Citation for Jovito R.
Salonga
Ramon Magsaysay Award Presentation
Ceremonies
August 31, 2007
Manila, Philippines
Jovito Salonga's
long life began only twenty-two years after the onset of American
rule in the Philippines. His youth was a time of national hope
and longing for independence. These things shaped him, alongside
his family's deep Christian convictions and the hardships of their
daily life. When he was twelve, a speech by the independence-champion
Manuel Roxas in his hometown stirred him to dream of a life in
law and in public life.
Seizing on
this ambition, he rose through public schools to the College of
Law at the University of the Philippines. When war overtook his
studies, Salonga quickly ran afoul of the new Japanese authorities.
He was tortured and jailed and released after nearly a year. Amid
dearth and uncertainty, he crammed for the bar examinations and,
in 1944, earned the highest score.
At war's end,
Salonga embraced Philippine independence but denounced "parity
rights" and other compromising ties to the United States.
He topped off his legal education with graduate degrees from Harvard
and Yale universities and then plunged headlong into the life
of his new nation.
Salonga established
himself as a sought-after lawyer and an influential legal scholar
and educator. In 1961, the Liberal Party tapped him for a successful
run for Congress in his home province of Rizal. Four years later,
he outpolled all other candidates for the Senate-a feat he repeated
twice. He built his reputation as a crusader for clean government
and public education. As a staunch nationalist, he opposed Philippine
complicity in the Vietnam War and other acts of "puppetry."
And he so persistently exposed the troubling anomalies of President
Ferdinand Marcos that the Philippines Free Press named him the
"Nation's Fiscalizer."
The bomb that
crippled him at a political rally in 1971, Salonga says, led him
to a second, "borrowed life." He opposed martial law
from the start, defending opponents of the Marcos dictatorship
and working tirelessly for the succor and release of political
prisoners and for the democratic opposition. In 1980, he himself
was jailed without charges and then released. Four years in exile
followed.
Yet he never
lost hope. In 1985, Salonga returned home to revitalize his political
party and confront the dictatorship. Putting aside personal ambition,
he withdrew his candidacy for vice president in the snap elections
of February 1986 and threw himself heart-and-soul into Corazon
Aquino's presidential campaign and the People Power Revolution.
Afterwards,
Salonga initiated the new government's legal efforts to reclaim
wealth stolen by the Marcoses. In 1987, voters returned him to
the Senate. There, he authored new laws protecting the state from
plunder, military coups, and corrupt officials and, in 1991 as
Senate president, triumphantly led his colleagues in ejecting
American military bases from the Philippines.
Salonga returned
to private life the following year, having made a hotly contested
but disappointing bid for the presidency. But through his NGOs,
Bantay Katarungan (Sentinel of Justice) and Kilosbayan (People's
Action), he has sustained his principled interventions in the
affairs of the nation up till now.
Salonga relishes
the point-and-counterpoint of democratic politics. But to Salonga
politics is not a game. There is a right and a wrong. Democracy
is right. Social justice is right. The rule of law, honest and
competent government, compassion for the poor, pride in country-all
are right.
To be sure,
these are the familiar mantras of Philippine politics. But to
Salonga they are a creed. His rare moral authority stems from
a simple fact: he practices what he preaches.
Today, at
eighty-seven, Salonga urges young people to seek happiness in
service. More important in life than wealth is meaning. We will
find it, he says, if we live "by what we know to be true
and good."
In electing
Jovito Salonga to receive the 2007 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Government
Service, the board of trustees recognizes the exemplary integrity
and substance of his long public career in service to democracy
and good government in the Philippines. (from rmaf.org.ph)
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