area but more buildings along High School Boulevard. There is no more Annex, and the old school building is being reconstituted as a historical and heritage museum.


Looking at the profile of JASHS graduating class of 1972-73 as presented in The Pampangan, we can gauge the state of our education of our time and expectations of our graduates.


The number of graduates is 1114, of which 562 are males and 552 are females, are spread in 25 sections, with an average of 40 students per section. The sections are arranged numerically based on the students’ grades.


The residence of students illustrates our Alma Mater as Pampanga’s premier high school.

1. San Fernando 666 60%

2. Bacolor 137 12%

3. Sto Tomas 125 11%

4. Mexico 76 7%

5 San Simon 37 3%

6. Minalin 26 2%

7. Apalit 9 1%

8. Sta Ana 8 1%

9. Guagua 8 1%

10. Angeles 5 0%

11. Arayat 5 0%

12. San Luis 4 0%

13. Candaba 2 0%

14. Lubao 2 0%

15. Mabalacat 2 0%

16. Metro. Manila 2 0%


Our batchmates come from various towns and cities just to attend our school. I wonder what the current residential makeup of the more than 13,000 students of Pampanga High School is. It is also good data where these JASHS end up after graduation, unfortunately, we did not have a survey of the living situation of JASHS 73.


I am more familiar with our Section One. We were 46 in our class, 24 girls and 22 boys. And this is the current living situation of Porwan.


1. Residing Locally 15

2. Residing in the PH but not locally 7

3. Residing Abroad -USA & Canada 12

4. Residing Abroad- Europe 0

5. Residing Abroad -Asia-Australia-Pacific 3

6. Residing Abroad - Middle East & other 0

6. Unknown-Missing (No Contact) 6

7. Deceased 3


I am one of JASHS 73’s alumni who resides abroad (San Francisco, California). I migrated to the US in 1984. My last visits to San Fernando were only during our batch reunions (2013, 40th, 2018, 45th, and 2023, 50th). The alumni from abroad are very much represented in our celebrations. Our Porwan even won the greatest number of attendees (34 in all) among sections, and gave a wonderful musical performance.


I am happy to be back. I am inspired and enjoying every minute of our grand reunion and homecoming.


I would want to send my kudos to our batchmates and leadership for the successful Golden celebration, special mention to President Alfredo Patawaran, Carmelita Cruz and their team, and Val Cristobal, Alma Canara, and Lourdes P Velasco for the International JASHS 73.


As they say Together Then, Together Now. Together Again and Again, and Forever.


One of the popular songs released in 1973 was The Carpenter’s Yesterday Once More. As for me, the continuing tune of our generation is about longing and belonging.


As we long for each other, we sincerely feel that we belong here wherever we may be.

 

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