Five inspiring stories of Kapampangans who surmounted their physical
impediments to become leaders, achievers, and outstanding
citizens—living proofs of the triumph of the human spirit over personal handicaps
and adversities.
*******
ATTY. AHMED C.
GARCIA, San Fernando
Disability: Total
Blindness
Claim to Fame:
Practicing Lawyer for over 30 Years, using Braille.
Atty. Ahmed C. Garcia has one of the most remarkable
careers in the field of law—for he was not only a brilliant lawyer, but he was also
completely blind. Born with a normal sight, he was allowed to enroll at the
U.P. College of Law, on scholarship. Among his classmates were kabalen Renato D. Tayag and the future president, Ferdinand E. Marcos.
Four years after graduation, Garcia went completely blind. He went to America
in 1947, but doctors confirmed that he would be blind for the rest of his life.
While in the U.S. ,Garcia deemed it wise to learn Braille at a Braille Sight
Saving School, which he mastered.
His marriage to 18 year old Marcelina Ocampo in 1948 prompted him to resume his stalled
legal career. His keen sense of hearing compensated for his blindness. He could
navigate around the courthouse, recognize a person through his voice, and feel
his way through the railings of buildings. In his court appearances, Garcia relies
on his wife who reads and reviews his notes with him, helps in preparing his
briefs and in describing witnesses’ reactions. Otherwise, he takes down his own notes in Braille.
One of his high-profile clients was Huk leader Casto
Alejandrino. In 1961, Garcia decried as
unconstitutional, a 1957 law that outlawed
the Communist Party of the Philippines, because “it denied individuals to group
among themselves”. He assiduously
pursued the case all the way to the Supreme Court, but Alejandrino’s conviction
was upheld.
At their 1964 Silver Anniversary Reunion, Garcia’s
classmates honored him with an award “in recognition of his courage,
perseverance and determination in the pursuit of the legal profession as a
practitioner, despite adversity imposed by total loss of sight”.
Disability: Lost
one leg in a shooting
Claim to Fame: The
Fighting-est Mayor of Angeles
Elected in 1951, Manuel Abad Santos is best remembered as
a town leader who stood firmly on one leg and a crutch, sticking firmly to his
principle of standing up for the common good of his people. Born 26 March 1907 to parents Irineo Abad Santos of
San Fernando and Teofila Dizon of Angeles, Manuel counts the late martyr-jurist
Jose Abad Santos and the great people’s leader, Pedro Abad Santos as uncles.
An incident in
1926 would leave him physically maimed for the rest of his life. While in a San
Fernando entertainment place, he was caught in a gunfire started by a PC
trooper who suddenly went on a shooting rampage. He lost his left leg in that
carnage. Once recovered from his wounds, however, he went back to Ateneo and earned
a pre-law degree, which he finished in
1927. Manuel, however, opted to work right after college, joining his parents
in expanding their burgeoning moviehouse business.
In 1951, Abad Santos, then already in his mid-40s, joined the political fray. Running as a
minority candidate, he won the mayorship of Angeles by a landslide, signalling
the beginning of a long, fruitful career. In 1955, he was re-elected but this time, his
term was marked with bitter and contentious moments with Clark Field and socio-civic
groups. Nevertheless, this “only one-legged mayor of the Philippines and the
one with the most kick inspite of his handicap”, would continue running the
affairs of the town with nationalist zeal. To him, there is no other accomplishment greater than protecting the rights of the people
whom he vowed to serve.
Disability:
Blindness
Claim to Fame:
“The Blind Songstress”
Kapampangan Norma Lapuz was just 16 years old when word
of the blind girl’s singing talent reached the LVN Studios. She had made waves
as a singer in Clover Theater along Rizal Avenue, the one of the hottest
entertainment spots in the city back in the 50s, along with Diomedes Maturan
and Elsie Oria. And so, in 1959, Lapuz
was given the title role in the movie “Ginintuang Tinig”, the “blind girl with a silver song” paired
with “the most popular voice in the Philippines”, Diomedes Maturan. The film turned her into a full-fledged movie
star, but it was still her extraordinary voice that people remember, with
signature songs like “Kung Maging Ulila” (a kundiman by Prof. Jose Silos),
“Ligaya Mo, Ligaya Ko” (a Tagalog adaptation of the hit theme song, “To Sir
With Love). By 1961, she was one of the top recording artists of the country,
ranking along Sylvia La Torre, Diomedes Maturam Tres Rosas, Reycard Duets,
Pilita Corrales and Fred Panopio.
