Wednesday, May 3, 2017

45. 9 REAL-LIFE LOVE STORIES OF KAPAMPANGAN COUPLES

"Oh Jo, caluguran daca...caluguran sobra-sobra", so goes a Kapampangan hit song just a few years back. But oh, the things Kapampangans will do for love. He will go to great lengths to win the love of his life, including getting parental approval, overcoming differences like race, age and social status, hurdling legal impediments and other adversities. The love stories of these Kapampangan couples--some fascinating, others amusing, all real-life-- illustrate how love can indeed, move mountains.
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1. FRAY GUILLERMO MASNOU & PATRICIA MERCADO: A Dangerous Liaison
The accomplished Fray Guillermo Masnou (b.6 Dec. 1827)/d.16 May 1895) , the son of Pedro Masnou and Isabel Gomez, was a  graduate of the Real Colegio Seminario de Villadolid. Three years after professing his vows, he sailed to the the Philippines  in 1852, along with 34 other Augustinians. His first assignment was in Sto. Tomas, Pampanga , followed by Angeles  where he served the longest (1855-1877). There, he worked to renovate the church, build the convent, several bridges, the town cemetery and a school building. While on his first year in Pampanga, Fr. Masnou  met Patricia Mercado of Sto. Tomas (b. ca. 1828/d.4 Apr. 1900), a single mother of 3 children. The two started an affair, which resulted in at least 6 children.

In an effort to spare Patricia and his family from possible disgrace, Fr. Masnou devised a way to make it appear that their children were legitimate. He had their names recorded in the Angeles parish books, identifying Patricia Mercado as the mother and a certain Nicolas Gomez as the father. Gomez was supposedly a Spaniard who went to the Philippines to marry the Pampanga native. Records also show he died in 1861—6 years before his youngest daughter was born and more than 38 years before  his “widow” died. All these entries in the canonical books were signed by Fr. Masnou.

 It has now come to light that this Nicolas Gomez was a fictitious character that Fr. Masnou created, to give legitimacy and respectability to his children and his mistress. It was a final act of love that he did,  before he returned to Spain in 1877. His stay would be brief, as a year later, he was back in Pampanga. Could it be that he couldn’t stand being away from his true love?

As a footnote to this 'dangerous liaison', the couple’s firstborn, Esteban Gomez married Josefa Pamintuan. Daughter Teresa would grow up to be the wife of Juan De Dios Nepomuceno, and the two would start a clan that would shape the progress of Angeles.

2. ROMAN R. SANTOS & JULIANA P. ANDRES: The Comeback Story of a Penniless Orphan and His Headstrong Bride.
The riches-to-rags-to-riches story of Roman Rodriguez Santos (b. 9 Aug. 1880/d.19 Jul. 1959) began in Apalit, as the son of a well-to-do family whose fortunes from their sugarlands were all wiped out by a series of calamities—typhoons, earthquakes and sicknesses. To make things worse, his father Hilarion died of beri-beri, leaving a young wife to fend for their 4 children. The final blow to Roman, the only boy in the family, was the death of his mother when he was but 11.

The orphan came to live with a well-off  cousin, Florencia Rodriguez Sioco, married to Spanish mestizo, Joaquin Gonzalez. They took care of Roman, sent him to Letran, and the boy, in turn, ran errands for the family. Roman went home to Apalit once a month. In one of his visits home, Roman stopped to consult a manghuhula (fortune teller)—who prophesied that he would become wealthy beyond his wildest dreams.

On weekends, Roman would explore Manila, walking as far away as Navotas. Here, he would meet Juliana  Andres (b. 1877/d.2 Mar.1946), who turned out to be a second cousin—both their paternal grandmothers, Maria and Leogarda Ochoa, were sisters. Unlike the deprived Roman, Juliana was the daughter of town principalia, known for their vast tracts of lands and fishponds.  Determined to pursue her, Roman left the Gonzalez household to seek a new life in Navotas. At the onset, Juliana’s father disapproved of Roman because of his lowly station in life. He had earlier disowned his own son because he rejected his choice of wife. But the headstrong Juliana prevailed when she eloped with Roman in 1899.

