Fellow diplomats pay emotional tribute to Leticia Ramos Shahani
By Michaela Del Callar
Reprinted from http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/604573/news/nation/fellow-diplomats-pay-emotional-tribute-to-leticia-ramos-shahani
24 March 2017
The Department of Foreign Affairs paid tribute on Friday to
their late fellow diplomat Leticia Ramos-Shahani, who helped nurture Philippine
diplomacy, fought for women's rights and called on Filipinos to staunchly
defend the country's rights in the South China Sea – at the shores of which she
grew up.
Acting Foreign Secretary Enrique Manalo and United Nations
official Ola Almgren led the mourners who recalled the various exploits of
Ramos-Shahani, who died Monday of colon cancer. She was 87.
Her flag-draped gold coffin was brought to the Apolinario
Mabini Hall of the DFA for an emotional necrological rite attended by her
family, which included her brother, former President Fidel Ramos, and retired
and active Filipino diplomats.
Manalo said the former diplomat turned Senator "ardently
championed and supported causes of the Philippine Foreign Service" on both
fronts.
"The DFA family mourns the passing of a renowned
diplomat, an outstanding legislator and most of all a dear, respected and
beloved colleague," he said.
Ramos-Shahani will always be remembered for authoring the
Philippine Foreign Service Act of 1991.
The law, Manalo said, "ensured the department's
continued primacy in the nation's foreign relations."
"The Philippine Foreign Service is where it is today
because of Sen. Shahani's forward-looking vision," he said.
Born on September 30, 1929 in Lingayen, Pangasinan, Shahani
was the daughter of late Foreign Affairs Secretary Narciso Ramos and Angela
Valdez. She was the younger sister of former President Fidel V Ramos.
Career diplomat
A deft career diplomat, Shahani was the first Filipina
ambassador assigned to a communist state, having served as ambassador to
Romania with concurrent jurisdiction on Hungary and East Germany from 1975 to
1980.
She was also the first female senator to be elected as
Senate President Pro-Tempore in the 9th and 10th Congresses.
Fondly called by colleagues and close friends as Manang
Letty, Ramos-Shahani was among the highest-ranking women at the United Nations,
having served as Assistant Secretary-General for social development and
humanitarian affairs from 1981 to 1986.
She co-authored the UN Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women, was chair of the UN Commission on Women
and secretary general of both the Third UN Conference on Women and Seventh
Congress on Crime Prevention and Treatment of Offenders in 1985.
To the UN, Ramos-Shahani "will long be remembered and
appreciated as the gains of her work will continue to be felt for generations
to come."
"She demonstrated outstanding leadership and public
service," Almgreen, resident coordinator of the UN Information Center,
said. "Her ideas were ahead of her time."
"Many strive to leave this world in better shape. But
very few positively impact the world the way you did," he added.
Second home
In an emotional eulogy, Ramos-Shahani's daughter, Lila, said
her mother considered the DFA as her "beloved second home."
"Throughout her life, mom dealt with all sorts of
people and all sorts of situations – from communists, strongmen, to UN secretaries
general, from Presidents to activists, from the richest of the rich to the
poorest of the poor," said Lila Shahani.
"As the cancer ravaged her body, her mind remained
sharp and her spirit unfailing till the very end."
Born and raised as a child in Lingayen, Pangasinan, located
in Northern Luzon facing the South China Sea, Lila said her mother always had a
"strong attachment" to the waters now referred by Manila as West
Philippine Sea.
Before her death, Ramos-Shahani has been known as one of the
strongest defenders of the Philippines' claim to South China Sea territories
amid simmering disputes with China, which asserts ownership over nearly the
entire resource-rich waters.
Rear Admiral Rafael Mariano said Ramos-Shahani helped
advance the interest of the Philippines as a maritime nation.
"Her belief is that every Filipino and only the
Filipino has the right over our archipelago," Mariano said. "She was
an epitome of compassion and patriotism."
"She will always be our beacon who shall guide us in
our pursuit of a stronger, better and more credible navy, protecting every inch
of our archipelago and maritime rights," he said.
Passion for
literature
In the midst of all her accomplishments, Ramos-Shahani
nurtured a deep passion for literature.
She graduated with a bachelor's degree in English Literature
from Wellesley College in Massachusetts and went on to pursue her master's
degree in Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York.
Ramos-Shahani finished her Doctor of Philosophy in Comparative
Literature with the highest honors.
"She was independent in many ways but she was also
reasonable in the exercise of her profession as a diplomat, particularly in the
UN," said Rosario Manalo, former ambassador and current Philippine
representative to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
Women.
Former Foreign Secretary Delia Albert called Ramos-Shahani
as a "woman for all seasons," while retired ambassador Rosalinda
Tirona described her as a "feminist and a humanist."
Jun Lozada, an ex-diplomat who later became a congressman,
said her former boss and mentor "was passionate and one of a kind."
Philippine diplomats lamented that Ramos-Shahani's passing
has left a huge void in the Philippine Foreign Service.
They said she was the epitome of a world class Filipina — strong,
intelligent, accomplished, and one who was always passionate about the
Philippines.
"As she was a mother to her children, she was also one
to the DFA," Foreign Secretary Manalo said.
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