July 26, 2007 · Posted in: i Report Features

Mangyan and proud of it

HIS name may not ring a bell to most Filipinos, but to the Mangyan Renato Zosimo Evangelista is a great man — and one they are proud of. Only 34, Evangelista is the first Mangyan to become a lawyer, and he says he will use his knowledge to help his people.

Renato Evangelista, first Mangyan lawyer [photo by Lala Ordenes-Cascolan]The Mangyan are among the many indigenous peoples in the country, and number almost 400,000. They live in the mountains of Mindoro, where they grow vegetables and weave baskets and bags for their livelihood. Inveterate betel-nut chewers, many Mangyan have blackened teeth as a result; even to this day, many of them prefer to go around in g-strings (including the women).

Their history is 3,000 years old, but like other indigenous peoples, the Mangyan have been victims of discrimination, among other things. This was why Evangelista decided to study hard, even if this meant walking for hours down the mountain just to get to school. And when time came for law school and finances were running low, Evangelista looked for sponsors, whom he invited to “be a part of history” by helping a Mangyan earn a law degree.

Read more about his remarkable story that is part of i Report‘s Alien Nation series at pcij.org.

6 Responses to Mangyan and proud of it

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alberto jr abogado

August 1st, 2007 at 3:33 pm

your feature about atty. sozimo evangelista is very very inspirational to say the least ..because for me it is a triumph of an individual against the overwhelming odds…

please continue posting this kind of news… i am not alone for i graduated in high school last 1978 and graduated my college during the centennial year of 1998..through the scholarship of the civil service commission..kudos to the mangyan lawyer and other indigenous persons in this endeavour.. keep it up people..follow the good leader..dios mabalos and mabuhay!!!!

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Danilova

August 3rd, 2007 at 12:16 pm

Remembering the late Dennis Molintas Sr.
(Major of the 66th Infantry Battalion, United States Forces in the Philippines-Northern Luzon, first governor of the old Mt. Province and of the newly-created Benguet Province in 1966, Filipino hero)

— By his grandson, Daniel R. Molintas.

More igorot achievers at:
http://igorotblogger.blogspot.com/search/label/Igorot Achievers

IF OUR family has a measure of insanity, his “flavor” would be labeled these days as manic-obsessive.

MY GRANDFATHER, Dennis Molintas Sr., was obsessed with the abrupt, full scale, instantaneous north-to-south disruption of the Mountain Trail. His files on the movement of the 66 th Infanty Battalion, USFIL-NL movements in World War II (which eventually burned along with his house in 2003) indicate that he monitored enemy deployments and maneuvers on a weekly basis, even years before the actual days of reckoning. The same held true for enemy deployments in Lepanto and Mankayan, Benguet.

Yet, like all heroes, he made mistakes. My Lola says that Igorot troops defending the homeland had missed out the double-layered nature of the Lepanto pillboxes. And this cost them heavily. But he made up for such shortcomings with personal valor, and honor, and loyalty to his men. They felt this and reciprocated with personal loyalty to him.

Later in his retired years, he transferred this obsessiveness to cleanliness and orderliness. His house and garden in Betag, La Trinidad was the epitome of spic and span. Being at heart an agriculturist, a teacher and really just a reluctant hero—one of the first Ibalois sent by the American colonizers to the University of the Philippines in Los Baños to study—his garden was always in perfect order.

In fact, he was very much a conservationist and ecologist, way ahead of his time. He practiced organic farming in the 1960s, before it became the fad. When he spoke of the environment and ecology, he spoke with reverence. His contemporary ex-Baguio Mayor Virginia de Guia still voices the same sentiments.

Lolo Tatang was also a staunch guard of the old school, in terms of honor and integrity. When questioned by Daddy, the ever-rebellious son, as to why he did not bend the rules even a little, when in contrast, even army sergeants were amassing wealth, he replied: “I want you to be able to look at anyone STRAIGHT IN THE EYE.”

The old man Governor Alfredo G. Lamen (yes, the famous Lamen who walked up to Congress in g-string in response to Carlos P. Romulo’s declaration that Igorots were not Filipinos) who was his partner-in-office as Governor and Vice for the old Mountain Province acknowledged to me, when I met him, that honesty was lolo’s flaw. This is why he died a poor man.

SOME people today take Lolo to task for fighting against the Japanese, and for being harsh against enemy collaborators. They say he allowed the Igorots to fight a war that was not their own. World War II, they point out, was a colonizers’ scramble for power and resources.

But what these people do not take into consideration is that Lolo lived at a time where there was no instantaneous communication, there were few newspapers, and only a lot of whispered news of the Rape of Nanking (where some 300,000 Chinese people were raped and killed by Japanese soldiers, an event that remains a thorn in relations between China and Japan today), and of rapes and killings of fellow Filipinos in the lowlands. What they forget is that Japanese troops landed first on the shores of Lingayen Gulf—too close to Igorotlandia—and that the Filipinos were left by their Americans masters to fight off the Japanese invaders by themselves. And that the final battles against Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita were fought deep in the heart of Igorot lands.

Truly, he was more than just the product of his times. And he was not just an “American boy” that the today’s leftists would view him as. For sure, he was more broadminded than a mere American puppet.

Lolo fought the Japanese, but he tried to understand their culture. He had a book on Japanese culture. This attempt to see things in a broader view is, indeed, heroic, when seen in the context of what he personally had to go through during World War II: He was hunted by the Japanese, his father was tortured by Japanese soldiers, his aunt went insane because of psy-war (she was tied to a burning hut, but let free), and he had to see the two captured American Colonels who had appointed him—Arthur Noble and Martin Moses—executed by beheading in full public view at the Baguio Plaza.

He tried to understand the war, even while it was still going on. Among his files I found scholarly British texts on the diplomatic origins of World War I, a book by Lord John Maynard Keynes explaining the economic causes of World War II, novels by a Jewish-Austrian exile, and others. Clearly, something not to be expected from a man of “action”. In these too, we see that Lolo was truly a great man.

THROUGH the years and across the states of conciousness, Lolo’s hand reaches out to bless me. As the eldest male of our family, I have not inherited any sort of material wealth from him. But my Lolo did hand down to me a great legacy: the value of education, of books and of pure learning. And the understanding—that in the midst of the outrageousness of life and of the cynicism of modern times—some things, like honesty and valor, have to be absolute and untransactionable.

Dennis Molintas Sr.’s birthday is on August.

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Anekdota ng Isang Abugadong Mangyan « TALIPANDAS Blog.

August 15th, 2009 at 8:52 am

[…] Mangyan and proud of it […]

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Ma.Cristina C. Bigong

August 31st, 2011 at 10:34 am

thank you for being proud to be a mangyan. You are one of my inspiration because i am mangyan also

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Ma.Cristina C. Bigong

August 31st, 2011 at 10:36 am

Sana marami pang mangyan ang makapagtapos tulad mo…i am very proud of you,atty.

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Ty, Liberato O.

September 26th, 2013 at 1:23 pm

its now 26 years living and serving the mangyans of mindoro. we need a lawyer like “Sosing” na makatutulong sa mga problema ng mga Alangan. Paano kaya namin makokontact si Atty?

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