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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

LOVE

is founded 
on our desire for completion
"to be whole, to be in harmony, to be connected, to be free."

What is it that completes us?
 It does not have to be a person,
it could be work, an experience in nature,
a hobby or something else...

BE ALWAYS IN LOVE, 
that is, 
be always in touch with and be grounded on
 what it is that completes you!

Adapted from the quotation from Rabbi David Cooper

Monday, March 14, 2011

E-MAIL PRAYER BRIGADE INITIATED BY FR. JAMES REUTER, S.J. FOR PHILIP PESTANO

Subject: Philip Pestano Memorial Justice at 3 A.M.
by Fr. James B. Reuter, S.J.

(NB. This e-mail cying for justice for Philip has been circulating in the internet for several weeks now. I was not compelled to post this attachment until I recieved this e-mail again today from my former mentor at Mount Carmel Victoria Parco, NDV, a PhD. graduate and a Faculty Member of Graduate Studies at the Ateneo de Manila, Philippines. Let us join Ateneo de Manila staff in praying for Philip and in praying for peace and justice in the Philippines.)

Phillip Andrew A. Pestaño graduated from the Ateneo de Manila High School in 1989, entered the Philippine Military Academy, and became an Ensign in the Philippine Navy in 1993. He was assigned as cargo master, on a Navy ship.

He discovered that the cargo being loaded onto his vessel included logs that were cut down illegally, were carried to the ship illegally, and were destined to be sold, illegally. Then there were 50 sacks of flour, which were not flour, but shabu - worth billions. Literally, billions. And there were military weapons which were destined for sale to the Abu Sayyaf.

He felt that he could not approve this cargo.

Superior officers came to him and said: "Please! Be reasonable! This is big business. It involves many important people. Approve this cargo." But Phillip could not, in conscience, sign approval.

Then his parents received two phone calls, saying: "Get your son off that ship! He is going to be killed!" When Phillip was given leave at home, his family begged him not to go back. Their efforts at persuasion continued until his last night at home, when Phillip was already in bed.

His father came to him and said: "Please, son, resign your commission. Give up your m ilitary career. Don't go back. We want you alive. If you go back to that ship, it will be the end of you!" But Phillip said to his father: "Kawawa ang bayan!" And he went back to the ship.

The scheduled trip was very brief - from Cavite to Roxas Boulevard - it usually took only 45 minutes. But on September 27, 1995 , it took one hour and a half. When the ship arrived at Roxas Boulevard, Ensign Pestaño was dead.

The body was in his stateroom, with a pistol, and a letter saying that he was committing suicide. The family realized at once that the letter was forged. They tried desperately for justice, carrying the case right up to the Senate.

The Senatorial Investigation Committee examined all the evidence, carefully. Then they issued an official statement, saying among other things: Ensign Phillip Pestaño did not commit suicide. He was murdered. He was shot through the head, somewhere outside of his stateroom, and the body was carried to his room and placed in the bed. The crime was committed by more than one person. In spite of these findings, by the Senate, the family could not get justice. The case is still recorded, by the Navy, as suicide. For 12 years they have been knocking at the doors of those in power, to no avail. Now they realize that they should knock on the door of Him who said: "Knock, and it shall be opened to you. Ask and you shall receive. Seek, and you shall find."

So they are asking all of the friends of Phillip from the Ateneo, from the PMA, friends of the family - including the girl he was engaged to marry - to say this prayer:

"Lord, we know that Phillip is safe with you, and will be safe forever, because he gave up his life, as You gave up Your life - for justice. If it is Your will, please let the truth be known of his heroic courage and strength and love of country. Let justice be rendered here on earth. But if it is not Your will that justice be rendered here, give each of us the grace to live and die as he did - following in Your footsteps.
And at the last judgment, Lord, when all that is hidden will be known, let Phillip be seen as he really is - a brave young man who gave his life for honesty, truth, and justice."

Phillip Pestaño died at the age of 24. He was scheduled to be married in January of 1996, four months after he was murdered. He was a martyr. A martyr is one who dies for the faith or for a Christian virtue. Phillip died for a Christian virtue - justice. It is not likely that he will ever be canonized, but he takes his place among the Unknown Saints.

