A lady of substance – Melito Salazar Jr
Melito Salazar Jr
Reprinted from Manila Bulletin
http://news.mb.com.ph/2017/03/26/a-lady-of-substance/
Reprinted from Manila Bulletin
http://news.mb.com.ph/2017/03/26/a-lady-of-substance/
Last weekend we paid our respects to former Senator Leticia
Ramos Shahani an advocate for the best for the Filipino and the Philippine
nation. I first met Senator Shahani when, as the director of the University of
the Philippines Institute for Small Scale Industries (UPISSI), we assisted her
in the conceptualization and drafting of the Magna Carta for Small Enterprises
(RA 6977) which she authored in the Senate and then Congressman Gary Teves
authored in the House. I found Senator Shahani very conversant with the
situation of the small and medium entrepreneurs as well as down-to-earth and
with a very common-sense approach in creating the legislation that would
provide a nurturing environment for the small businessmen. While I was head of
UPISSI, the country’s pioneer institution in SME and entrepreneurship
development, I became her student in navigating the legislative mill as well as
in arriving at a deeper understanding of the plight of Philippine small
business.
Later on as Undersecretary of Trade and Industry and
vice-chairman and managing head of the Board of Investments, I accompanied
Senator Shahani to Taiwan to promote Philippine investments. Instead of giving
speeches in an investment forum, she preferred that we go on plant visits to
get a better appreciation of Taiwanese business; her view was that we should
identify the kind of Taiwanese business that would have greater effect on the
Philippine economy and not just any enterprise. She was also concerned that the
Taiwanese investors who set up their firms in the Philippines had a good
appreciation of Filipino culture and would treat Filipino workers fairly and
with respect.
While I worked with her on these two issues of small and
medium business development and investment promotion, over the years I had the
opportunity to see her push for her many advocacies.
Former Senator Rene Saguisag,succinctly focused on one such
advocacy, saying in his eulogy: “She served as our expert advocate for an
independent foreign policy. She would not want us to resume being America’s
last plantation nor China’s new one.”
Even when ailing, Senator Shahani reportedly delivered a
fiery speech at the launch of P1NAS, a new alliance to defend Philippine
sovereignty and territorial integrity, and strengthen efforts to forge an
independent foreign policy. Formal diplomacy and tiptoeing around protocols are
not going to help the Philippines thwart a bristling giant encroaching on its
waters and islands, according to her. “We need a mass movement,” she said.
“Citizen Diplomacy is needed to thwart the power play in the West Philippine
Sea.”
Her expertise in diplomacy was of product of education and
experience. After passing the Philippine Foreign Service Officer (FSO)
examination, she held various high positions such as Ambassador to Australia
from 1981 to 1986; secretary-general of the World Conference on the UN Decade
of Women in Nairobi, Kenya in 1985. She became the UN assistant
secretary-general for social and humanitarian affairs. Ramos-Shahani left her
UN post and returned to the Philippines, where in 1987 she was elected a
Senator and became the Deputy Minister for Philippine Affairs after the 1986
EDSA Revolution.
Senator Shahani had a love and passion for education.
Graduating elementary and secondary level at the University of the Philippines,
she finished her Bachelor of Arts in English Literature at Wellesley College in
Massachusetts and her Master in Comparative Literature at Columbia University
in New York. She earned her Doctor of Philosophy in Comparative Literature
after defending her doctoral thesis with highest honors.
A former dean of the Graduate School of Lyceum of the
Philippines, she taught English Literature, French, Spanish, Comparative
Literature, Humanities, Social Psychology and others. She was a member of the
faculty of the University of the Philippines from 1954 to 1957, Queens borough
Community College, New York in 1961, Brooklyn College, New York in 1962 and New
School for Social Research, New York from 1962 to 1967.
Despite her ailment, she would attend religiously the
meetings of the Former Senior Government Officials (FSGO) allowing us to share
of her wisdom and insights. She would even quietly tell me of the carabao milk
and cheese which she produces on her farm where she spends time thinking about
the state of farming in the country and working with farmers to adapt more
efficient forms of farming.
We will miss Senator Leticia Ramos Shahani but her legacy of
nationalism and service to the Filipino people is there for us to emulate..
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