Book recalls ‘Aquino Legacy’
YESTERDAY, Aug. 21, marked 33 years since the death of Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. It is the best opportunity to discover “The Aquino Legacy: An Enduring Narrative,” the book
YESTERDAY, Aug. 21, marked 33 years since the death of Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. It is the best opportunity to discover “The Aquino Legacy: An Enduring Narrative,” the book
For a certain group of Filipinos, the word “tarmac” will always be synonymous with “Ninoy.”
IN HIS last address to the nation, P-Noy presented a short documentary telling the story of our country. The point of view is from our generation, as seen from his 13-year-old eyes, the time his father, then Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr., was unjustly imprisoned.
President Benigno Aquino III on Thursday compared his parents’ love story to the difficult quest for the country’s next President.
Millennials who have no memory of martial law and the late Sen. Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino Jr. now have a book that might well be written with them in mind.
Secretary Voltaire T. Gazmin pulls out his smartphone and turns on an app that details the number of days left before he leaves the Department of National Defense.
Your mantra for the week: “The gift of love is the best gift in the world.”
This compilation covers a wide range of testimonies and writings on what life and governance were like during martial law.
Sad but true: Most Filipinos do not seem to have a profound sense of history. Those who do, tend to be more knowledgeable about the distant, rather than the recent, past. The so-called martial law babies, for instance, might be more familiar with the martyrdom of Jose Rizal than of Ninoy Aquino.
Forty-one years ago, on Sept. 22, I reported to the pre-martial law Graphic Magazine office in Port Area only to find it closed.
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