Mga lumang istruktura sa ating kasaysayan, kumusta na nga ba ngayon? | Kapuso Mo, Jessica Soho

  • 5 months ago
Kalagayan ng ancestral house ng Ama ng Sarsuwelang Tagalog na si Severino Reyes o mas kilala bilang si Lola Basyang, at kinatitirikan ng sinaunang bahay kung saan inilimbag ang peryodikong Kalayaan ng mga Katipunero noong panahon ng mga Kastila, binisita ni Jessica Soho.

Sa paglilibot natin sa mga kalsada ng Maynila, ano pa kayang lihim ng kasaysayan ang ating matutuklasan?

Panoorin sa video.

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Fun
Transcript
00:00Can the old houses and houses that are part of our history and culture
00:09be given more importance?
00:14The debate today is about the noise of the market
00:17due to the destruction of the well-known Iloilo Central Market in Iloilo City,
00:23which was built in the 1930s and was one of the main choices in the whole province.
00:31I also visited this place in 2017.
00:43But for now, because the house was not saved,
00:47the Iloilo City Cultural Heritage Conservation Council
00:51and the city government, instead of renovating it,
00:54they will continue to demolish it for a safer and more modern market.
01:00It's better to demolish what was once in ruins.
01:04We were surprised why everything was destroyed.
01:08Even in the heart of Manila,
01:10it is now time to discuss the condition of other old but historic structures
01:17that have not only aged over time, but have also been forgotten by the current generations.
01:23We should revive our historical sites.
01:28They forget that they are just passing by like nothing happened.
01:31But this is what gave us freedom.
01:35In our tour of the streets of Manila,
01:38what other secrets of history can we discover?
01:44The historic structures in Manila
01:47are a mission to introduce to the current generations
01:51through the Heritage Walk of Renasimiento Manila,
01:55a group organized by history advocate Diego Torres.
02:00The Heritage Walks are here to bring the residents in contact and face-to-face with their history.
02:08If our first destination can only be spoken of,
02:13it has a lot to tell.
02:16On this street in Santa Cruz, Manila,
02:19there are many stories that we Filipinos loved.
02:24Here, you can find the ancestral house of the famous writer Severino Reyes.
02:31He will never forget his contribution to our culture and history.
02:36In fact, this entire street in Manila was named after him.
02:40Severino Reyes, also known as Don Binoy,
02:45is the author of famous stories like Walang Sugat,
02:50as well as the stories of Lola Bashang in the comics.
02:55But if his authors will not be forgotten,
02:59it is as if the place of his birth has been forgotten and neglected.
03:07It is as if it has been left behind for a long time.
03:11The painting is gone.
03:13The glass in the window is broken.
03:16The fence is broken.
03:17The plant is eaten.
03:19It's a big deal if your house or your place has a marker like this.
03:24If it's not here,
03:25you wouldn't think that in our history,
03:28there is an important personality who lived here.
03:33In these paintings, you can see the inside of the ancestral house.
03:38It's like a warehouse.
03:39This house has been here for more than 100 years.
03:43It's like it has been abandoned.
03:45But the frame is still intact.
03:47The steel of the house was quite durable that day.
03:51It wasn't restored at all.
03:53It's very important to me because this is where I became a person.
03:56In the early 1960s, we were quite happy there
03:59because Severino's son, his descendant, Narciso,
04:03and his family were there.
04:04Narciso Reyes Sr. is of the same age.
04:07So they moved to another house.
04:09All of his collections were secured,
04:11but it was burned down in the early 90s.
04:15Severino Reyes was named the father of Sarzuela in Tagalog.
04:20Sarzuela or Dula,
04:22which has a song and dance with a new name.
04:26One of his most famous works,
04:28is the Walang Sugat,
04:30which is still performed in theaters until now.
04:35He was brave,
04:36but his style was elegant.
04:38Elegant.
04:39That's why it's addictive.
04:40Yes.
04:41He has ways to make the message not so antagonistic.
04:44But if you're a Filipino audience, you'll get it.
04:46Severino Reyes was also one of the founders of Liwayway Magazine.
04:50In 1922,
04:52he named Liwayway as one of his most famous works,
04:57the Kuwais.
04:59In 1923,
05:01he named Liwayway as one of his most famous works,
05:05the Kuwento ni Lola Basiang.
05:08I want to hear the Kuwento ni Lola Basiang.
05:11He even made a movie and a TV version of it.
05:16Not many people know,
05:18even me,
05:19I only recently found out that Lola Basiang is not a real grandmother,
05:26but Severino Reyes himself.
05:29Lolo is a man,
05:31Lola Basiang, right?
05:33Yes, that's his pen name.
05:35Alias.
05:36But did you know that the pen name of Severino Reyes, Lola Basiang,
05:41is related to one of their neighbors on this street?
05:45The matriarch of the Zamora family in Quiapo, Manila,
05:50Hervasha Guzman de Zamora.
05:53Do you know Lola Basiang?
05:55Yes.
05:56Really?
05:58You know that you have a neighbor,
06:00a famous person in our history.
06:03Yes, and what I'm talking about is also related to them.
06:06The challenge in maintaining these houses is maintenance.
06:09If the properties are abandoned or leased out to other people,
06:14it's not like they don't care about the house.
06:17Is there really nothing I can do to preserve this better