On the day he ran away with Juliana, Roman had 70 pesos in his pocket, a calesa and a horse. In due time, he acquired a boat, and engaged in trading molasses from Pampanga. Through long years of hard work, the once penniless orphan expanded his business, acquired haciendas from the Zobels, established his own fishing corporations, invested in a coconut business,  founded the Rizal Surety and Insurance Co., Empire Insurance Co., and at age 72, the Prudential Bank and Trust Co. By the time he died in 1959, he was a pillar of Philippine economy, with an estate conservatively valued at close to 4 million pesos. The prediction of the Apalit fortune teller Roman met many years before had come true.

3. JOSE GUTIERREZ DAVID & CONCEPCION ROQUE: All Is Fair In Young Love
The future Supreme Court justice, Jose Gutierrez David of Bacolor (b. 29 Jan. 1891/d. 24 Mar. 1977) first met the love of his life, Concepcion Roque (b. 8 Dec. 1891/13 Jul. 1971) of San Fernando,  in 1905, when the 15 year old was chosen to deliver a speech in front of visiting Secretary of War, William Howard Taft and Miss Alice Roosevelt.  Concepcion or “Chong” was also with a group of girls that welcomed the distinguished visitors.  Only after the chinita beauty was promoted to intermediate level that the two met formally. The young Jose lost no time in writing love letters to Chong that were discreetly inserted in her books by Jose’s cousin. In February 1906, Chong accepted Jose’s offer of love, over rich suitors from Guagua, Tarlac and a businessman from San Fernando.

In one of their dates, he overheard Chong talking to her chaperone friend, Maria Guiao, about a lady’s handbag that she liked for sale at a local shop. Jose was determined to save enough money so he could buy the desired bag for Chong by Christmas. Every so often, he would go to the Bombay Bazaar to check if the bag was still there. In four months, he managed to save 15 pesos, the exact amount that he needed to buy the bag. Jose presented the gift on her birthday, which thrilled Chong and further endeared him to her. But the most precious gift was a poem dedicated to her entitled “Tuqui Ca Baculud” (Come to Bacolor), which saw print in the March 1908 of the daily, “Ing Bandila”.

The first time Chong was displeased with Jose was when he quit school in 1907 after a misunderstanding with his teacher. It was she who convinced him to return to high school, which he finished, after an absence of 2 years. The second time was when the two went out to see a movie. While Chong’s chaperone was walking ahead of them, Jose stole a kiss, in fact, two kisses—which alarmed the young Chong.

Influenced by the prevailing notion that a girl was no longer pure once she had been kissed, Chong conceived the idea that they should marry secretly, but would not live together. On 6 Jan. 1912, the couple were secretly married in Minalin by Jose’s judge-uncle, Macario Julao. In no time, the news leaked out, and Chong would have been punished by her outraged father had her mother not intervened. The couple only lived together after Jose graduated from high school in March 1912.

 Jose topped his law class at the Escuela de Derecho  in 1915, became a trial lawyer and then joined the judicial court system  as Auxiliary Justice of the Peace from 1918-20. He would rise to become an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in 1959, under Pres. Carlos P. Garcia. Retired in 1961 in San Juan,  he outlived his wife for 4 years. It is but fitting that his last poem, “Misan Pa” (Once More) was dedicated to his beloved Chong.

4. JUAN D. NEPOMUCENO & TERESA GOMEZ: Joined By the Gods of Fortune.
The story of Angeles and its progress is inextricably linked to the remarkable partnership of a Juan de Dios Nepomuceno ((b. 8 March 1892/d.22 Apr. 1973 )  and Clara Teresa Teodora Gomez (b. 12 Aug. 1893/d. 17 Apr. 1970)   whose larger-than-life businesses shaped the course of the town’s economy while serving God and their beloved community. The 2 had contrasting backgrounds--Juan was an academic achiever, a summa cum laude law graduate of UST. Unlike her Jesuit-educated husband, Teresa or Nena never went beyond grade school, but developed uncanny business savvy, while dabbling in healing and folk naturopathy.