Disability: Lost
both hands, part of arms and left leg in an electrical accident.
Claim to Fame:
Finished Architecture at age 46
Ronnie Manalang was 20 years old when he was working in
the construction of a building in Angeles. It was breaktime, but Ronnie was
still at his post, hold an iron rod. Then, the unthinkable happened. The iron
rod touched a power line, immediately delivering 13,800 volts to his body. When
his arms and left foot were severely burned, 80 % of his body electrocuted. His
recovery was long and expensive, but good thing his mother Yolanda met William
Pitsenberg who made it possible for Ronnie to get reconstructive orthopedic treatments
and surgery at Shriner’s Hospital in Boston and Los Angeles. While undergoing
treatments, Ronnie managed to take up drafting courses in California. Outfitted
with iron-hooked hands he designed himself and with his health back, he returned
to the Philippines in 1997, and continued with his schooling. At age 46, with his
wife Catherine and son Tyron in attendance, Ronnie Manalang walked proudly on
stage to receive his diploma, achieving his dream against all odds.
Disability: Born
with a brittle-bone disease
Claim to Fame: Multi-Awarded
Visual Artist
An Outstanding Fernandino awardee for 2011, artist Erwin
“Weng” Dayrit was born in 1979 with osteogenesis imperfecta (brittle-bone
disease), which gave him a barrel-shaped rib cage and a short, dwarfish
stature. Despite this, the young Erwin flourished and persevered, finishing a
drafting course at Don Honorio Ventura State University. He put up an art and
sign business along with friends, but it was his amazing artwork pieces drawn
using ballpoint pens that made him well known in the local art circle. Soon, Erwin
was winning competitions, and began receiving extensive media coverage for his
art. His inspiring life story was featured in the popular Channel 7 drama anthology
program, “Magpakailanman”, hosted by Mel Tiangco, in an episode entitled “Abot-Kamay
ang Pangarap: The Erwin Dayrit Story”, which aired on 18 March 2017. Erwin
Dayrit portrayed himself in the biopic, that also starred Aicelle Santos, Ana
Capri, Gary Estrada, Jazz Ocampo, and David Remo, as the child Erwin.SOURCES:
AHMED GARCIA: Carpio, Solomon T., “Pampanga, Blind Lawyer: Courtroom Celebrity”, The Sunday Times Magazine, pp. 38-39
MANUEL ABAD SANTOS: Manuel Abad Santos, The Fighting Mayor of Angeles
NORMA LAPUZ: Jessie B. garcia, A Movie Album Quizbook, Erehwon Books and Magazines, 2004.
RONNIE MANALANG: Universitas, Holy Angel University publication
ERWIN V. DAYRIT: Edwin V. Dayrit FB page
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/showbiz/chikaminute/603707/may-kapansanang-artist-na-si-erwin-dayrit-sasabak-sa-acting-sa-magpakailanman/story/
I've always thought Ahmed Garcia and his brother Xerxes (also a lawyer) were from Mexico. (They both graduated from UP and, if I am not mistaken, were fraternity brothers to Katoks Tayag and Ferdinand Marcos.) They had a house along the Mexico-Magalang Road at the boundary between Parian and Santo Rosario.
ReplyDeleteThe source for this information is the Sunday Times magazine article written by Solomon Carpio which states that--as a lawyer, he practiced in San Fernando and spent most of his years there, after his graduation in 1939. In 1947, he went to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for medical consultations and then lingered there to study Braille. After his return to the Philippines, he decided to abandon and returned to Mexico, where his family's milling operations was located. He managed that business until he met and married Marcelina Ocampo in March 1948. This prompted him to return to San Fernando that same year to resume his stalled legal career. He was also encouraged by a visit of a college classmate, Abelardo Subido, who, himself, was awed when Garcia identified him correctly just by his voice. The blind lawyer stayed on in San Fernando, Pampanga with his wife where he remained active until the late 1970s-early 80s
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