A long fight begins to save Philippine languages
Arnel Valencia felt humiliated at school when he was barred from using the language he spoke at home, part of a decades-long pattern of linguistic destruction across the Philippines.
Arnel Valencia felt humiliated at school when he was barred from using the language he spoke at home, part of a decades-long pattern of linguistic destruction across the Philippines.
It’s a sunny Saturday afternoon at a penthouse studio along the outskirts of Makati, and in between camera flashes, a group of teenagers are having the time of their lives.
There is nothing like the teen years—coping with youth angst aggravated by hormonal rages over the littlest things, while trying hard not to give in to peer pressure from so-called friends who are also trying to find themselves.
There is nothing like the theater, and theater people, if you ask Nick J. Lizaso, executive director of the International University Theater Association (IUTA) Philippine Center, and a veteran stage
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