Family lore has it that Juan actually acted as a go-between for a friend who wanted to woo Teresa. He would pay regular visits to Nena but was too timid to declare his intentions, preferring instead to “court through the eyes” (maglolo ya qng mata). It took Nena’s grandmother, Severina Pamintuan to help the reserved Juan to open up, by asking him blatantly what his feelings for Nena were. In the end, due to this prodding, Juan and Teresa went ahead with their wedding on 19 March 1919 after months of suffering from tuberculosis. In fact, so emaciated were they that they opted to have their wedding picture taken 6 months after the wedding, after they have recovered sufficiently.

The couple set up house in their Bale Maragul, along Santo Rosario, just across the church. Initially, Juan practiced law but the business minded Teresa sought other means of livelihood. Together, they single-handedly opened the 1st electric plant (1921) and the crystal ice plant of the region. They ventured into softdrinks production, and established the country’s 1st Catholic school run by laypersons—now known as Holy Angel University. In the 60s, they developed the city’s premiere subdivision that reconfigured the layout and social strata of Angeles. Around this, a new commercial business district was laid out by the couple and their children, whose very name today—“Nepo”—bears their enduring influence and legacy which continues to reverberate in the city today.

Juan and Teresa raised 10 children in all, each one raised in good old Kapampangan family values, and each one an achiever in their own right. It is no wonder that in 1969, the Nepomucenos were awarded the Rizal Pro-Patria Award for Family Solidarity by then Pres. Ferdinand Marcos at rites in Malacanang.

Throughout their lives, Juan and Nena shared their triumphs not only with their family, but also with the community through their philanthropic works, socio-civic-political-activities and religious advocacies. The couple lived their life simply, quietly and kindly till the end of their days, remaining steadfast in service and prayer.

5. DR. WENCESLAO VITUG & JUANITA ARRASTIA: When A Royalty Marries A Commoner.
In 1926, few were surprised at the election of Juanita Salgado Arrastia (b. 8 Mar. 1902/d. 8 September 1994.) as Queen of the Pampanga Carnival. Daughter of the richest hacendero of Lubao, the Spanish-Kapampangan comes from a family noted for the legendary beauty of their women, a group that that would come to include actress Letty Alonso, international socialite Isabel Arrastia Preysler and Steve McQueen’s wife, Neile Adams. But the Colegio de Sta. Rosa student had a more practical reason for her triumph- "I won because my father had the biggest hacienda in Lubao”, she said, “ It wasn't about beauty."

It was no wonder that, a few months after being named Miss Pampanga, Juanita did the unthinkable—she married Dr. Wenceslao Beltran Vitug (b. 28 Sep 1892/7 January 1986), considered a “commoner” having come from Concepcion, a barrio of Arrastia sharecroppers. Moreover, “Beses” was dark and plain, not to mention 10 years her senior. But he overcame his lowly beginnings by topping his class at the Pampanga High School, earned a medical degree from the University of the Philippines, practiced at the Philippine General Hospital and taught Medicine at the University of Santo Tomas. His whirlwind romance with Juanita served to accelerate further his rise to social prominence.

Their love affair began when she and her sister, Carmen, accompanied their diabetic mother to the PGH for consultation with the accomplished doctor- internist. His diagnosis impressed Juanita’s mother,  Doña Francisca, who did her best to push her daughter to become friends with "Beses".  She did not need much prodding, as Juanita had also fallen in love with the brilliant doctor.

The marriage of Juanita to a ‘commoner’ who made good was big news in Lubao. The Vitugs quickly settled in the town and became hacenderos themselves. Eventually, they would run two households—one in Manila, the other in Lubao, balancing work with raising 5 children.  The hacienda that was left to their management prospered and grew, and in turn, their tenants rewarded them with their loyalty. In the truest sense of the perfect royalty, Juanita Arrastia wore her crown on her heart, not on her head.

