by Vinia D. Mukherjee

1989, I was 16, a probee. He was, by campus journalism standards, a seasoned news reporter. The editors had assigned me to be his ‘buddy’ for a story, the topic of which I will probably remember at another time. The afternoon of the deadline, on my way to the Kule office and finding him perched on a ledge in front of the downstairs cafe with a couple of friends, I asked him when we could perhaps sit down and work on the story. Maybe he sensed the concern on my greenhorn face, and he said in Tagalog without budging one bit, ‘It’s alright, Vinia, we have time.’ I was, of course, frazzled. But that was Alecks, and eventually I would find out, that Alecks and ‘chill’ are synonymous. Years later, he would, in a characteristically self-deprecating manner, take the word Tamad and join it with a second word in honour of Bob Marley to come up with a monicker for himself, Rastamad.

But let that favourite nickname not delude you into thinking that he amounted to nothing. Sure, Alecks liked to take his time. But what he came up with, every time, was exemplary. He was a perfectionist, he broke paths with his Web savvy, he was dedicated to his profession, and without him, PCIJ would not have become what it is now.

Much, much more than any of that, Alecks was a dear friend. In the 12 years that I worked with him at PCIJ, we had our differences. There were stretches of time when we would not speak to each other outside of what was required by our professional relationship. After a spell, however, we would both simply snap out of it and start anew. And being friends with Alecks was a perpetual bonus in my former life as a journalist in the Philippines.

Alecks, you will live on in my heart. As someone very dear told me when I lost my father recently, there is no forgetting, only remembering. And I will have enough memories to remember you by. I could try to write them down but even my best effort will not suffice.

Where you are is an infinitely better place. Rest in eternal peace, Alecks.

To Mira, Marlee, and Kaya, may you be embraced by the thought that your Alecks was one fine man, a husband and father who will love you no end.

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