Rica Peralejo recounts time when mom brought her to the EDSA People Power revolution
It’s something that Rica Peralejo thinks affects how she is as a mom now, that is, aware of her civic duties.
It’s something that Rica Peralejo thinks affects how she is as a mom now, that is, aware of her civic duties.
My memory may not be as good as it was, but there just are events in my life I’ll never forget, and one of them is Edsa. No one can take that experience away from me or devalue it in any way without hearing from me.
EDSA Day, Feb. 25, is a romantically important day for me. My hubby Dennis and I first met on this historic day 23 years ago.
“IT WAS kinda like the Battle of Hogwarts,” Jaycee, a 32-year-old training supervisor, said in reference to the 1986 Edsa People Power Revolution. “I think about freedom and democracy.”
There was “discipline” during martial law, they say. The Philippine economy was at its peak during the dictator’s regime, they say. Three decades after the historic
There is a parlor game we used to play in Hong Kong, using the qualities of objects, nature, the seasons, and even music, to pinpoint an individual within a group.
Your mantra for the week: “All is good, all is well, all is perfect in my life.”
It felt like I had the best seat in a full house. I was in a good place in a good month—my birthday month—at a good time during Edsa. I
In 1970, a spoken-word composition called “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised” by American soul and jazz artist Gil Scott-Heron featured haunting lyrics that ended with the line, “The revolution will be live.”
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