6. DIOSDADO P. MACAPAGAL & PURITA DELA ROSA: Devotion Until Death
The poor boy from Lubao and the future president, Diosdado P. Macapagal ( b. 28 Sep. 1910/d. 21 Apr. 1997 and Purita dela Rosa (b. 1916/d.1943) were neighbors in San Nicolas, a sleepy barrio of Lubao, Pampanga. Purita had an admirer, who happened to be a friend of Dadong. Dadong used to accompany this friend in his regular visits to the dela Rosa home, so Purita and Dadong became acquaintances as well. Also, both were hometown zarzuela stars who, on several occasions, had performed alongside each other. Little did Dadong know that it was him that Purita was attracted to, finding him gentle, good-looking and promising.

It took 10 years before their courtship culminated in their wedding on 4 July 1938. On that special day, Dadong recalls his "sublime feeling of oneness with my wife as God meant it to be and as we celebrated our wedding together, there was another celebration in the city—American Independence Day."

In a rented house in Sta. Ana, the newlyweds made their home. Dadong worked as an assistant attorney while Purita played her role as a doting wife, often cooking sinigang for her new husband. Their union was blessed with two children, Cielo and Arturo.

Purita, however, had always been plagued by poor health all her life. After her second child was born, she fell ill, and her sickness was aggravated due to the lack of medical attention in wartime Philippines. Dadong tended to Purita, staying by her bedside, as a dutiful caregiver. She lingered for 3 years, and died in Dadong’s arms, a tragic scene straight from a movie. Purita was only 27, a president’s wife who never became a First Lady, but who definitely was first in Diosdado’s heart, in the short years they were together,

7. VIRGILIO RODRIGUEZ & CARMELING DEL ROSARIO: Giving Up the Crown for the Man She Loves
One of the most striking beauties ever to emerge from the legendary Manila Carnivals of the peacetime years was Carmen del Rosario (b.2 Jul. 1916/d. 17 Apr. 2012), Miss Mindanao 1935. Though not Pampanga-born,  her marriage to the scion of San Fernando’s most prominent family and her long-time residence in the capital certainly qualifies her to be claimed as one of Pampanga’s own. She was one of 9 children to Jose del Rosario and Carmelita de Leon of Manila . Her grandfather, Anacleto Sales del Rosario was the country’s leading chemist during the Spanish times and was an acquaintance of Jose P. Rizal

As a standout campus beauty of Centro Escolar de Señoritas,  Carmeling was wooed and pursued by a number of swains. One of them was the dashing Virgilio H. Rodriguez, the eldest son of the affluent sugar planter and businesswoman Doña Victoria Hizon Rodriguez, widow of the late Godofredo Rodriguez of San Fernando.

The couple had planned to get married after college, but the 1935 Manila Carnival intervened. A La Vanguardia  editor and a friend of Carmeling’s father, had been badgering the latter to allow her 19 year old daughter to run for Miss Philippines under his paper’s sponsorship.  Thinking that her chances of winning were slim, Carmeling’s father persuaded his reluctant daughter to run. They agreed however, that should she win, she would immediately relinquish her title and go back to her studies.

As luck would have it, Carmeling garnered enough votes to place 4th—and win the Miss Mindanao title behind winner Conchita Sunico. But for her family, there was no real cause for rejoicing for it meant putting on hold all her plans for one full year. Her victory had already been reported in newspapers along with Catalina Zabala (Miss Luzon) and Julieta Abad (Miss Visayas)  when she announced that she was giving up her title.  Her decision ruffled quite a few of the feathers of carnival officials and participants who now believed her to be a nuisance candidate. Celia Araullo, who placed fifth, replaced her.

Carmeling not only went back to school, but the very next year, on 26 June 1935, she married her beau Virgilio,  in spectacular rites at the Sto. Domingo Church. The couple settled in San Fernando, where Carmeling quickly learned to speak in Kapampangan. They had 5 children: Victoria, Godofredo, Gorgonia, Ana Marie and Jo Anne. She settled in San Lorenzo Village, Makati with a daughter until her death at age 96.

