Friday, July 29, 2011

Mt Pinatubo Hiking » Capturing Beauty out of Chaos: Mobile Phone Photography

This is another attempt on mobile phone photography and I think it shows through a little bit of improvement from my previous photos so I´m going to post my Pinatubo set almost entirely, and as such I would like some feedback and advise on my shots because I still find them lacking composition. Sorry about this being such a wall of greens and ashes but the background story in text is rather complex, and deserves a separate post - I’m still editing it (meaning I’m still on lazy-mode) so please bear with me.

I took these photos using my very handy Samsung Galaxy S smartphone during our “Akyat Pinatubo Bloggers Climb for A Cause” last month. Mt. Pinatubo became synonymous with death, destruction and mudflow when it erupted but after a few years, it became a tourist attraction, hence my title “Beauty out of Chaos”

Here take a look:

"Out there"
"Bumpy ride"
"Race to the Horizon"
"Ash Desert"
"White Phantasm"
"Ash Symphony"
"Pinatubo Collage"

"Monuments of Destruction"
"Mystery Mountain"
"Against the White"

"Catching the Fallen Leaf"
"Baptism of the Solitary Wanderer"
"Death of the Evil Tree"
"Ash Caves"
"Pebbled Harmony"
"Rocks in  Bloom"
"Escape of the Ash Leaves"
"Colored Conformity"
"Metamorphosis at Rest"
"Beautiful Lucifer in Paradise"
"Lost Flock"
"Where is Moises"
"Mystery of Death"
"Femme Fatale"

P.S.

Well, it looks like Google got irritated at me for not writing for so long a time and for my intermittent posts and kicked my adsense and traffic round a bit. As a result I review my dusty drafts folder, cringed a lot for the long list of pending articles and decided to go backwards and abandoned chronological posting of my travel adventures.

I’m still editing my “Spiritual Walk to Pinatubo” so I posted this photo set as teaser. After this, I will post something about my recent trip to Hong Kong going all the way back to my pending post about our Quezon and Vigan escapade.

Monday, July 25, 2011

The Burning of Philippine Presidents

I still have to ask, what is the meaning of the burning of Philippine presidents in effigies especially during state of the nation address (SONA)? But then I realized the answer to the question seems obvious. Aside from catching media’s attention it is also like the “Burning of Judas,” a ritual in many Orthodox and Catholic Christian communities, where an effigy of Judas Iscariot is burned.

In the Philippines, burning political figures in effigy usually highlights protests and rallies. These effigies are usually crude representations of a despised political figures especially the President. Burning of these effigies are usually held during State Of the Nation Address (SONA).

The delivery by the President of the Philippines of the SONA is a yearly tradition wherein the President reports on the status of the country, and may also propose to Congress, before which the address is delivered, certain proposals for legislation that are believed to be necessary.

THE BURNING OF P-NOY      Image Source: Yahoo News
Yesterday, July 25, 2011 marks the second State of the Nation Address of President Benigno S. Aquino III. As expected, militants burn the effigy of President Benigno Aquino III during protest along Commonwealth Avenue shortly before P-noy delivers his speech.

THE BURNING OF GLORIA ARROYO    Image Source: Revolutionary Frontlines
However, maybe most Filipinos including me just ignored it because it seems like a street ritual and not protest. Effigy-burning had been a regular spectacle during the SONAs of Aquino’s predecessors. They also burned effigy of former Philippine presidents like Ferdinand Marcos, Erap Estrada and Gloria Arroyo. Fidel Ramos banned effigy burning so he’s spared. They are doing it annually and it is starting to lose its meaning. It is becoming more like a circus.

THE BURNING OF ERAP       Image Source: arkibongbayan.org
The EDSA revolution is a reflection of Philippine’s moments of unity in crisis, which inform us that Filipinos somehow crossed an inner threshold and are changed. Thus moving from one state of political awareness into a more matured society.

THE BURNING OF FERDINAND MARCOS     Image Source: Corbis Images
However, militants will always be militants. Leftists will always be leftists. How many Philippine presidents will they burn? Anthropologists are maybe correct when they generalize these types of activities as "scapegoating rituals".

I am not pro P-noy but hopefully next year we will no longer burn our President. Let us just burn Judas’ effigy on the eve of the new year as a symbol of ridding ourselves of government-blaming and beginning a new year in spiritual purity and unity, free from bishops-in-politics.

In the meantime, may I ask where is the exact address of “Daang Matuwid?” P-noy still failed to guide us there.