Leticia Ramos-Shahani: The Accidental Politician
Published 26 March 2017
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/883824/leticia-ramos-shahani-the-accidental-politician
"A politician by accident… who won on luck and
auspicious timing," was how former Sen. Leticia Ramos-Shahani described
herself in a speech at Miriam College's Eminent Women in Politics Lecture
Series in 2007.
"I wanted to be a teacher," added the former
foreign undersecretary, who died of colon cancer on March 20. She was 87.
She explained: "My entry into politics was unplanned. I
returned to Manila in late 1985, while with the United Nations (UN), because my
father (former Foreign Secretary Narciso Ramos) fell very ill…
"When I went to our hometown in Asingan, Pangasinan, to
register to vote for the snap elections, I was anxiously asked by the local
YWCA (Young Women's Christian Association) whom I was supporting for President.
I simply and honestly said: 'I am for change; I am for Cory who can bring about
that change.' This direct, short reply reverberated quickly out of our sleepy
town to the offices of national broadsheets, and the next day I made the headlines
which screamed that a second cousin of President Marcos was for Cory. Without
any TV ads or a campaign machinery, I became nationally known overnight."
Two-term senator
She added: "Somehow without much effort, I had
fulfilled the requirements of a senatorial candidate in this country—a
personality known nationwide, who was now accepted and approved by an
electorate hungry for change."
Shahani became a two-term senator from 1987 to 1998, but
lost her bid for the governor's post in Pangasinan in 1998. "I
underestimated the kind of micro-campaigning required in 1,355 barangays of
Pangasinan, where people were not interested in grand visions for the province
but rather in being gifted with monoblock chairs and toilet bowls, and having
their pictures taken with candidates," she recalled ruefully.
That brief unintended foray into politics might be one of
the few instances when Shahani relied more on happenstance than on planning and
strategy, which characterized her long and illustrious stint as ambassador to
Romania, Hungary and Australia, and as secretary general of the 1985 UN World
Conference of Women in Nairobi.
Upright character
In a memorial service at the Department of Foreign Affairs
(DFA) on Friday, former colleagues recalled the upright character Shahani had
been known for even outside her office. Recounted a DFA colleague, Juan Ona: "I
usually hitched a ride with her on our way to this regular gathering of retired
foreign service officers. She was
serious, soft-spoken and always proper. Once I told her about this foreign
ambassador who was divorcing his wife because he was enamored with a
Filipina. Well, she was not about to be
drawn into gossip. All she said was, "Filipino
women, deadly yan! And that's because
they're so caring."
But she was not above matchmaking, recalled former
ambassador Delia Albert. When they were
together in Berlin, Shahani would needle her about her love life. "Sige na, say yes to Hans. Don't you agree that he looks a bit like Sir
Laurence Olivier?" she told me. I told her, 'what if the DFA asks me to
resign,' which it did? Women in foreign
service were considered security risks when they marry foreigners. But there were 21 male officers married to
foreigners at that time who kept their jobs. So Shahani cited the Convention on
the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women
and said that it would support us…"
Added Albert: "So you see, my boss not just showed us
the way but gave us the means (to get there)."
For the sake of her diplomatic mission, Shahani would even
risk her job, recalled ambassador Rosario Manalo. "It was the height of the Cold War and
she had asked lawyer Minnie Falcon to draft the bill of rights for women that
she would later submit to the UN. (There
were very few women at the UN at the time, so) nobody wanted to co-sponsor it,
except for the woman representative of Russia (the bill eventually passed,) but
in Manila, Foreign Secretary Carlos P. Romulo scolded us about it because (we
had unwittingly aligned with the enemy)."
It was Shahani's unusual ways of training her on the ways of
foreign service that impressed her most, said ambassador Rosalinda Tirona. "Sometimes when we were discussing some
serious matters, she'd put on some classical music—Brahms, Mantovani, Chopin. I
found it very difficult to focus, but later realized that she must have been
training me to learn to concentrate even in times of distraction."
Beating the system
Shahani, who authored such measures as the
Anti-Discrimination Law or Republic Act No. 6725 and the Anti-Rape Law of 1997,
stoked fond memories as well among fellow advocates in the local women's
movement.
Anna Leah Sarabia, who produced Shahani's two-hour radio
talk show "Kayo Naman Po" over dzBB in the early '90s, recalled an
incident recounted to her by another feminist icon and author, Robin Morgan.
Although she was secretary general of the Nairobi
International Conference on Women, Shahani was given a shoestring budget of
only $50,000 because, according to Sarabia, "Robin said the guys at UN
didn't want the conference to be too successful. So Shahani called Robin and poured out her
frustration over this. Robin then called on her friends—Bella Abzug, Gloria
Steinem, friends from Ford Foundation and other women's networks to act as
sponsors." The conference became a
huge success.
Added Sarabia: "I think Robin told me this story to let
me know that even one such pioneer as Shahani would not have made it on her own
because she was trying to change a system so well-entrenched in its disdain for
gender equality (at that time). Fortunately for us, Shahani was so much more
stubborn than the system. When she found that source of an equal and righteous
but untapped power outside the UN, she knew that the system could not stop her."
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