Change is coming indeed. We will have two inaugurations instead of a joint one this year. In a clear break from tradition, protocol and post-election healing, our President has opted to take his oath at Malacañang, while the Vice President takes hers in the Quezon City Reception House or Executive House in New Manila, Quezon City.
MENTION of cultural heritage often brings to mind our colonial structures from the Spanish era to the American period, never...
A thread started with a casual conversation on Monday morning, with Felice Sta. Maria posting a section of an endpaper from her book, the “Governor-General’s Kitchen,” which I designed about 10 years ago.
The First Philippine Republic’s 116th anniversary in Malolos shows reliving history can be fun and exciting.
The people of Malolos, Bulacan, should feel privileged to live and walk in such a historic town, now a city. Every street is rich in history.
Heritage advocates in Malolos, Bulacan, are opposing the planned demolition of the city’s 91-year-old water tank, a structure presumed important cultural property under the National Heritage Law.
When I visited my aunt Charito Sambile, my cousin Rosen offered me empanada with a crust that resembled thin layers of rippled gold fabric. It was a work of art.
Beyond the iconic Barasoain Church in the bustling Bulacan provincial capital of Malolos are heritage structures and areas that tourists, and even residents, could explore to appreciate the city’s important place in shaping Philippine history.
The day the country’s founding fathers ratified Philippine independence in Malolos in 1898 seems to have been a busy one, including the stomachs of the revolutionaries.
The Diocese Malolos has a new parish church right in the capital of Bulacan, near the border of Plaridel. It has been canonically dedicated to the Santisima Trinidad (Holy Trinity) by Malolos Bishop José Oliveros.