8. BENIGNO AQUINO JR. & CORAZON COJUANGCO: A Car Accident Made Them Do It.
The future hero, Benigno Aquino Jr, (b.27 Nov. 1932/d. 21 Aug.1983)  and first female president of the Philippines, Corazon Cojuangco (b.25 Jan. 1933/d.1 Aug. 2009)  first met when they both were 9 years old.  The two families were actually related to each other—Ninoy’s half-brother, Servillano Jr., was married to Cory’s cousin, Trinidad Cojuangco. Cory’s father, Jose Sr., was godfather of Lupita, Ninoy’s sister.

As Ninoy came of age, he was linked to several ladies—including Imelda Romualdez—who was introduced to him by Danieling Romualdez (Imelda’s cousin)  whose wife was Ninoy’s aunt, Paz Gueco of Magalang. Ninoy was often asked by her matchmaker aunt to escort Imelda home, after her work. Imelda once claimed that Ninoy courted her, and Ninoy’s sisters (except Lupita) favored her. But their relationship came to a sudden halt when Ninoy met Cory during one of her vacations from the U.S. where she was studying. Their romance became more definite when she returned for good to the Philippines..

In one of their early dates, Ninoy, Cory and sister Josephine, a chaperone, met an accident when their Buick was hit by a jeep. While the 2 sisters were confined at a hospital,  Ninoy told Cory that the accident was meant for them to get married. To this, Cory gave feeble resistance, after insisting that the accident was planned by Ninoy on purpose. Even Cory’s parents approved of the match and on 11 October 1954 , Ninoy and Cory, both 21, got married and this consolidate the Aquino-Cojuangco family wealth and power, leaving behind legacy of bloodless people power revolution of EDSA.

9. SILVESTRE  LANSANGAN & ERLINDA BAUTISTA: Romeo and Juliet of Mabalacat.
The story of star-crossed lovers Erlinda Castro Bautista (b. 14 June 1936/d. 16 Sep. 2010) and Silvestre Malit Lansangan (b.12 Nov.1932)  is the stuff TV telenovelas are made of. In fact, their story was featured as an episode in the “Miss D” drama series on Channel 7, aired on 12 August 1998. Linda and Beting first met in May 1949, during a town santacruzan where Linda was the Reyna Elena. He was quickly smitten by the young queen and she too, succumbed to her feelings. So, on 3 Sep 1950, 14 year-old Linda went to hear mass and never came back home, having eloped with 18 year-old Beting.

Linda’s mother, Apung Coring, was against Bet, because her daughter was too young to get married. But lovestruck  Erlinda would not come home. The disappointed parents took a drastic measure--they decided to send her to jail for disobedience. There, the police chief, an uncle, took her under his custody but gave her special treatment. Undeterred, Beting secretly saw his beloved Linda by climbing the back wall and peering through the cell’s small window--every day for 21 days—the length of time Linda was incarcerated. Their love story made them popular in Mabalacat, so much so that the people made this line for Linda: "Tadtaran daku man mapinu, ing mitalamsik a daya kang Bet ya pa murin." (Even I were finely chopped, my blood that spatters will still be for Bet).

Eventually, Linda’s parents sent her off to Marikina where her paternal relatives resided. There, she enrolled at the Cubao Elementary School. Beting sought her out and found her in Cubao after a month’s relentless search. For the second time, the two decided to elope again.  But, they were caught in time by Linda’s grandfather—and ex-Katipunero-- who saw her stuffing her bag with clothes. The couple were already in a bus when the old man came running with a bolo, demanding that they alight from the vehicle. Their thwarted plan was reported to her parents. But this time, realizing the depth and sincerity of their love, Linda’s parents gave their blessings to the couple. Linda and Beting were married in San Juan Church and were blessed with 4 children: Joel, Rod, Elvis and Lily, all married with children, all residing in the United States.

