Friday, April 22, 2016

Candido Sibal: Educator, poet, essayist and a public intellectual

Candido Sibal
(December 1, 1932 - April 19, 2016)
Educator, poet, essayist and a public intellectual

“Pagmaragul ke ing Indung Kapampangan! E makatauli king insanu man karing aliwang lalawigan king keyang panyulung king larangan ning bye moral, sosyal, king ekonomiya at magin king bye politika. Ing sangkan, atilu keti king Kapampangan ding memalen at mamuntukan a maka-Dyos, makabalen at maka-tau…” (Candido Sibal, Ing Amlat Ning Kapampangan, 1981)

Candido Sibal is a respectable educator and community servant leader. He is one of the pioneer teachers of Bamban, Tarlac during the difficult and challenging years of the 60s and 70s. Leading a few number of volunteer teachers, he served as the first principal of the then barrio elementary school of Malonzo, which is a very remote village of Bamban and later on assigned to other public schools of his town.
Idolized by many, he was considered a public intellectual by his town mates for he never runs out of wisdom to share especially for those who seek his sound advices and words of encouragement, and also to those who recognizes his dedicated teaching service.


Aside from serving his town mates as an educator, Sibal also made his pen scribbled his thoughts and wisdom in the shape of essays and poems. His “Ing Amlat Ning Kapampangan” (History of Pampanga) is a scholarly work that combines his passion with Kapampangan literature and his knowledge about local history. Indeed, this piece was able to win a second prize in the 1981-1982 annual essay contest sponsored by the Office of the Governor of Pampanga. Prior to this, he already won several other essay writing competitions, one of them being the third prize in the 1980 Don Gonzalo Puyat Memorial Awards.
Sibals’ notable contemporary essayists include Serafin D. Lacson, Felix B. Bautista, Eligio G. Lagman, Silvestre M. Punsalan, and Jose P. Fausto, who wrote from 1921 to 1941. His “Amlat” is among the more recent noteworthy essays together with “Ing Pamilyang Cristiana” (The Christian Family) by Vicente B. Catacutan of Apalit, Pampanga; and “Ing Capampangan, Napun, Ngeni, at Bukas” (The Pampango, Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow) by Vedasto D. Ocampo of Magalang, Pampanga. Most of these writers have been prizewinners in the annual literary contest sponsored by the then Gov. Estelito Mendoza of Pampanga. (JPM)

References:
Hilario-Lacson, Evangelina (1984). Kapampangan Writing, A Selected Compendium and Critique. Manila: National Historical Institute
Icban-Castro, Rosalinda (1981). Literature of the Pampangos. Manila: University of the East
Mallari, Joel P. (2010). Kawatasan: Obrang Poeta Laureado. Center for Kapampangan Studies-Holy Angel University
Manlapaz, Edna Zapanta (1981). Kapampangan Literature, A Historical Survey and Anthology. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press
v38.pdf Date accessed: April 23, 2016
camaligcapampangan Date accessed: April 23, 2016


Photo: Modified after a photograb from a facebook posting of Delfin Sibal

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Kapurpurawan: Ilocos giant windrowers

Kapurpurawan

Ilocos giant windrowers

By Aleesus Manarang


It was only a few weeks back when former Vice President Al Gore visited the country. He is known to many as one of the hardcore advocates of green peace. He is very vocal in promoting the use of renewable resources as part of the needed moves of saving planet earth. And speaking of green energy producers, there stood giant sentinels of modern wind rowers at the heart of Ilocandia and one these sites is in Burgos Kapurpurawan. These are the modern windmills which were erected just a few years back to contribute in the much needed supply of electricity in the region. The construction is primarily for the generation of renewable energy by harnessing the typhoon blowing wind near the western Ilocos coastal margin. However, a big bonus of this huge physics project also brought the creation of tourism industry in the region.

In 1996, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) conducted a wind resource analysis and mapping study. It concluded that various areas in the Philippines are ideal for wind power installation. These areas include Bangui and Burgos towns in Ilocos Norte, Batanes and Babuyan Islands, which are north of Luzon and the higher interior terrain of Mindoro, Samar, Leyte, Panay, Negros, Cebu, Palawan and Eastern Mindanao. The study led to the inception of the wind farm project. NorthWind Power Development Corp. developed (and maintains and operates) the project, while Vestas Wind Systems, a Danish firm, supplied the wind turbine-generator units (WTGs) for the site, similar to those already found in Denmark. The project was to have been developed in three phases. The Kapurpurawan wind farm was commissioned in November 9, 2014 and upon its completion it became the largest wind farm in the country and in Southeast Asia, covering 600 hectares and three barangays of Burgos, namely Saoit, Poblacion and Nagsurot. The project was the first one to be nominated by the Department of Energy as eligible for the department's feed-in tariff scheme.



Ilocandia is always known for its beautiful tourist spots from the heritage and historic sites, rugged coastal margins down to the plantation of corn and tobacco. Today, the landscape is also propelled by these giant wind rowers that never fail to wow the seemingly dwarfed traveling audiences from the low ground. 

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