Some military men are killed in battle. They are given a hero's burial. But Phillip died for a much deeper cause - he was trying to preserve the integrity of our Armed Forces. He died out of loyalty to the Philippines, in an effort to keep the oath that he made when he graduated from the Military Academy.

Graft and corruption are the curse of this nation. But when they take root in the heart of our Armed Forces, they threaten our existence as an independent, democratic country.

The family of Phillip Pestaño is doing the right thing. They are turning to God. They are praying that justice will be administered here, in our country, in our day. But if this is not God's will, then let us at least try to preserve the ideal of integrity in every mind and heart and soul.

Let's forward this message to every freedom-loving Pinoy in our list. Thank you.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

LIFE IS A JOURNEY



A corollary water imagery came alive to my mind as I watched this thought provoking video. I remembered admiring a beautiful snapshot of flashy sailboats anchored safely in a harbor of calm and undisturbed waters.  In the background were expensive rest houses and gorgeous hillsides. The water was surreal.  The sailboats were shining in the sun. The words on the poster read, "Ships in a harbor are safe. But that's not what ships are for!"

" Life is not a destination; it is a journey," we are reminded by those who hve fathomed the depths of life. Sometimes, when we have docked our lives into a safe harbor, it is so easy to forget our life's journey and to just be content to rest at anchor. Just like the disciples who saw the transfiguration of Jesus, every time we had a "retreat experience" it is so tempting to just stay close to the clouds and not go down from the mountain.  We tend to stay where we are comfortable and safe.

Let us remember and pray for those who are moving forward in their life's journey, including our loved ones, our friends, even ourselves.  That as we move from our comfort zones and transition into major life changes, may we be encouraged and empowered by these journey wisdom.

May we rely on our ever-deepening faith in our Pilgrim God to propel us to risk the open seas, to continue sailing into unknown waters and to encounter wrath of storms and winds once again. Let us hold each other close in our hearts and speak our prayers with hope and joy!

A Prayer
by Francis Drake (1577)

Disturb us, Lord, when we are too well pleased with ourselves
When our dreams have come true because we dreamed too little,
When we arrived safely, because we sailed too close to the shore.

Disturb us, Lord, when with the abundance of things we possess
We have lost our thirst for the Waters of Life;
Having fallen in love with life, we have ceased to dream of eternity
And in our efforts to build a new earth,
We have allowed our vision of the new Heaven to dim.
Disturb us, Lord, to dare more boldly,
To venture on wider seas where storms will show your mastery:
Where losing sight of land,we shall find the stars.
We ask you to push back the horizons of our hopes;
And to push us in the future
in strength, courage, hope, and love.

This we ask in the name of our Captain, who is Jesus Christ.

Graced Margins of our Lives begin when we dare to leave behind our comfort zones!

"Twenty years from now, you will be disappointed
by the things that you did not do
than by the things that you did do.
So throw off the bowlines. 
Sail away from the safe harbor.
Catch the trade winds in your sails.
Explore!
Dream!
Discover!"
-Mark Twain-


Click to See Other Ship Snapshot!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/exequiel_mapa/6782993537/in/photostream/

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

'Sex abuse is the Catholic 9/11'

'Sex abuse is the Catholic 9/11' Interesting parallelism here between what happened to the United States during the 9/11 attack and the sex abuse scandal in the Vatican! It argues that as the invincible formidability of the US has been challenged by the unexpected terrorristic attack of 9/11, also the Vatican's representative cultural role has been changed in the midst of this sex abuse scandal issues on all sides.

Massimo Franco in his book entitled C'era Una Volta un Vaticano ("Once Upon a Time, there was a Vatican"), has proposed that the underlying the PR melt down and internal crises of the Vatican under Benedict XVI lies a "radical historical shift - from the Vatican as the chaplain of the West, to the Vatican as representative of a minority subculture." Franco arues that "for centuries, the Vatican thought and acted like the representative of a cultural majority in the West – a mentality forged in the era of Christendom, and given new life during the Cold War, when the Vatican and the great Western powers were fundamentally on the same page. It’s no longer adequate to the changed cultural landscape of the 21st century, he says – and the inability of senior Vatican personnel to adapt to this new world is the fundamental force, he argues, beneath their apparent disorientation."

Massiimo Franco, is a veteran journalist of Corriere della Serra, Italy's most prestigious daily newspaper.