BONUS! A Different Love..
THE LOVE OF LOLO PULONG/PULONIA
Never has the voice of the LGBT community been heard much louder than now---what with current issues in the news lately—from same-sex marriage to the victories of Filipino gays and transgenders in unexpected fields like sports and politics. Ours have always been an accepting society—since the ancient time of gender-bending babaylans who were empowered to heal and speak with divinities. The story of Crispulo “Pulong” Luna (b. 10 Jun 1903/d.May 1970) is another proof that indeed, love knows no gender.

His case was first written about by the award-winning writer, J. Neil Garcia in his book, “Performing the Self: Occasional Prose”.  In fact, “Pulong” made it to the cover of his acclaimed book. Born to parents Pedro Luna and Candelaria Trinidad of Sasmuan, Pampanga,  he grew up in Orani, Bataan where his father made a living in fishing, then moved to Paco, Manila.

There, the young Pulong discovered Victoria Studios where he delighted in posing for the cameras---all made up with rouge and lipstick, and dressed in female outfits—from an exquisite baro’t saya to exotic Japanese geisha robes. His permissive family didn’t mind his feminine behavior and his cross-dressing fetish, and when asked why he didn’t get married, he replied, “Por Dios, babae ako!”.

Pulong then fell in love with Juan, a young carpenter and many years his junior, and the two would live together as partners. Pulong’s immediate family and sisters did not object to this arrangement, and their relationship could have gone on had it not been for a tragic accident. Juan died from his injuries he sustained from a fall while doing construction work. Pulong, alone once more, moved in with his sisters after his partner’s death, and found work as a store help and a laundry worker.

In his golden years, Lolo Pulong kept company with gay beauticians in his neighborhood, “Lolo Pulonia” as they called him, passed away in May 1970.

PICTURES & SOURCES:
FRAY GUILLERMO MASNOU & PATRICIA MERCADO: Nepomuceno, Carmelo M.D. The Gomez family of Angeles Pampanga and the Mercado relatives, privately printed, 2002.
DON ROMAN R. SANTOS & DÑA. JULIANA P. ANDRES: Santos, Vicente Roman,, Alejandro, Reynaldo G., TAHANAN, A House Reborn, Duende Publishing. © 2003. pp. 24-49.
JOSE GUTIERREZ DAVID & CONCEPCION ROQUE: My Story, unpublished manuscript of Jose Gutierrez David., picture courtesy of Del Rosario Family
DON JUAN D. NEPOMUCENO & DNA.TERESA GOMEZ Mendoza, Erlita. A Cofradia of Two: Oral History on the Family Life and Lay Religiosity of Juan D. Nepomuceno and Teresa G. Nepomuceno of Angeles, Pampanga. Center for Kapampangan Studies, Holy Angel University, Angeles City. 2004.
DR. WENCESLAO VITUG & JUANITA ARRASTIA. Castro, Alex R. Aro, Katimyas Da!: A Memory Album of Titled Kapampangan Beauties 1908-2010, Center for Kapampangan Studies, Holy Angel University, Angeles City, 2013.Picture courtesy of Cathy Hengstrom
DIOSDADO MACAPAGAL & PURITA DELA ROSA: "A Love Story Thru War, Poverty and Illness", by Ria Salgado-Llanes, PDI. Northern Luzon, 14 February 2007.
VIRGILIO RODRIGUEZ & CARMELING DEL ROSARIO: www.manilacarnivals.blogspot/com, Picture from Pampanga Social Register 1933
NINOY AQUINO & CORY AQUINO, Tantingco, Robby P. Singsing Magazine, Picture from Bob Rzaon, A Life Devoted to Salon Photography
LINDA & BET LANSANGAN: Wedding anniversary program of Erlinda Castro and Silvestre Lansangan.
LOLO PULONG: Garcia, J. Neil C. Performing the Self: Occasional Prose. University of the Philippines, 2003. (also P

3 comments:

  1. It's a pity you did not include Diosdado Macapagal and his wife Purita dela Rosa Macapagal.

    ReplyDelete
  2. If you know their love story, do e-mail us and we will include it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Updated, with the inclusion of Macapagal-Dela Rosa love story.

    ReplyDelete