06:20and to honor his memory and his contribution?
06:24How many measures can be done?
06:26The first challenge is with the private property.
06:28That's why it depends on the availability of funds.
06:40Let's walk on Recto Avenue.
06:42It's just in the corner of Elcano Street.
06:45You can go back to the exact place where Gat Andres Bonifacio established KKK.
06:53KKK is a high-ranking organization of the children of the country.
06:58In 1896, KKK began the Declaration of Independence,
07:05which was one of the milestones in the independence of the Filipinos during the Castilian era.
07:11It was served by Punong Patnugot, or Editor,
07:15who was also the head of KKK, Emilio Jacinto.
07:21230 Lavesares Street Corner, Sevilla.
07:25Here in Manila, in the middle of commerce,
07:28just near Binondo,
07:30there is a huge pile of paper in the courtyard of the Katipuneros
07:35under Gat Andres Bonifacio.
07:42So this is the marker where the independence was printed.
07:46Original house was destroyed in 1945
07:51in the Battle of Liberation of Manila in the Second World War.
07:55Nothing was retained from its historical significance.
07:59In the same place where the 2000 copies of the Declaration of Independence were held,
08:06I met the grandson of Emilio Jacinto's fifth generation, Melissa Dona.
08:13What are his stories about what he did for freedom?
08:18First, the Jacintos were really hiding.
08:21That's why we changed our last name.
08:24They used it in the gathering of the Katipuneros that day.
08:28Usually, the Katipuneros are cousins.
08:32Because they are cousins.
08:33When they grew up, they needed to go to class.
08:36They wrote the Declaration of Independence
08:39so that the hearts and minds of the Filipinos would know
08:43so that they could go to class in Spanish.
08:47But because the Declaration of Independence was printed there,
08:52so that the Spaniards would know,
08:54it was written by Marcelo H. del Pilar, who was then in Spain.
09:01For example, they published the Declaration printed in Yokohama, Japan,
09:08and not in this place in Manila.
09:12Was this a printing press before?
09:14Actually, it was the home of Pio Valenzuela.
09:20When Pio Valenzuela became the fiscal of the Katipunan,
09:24one of the things he fought for was to make a printing press.
09:28Because at that time, the printing press was very important in spreading the news.
09:33The printing or printing of the Declaration of Independence was a huge sacrifice, especially for Patago.
09:41Maybe there was no typewriter back then, right?
09:43Yes.
09:44So he was the one who was physically typesetting all of his pieces.
09:48The letters were not enough for the typesetting.
09:52That's why they bought from Carriedo, Santa Cruz, Casacapo,
09:57and other members were needed to get typesets from Javio de Manila,
10:02which is in Intramuros, so that they could complete it.
10:06That's why the publication of the newspaper was slow.
10:08We should revive our historical sites.
10:13They forget that they are just passing by, like they don't care.
10:17But this is what gave us freedom.
10:20Our last stop is a winding path in Quiapo,
10:25where the so-called home of the Katipuneros is still standing today,
10:31the house of Pil Bautista.
10:33It served as the residence of several important people in our history.
10:38Like the well-known Lakambini of the Katipunan, Gregorio de Jesus Uriang,
10:44the widow of Supremo Andres Bonifacio,
10:47who was later married to the musician and composer Julio Nakpil.
10:52The people who lived here were directly active participants in the history of the Katipunan.
10:59It was built in 1914.
11:02Today, it is a museum.
11:05For a basic tour, it's P80.
11:08It's expensive to maintain.
11:09We have to ask people to pay a certain amount.
11:14The ticket of the visitors who will enter here is a replica of the cedula
11:19that the Katipuneros built when they were still alive.
11:23Long live the Katipuneros!
11:25Long live!
11:27Above, there are four large windows that are freshened by the windows made of saffron.
11:34It's worth noting that not only the house was preserved here,
11:38but also the old equipment.
11:41Here are some of Uriang's items.
11:45There is also a small bookcase.
11:48The responsibility goes to both sides,
11:51to the owner and at the same time to our national government
11:55through the National Heritage Agencies like the NHCP.
11:58There is a penalty for example,
12:00if you don't fix it according to the building code.
12:04At the same time, in our heritage law,
12:07it is said that if an owner cannot repair or fix his structure,
12:15the government can take over
12:18to help with a compulsory repair order to take care of that structure.
12:23Not only the government should take care of it,
12:27all the residents should be included.
12:30It's really hard to preserve the heritage
12:33because it's really expensive, it has a cost,
12:36and not all of it is preserved.
12:38But we choose what has a history to us.
12:42One thing becomes a history
12:44if we know its story, its history,
12:47and it becomes relevant to our lives and our hearts.
12:52These old structures
12:54prove that our heroes and well-known personalities back then
12:59were not only people who were worshipped or written in books,
13:04but were also alive and standing as Filipinos.
13:13But what importance do we give to them
13:18if in our current situation,
13:22what they left behind is just a memory?

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