Rohan is a friend who runs a video bar at the Capitol Site
in Jolo that has become a hangout for lesbians and their dates from the
campuses across the road. She has a niece who was a gf to a TL officer and the
niece used to snitch, steal from her to give to the lesbian cad. She knows the gang
I work with are survivalists of the highest order: if they could steal from
their own kin, for sure they could do worse things to me. One time that I was
in haste, I left in the vicinity a cell phone I borrowed from the house I was
staying in. When I went back to retrieve it, it was no longer where I thought I
mislaid it. How Rohan got angry, raising her voice and almost overturning the
table. That I should lose a thing in her shop! Out came the cell phone, from
the pocket of the thief.
“Here, you left it here
in between the songbook.”
“Oh. I left it there?!?
Thank you for finding it!”
We hugged like the best friends that we are, the thief and
I, and I was really grateful, exceedingly happy, having been forgiven for not
letting her get away with it. At departure she followed me to the waiting cab,
“Kah Sheh, gimme fifteen or else.” I gave her twenty and promised a chocolate
bar, she really is improving by the hour, talentwise, though it could be that
she was just a little high on something. That smell on her breath!
Rohan and I, we have this plan of putting up a snack house,
a way to employ the thieves at Tumba Lata, we said, so that they will stop
thinking they joined Tumba Lata so that they can collect money for just being
members. For this is what the women in the NGOs here, the gatekeepers and `moral
guardians of all things good and true, taught them, by example, and had been
blackmailing me into doing: what the USAID and UNDP did to them. People sign
their names up for this or that project, their idea of being organized, then
they go to a hotel for a seminar on peace, conflict mediation, human rights,
all expenses paid, and for attending they are to be given P400 to P500 per day.
It did a lot to reenforce the slash-and-burn economy, the patronage system, the
mercenary in the tribe. If you are a nakurah,
a team leader, head of an organization, or foreman, you ought to be able to
deliver this goodie. Or you’re no good.
When in another island a local organizer presented Manila
guys a budget informed by this kind of monetary demand, the Manila guys fled,
abrogating unilaterally the treaty of friendship with the local organizer and his
tribe. The tribe did not hang him; he was one of them, his loss was their loss.
He was nevertheless embarrassed, both ways. The tribe was not embarrassed, they
forgave him; the Manila guys were not, they are thick like elephants; it was a
hold-up. If they cannot get back soon, the tribe will welcome them later; they
have money, the tribe does not.
In Jolo, every program, every project set up is bound to be
captured by this kind of gunpoint diplomacy. The surest way to make people defect
is to not abide. As though you could actually
refuse, if there was money, and as
though they could actually shoot you in the head if they liked. But it can be very tacky in a long way: They think you can
obtain easy money and lots of money from funders abroad on demand because you
are a writer, that is what writers do, sit on their butts and scribble and
money will keep on dribbling in. If you tell them that one reason it is very
difficult to get funding for Sulu is because of this toll tax system, tell them
can’t they see NGO work is not like Cotabato to Malabang highway where checkpoint
robbery is SOP, they will be snoring on your homily. They also couldn’t care
even if you told them that some NGOs in Manila have even learned to exploit this
problem to cover for their own financial anomalies; couldn’t care if these NGOs
want to do away with your head, too, for knowing what you know, and for being rude,
rather than wise, in the knowledge.
It is a throwback to plain banditry, civilization is
elsewhere. Bounty is all, and share in the booty is what matters. It is taken
for granted that ODA, civil society money, feminist fund or whatever you have there,
is tribute money, tithe, resource that have to be extracted, in service of
slave society and the unoverthrown sultanate. No wonder that in the debate over
the Royal claim in Sabah, all people want to know is whether they will have a
share in case the Kirams would be able to collect the 749 million dollars
proprietary claims from the government of Malaysia. So what if there is a war
in Sabah, for as long as they are not going to do the fighting and the
evacuating themselves.
And if they could not care about the war in Sabah, why
should they care about rape, about lesbianism, about story writing, which is
courting trouble and will only bring harm to the children. Aykamu magkahagad-hagad ha Bisaya yan, makarara, maytah, hikasin niyu
yan? Don’t go with that interloper, that Bisaya runaway, she will just take
you to harm’s way, why, will you get any money from going with her?
For the bottomline is, this is just a racket, because
Mindanao and Manila NGOs do that all the time, sell the poverty, the war, the
peace, the women, the halaws, the HRVs, the gang rape, all the Bangsamoro
issues there is to sell to the funding agencies and churches abroad, to make
money, to buy themselves all those gadgets, to get themselves those offices, those
tabs and top-of the-line gadgets, those Land Rovers they ride in their peace
caravans.
Since I began doing work among the cads in Jolo, all sorts
of accusations have been thrown my way. That
I am not a lesbian before (true); that I got a crush on Vaness (not true: I
love Vaness); that I favour Mherz (true: I trust Mherz’s street-smart ass and
sense of self-preservation). And very recently, that I have been gangraped. We
were discussing the possible areas of cooperation between Tumba Lata and the Sulu Province Women Council, and suddenly,
the woman elder across the table asked me: Is it true that you have been
gangraped? I heard from somewhere.
If that would hold me up and make me more entitled to doing anti-rape and gender
justice work, and not make more Tausug men want to marry me (I am the way I am,
the men say, because I have never tasted the love of a man, LoL), I would own
up to being gang-raped.