Growing up
in Doruelo country is a bad preparation for a study in Marawi, though I recall
no such apprehensions when I was first presented the opportunity. It was April
or May of 1980 and I was on my first job right after high school as a salesgirl
at a tiny bazaar in the Supermarket area in Cotabato City, selling fake Levi
pants and RTWs, and here came my sister Sheila with a thick wad of paper
postmarked Mindanao State University, Marawi City. I was sixteen and my world
was my Grandmother’s house in the barrio and the rice fields in another barrio
where I would sometimes go with my mother and an aunt, to weed a neighbor’s
farm or join a harvest team. Marawi, then as now, did not sound like big
beautiful city, but for a confined, provincial girl, it boded well, like a
promise of a new horizon. I recall my Lola’s tears, my elders’ fears: Kamusliman, they kept on saying, which
meant Moros-infested, a country of traitors: it was no safe place for me. My
mother was standing by the window, not saying anything to discourage me, while
my cousins surrounded me, proffering all kinds of warnings and good advice; if
she had her way, I knew she would send me to the best school: all her life all
she wanted was an education for herself, which Grandmother denied her, she
said, and so she got stuck with the six of us and a husband who was a
philanderer until he was gunned down, yes, by a Muslim he made a score with, and yes, on his way to see his woman, while walking along Magallanes Street down across Dawn's Hotel.
The wad of papers said partial
scholarship, and stipulated free tuition, free lodgings in the college
dormitory, book allowance and a monthly stipend of two hundred compared to the
full scholar’s three hundred which, considering the impecunious poverty we were
used to, was generous enough. I could hear my mother’s heartbeat going for it: Get
it! Get out of here! Get away!
It was an eight-hour boat ride aboard M/L Farida from the docks of Cotabato to
the docks of Pagadian, and another seven hours across a rough road between
Pagadian and Iligan. I was with three or four other kababayans, Engineering
students in the higher year of the school I was going to. I remember them distinctly
well, mainly because they were provincial like me, they all came from Libungan,
a sleepy town next to ours slinking along rice paddies, Rolly, Elma, Rita, Virgie. I don’t know what became of them now, except for
Elma who was to be shot on the same or maybe another Pagadian-bound boat we had no choice but board, M/L Aida, by a boyfriend from the
Army, many years later, for breaking it up with him. Rolly was a friend, helpful during that first trip
I made, telling me about the sights I would see, the things I would find, like
it was a good beautiful place I was going to with them. Virgie sat by, and would
tell me later that Rolly got a little crush on me. Rolly never had the courage to
proposition me, probably thought I would marry into wealth and prosperity and wouldn’t
do to suffer him or anyone else; it was Virgie who would proposition me, later,
way way down the years, after one marriage and one miscarriage and a couple of live-in
arrangements with girls she got to know abroad, in the Middle East and Malaysia
before jail and deportment. In the dorm on campus she used to play bodyguard to
me, shooing away the Maranao tomboys who couldnt wait to shag me.