No 1045, District 25, Under The United Grand Lodge of New South Wales & ACT Australia [Views herein does not necessarily reflect those of LJR 1045 & UGL NSW & ACT.]

Monday, November 21, 2011

Roster of Members

Foundation Members

Bro Numeriano 'Nomer' Adriano [resigned]
WBro Mario Baylon Jr
[Lincoln Lodge No 34 GLP]
Bro Joel Joseph Cabides
Bro Eulogio 'Butch' Canicula
W Bro Israel 'Izzy' de Guzman
W Bro Russell 'Russ' Dobson
W Bro Marcelino 'Mar' Driza
Bro Jose Dan Elizes
W Bro Godofredo 'Fred' Enriquez [deceased]
 W Bro Micvi 'Mick' Fidel
W Bro Vicente 'Vince' Flores
VW Bro Rolando 'Rolly' Manarang, PDGDC
RW Bro Emmanuel 'Manny' Maniago, PAGM
 W Bro Roland Martinez
W Bro Herminigildo 'Hermie' Mateo
Bro Solovin 'Sol' Paje [resigned]
Bro Roy Purificacion [resigned]
RW Bro Fidencio 'Fidel' Pamplona, PSGW
W Bro Manuel 'Manny' Placido
RW Bro Rey Porras, PSGW
W Bro Kristan Regalado
Bro Vedasto 'Ved' Reyes [resigned]
[Lincoln Lodge No 34 GLP]
VW Bro Rodolfo 'Rudy' Romerosa, PDGDC
Bro Julio 'Jay' Roson
W Bro Manuel 'Manny' Santos
 W Bro Antonio 'Tony' Saputil
W Bro Alfredo 'Fred' Sese
W Bro Jacinto 'Jack' Sta Maria
Bro Roberto Urqueza

Members/Affiliates

Bro Larry Pamplona
Bro Daniel Vincent Placido
W Bro Roberto 'Bobby' Maneze
Bro Meinardo 'Meynard' Leonor [a] [resigned]
Bro Myles Eusebio [a]
 [Lodge Blacktown Kildare 393]
Bro Paolo Beringuel [a]
Bro Troy Quimpo
Bro Roderick 'Eric' Buenavista
W Bro Pritam Singh [a]
 W Bro Honesto 'Nesty' Bangcoro [a]
W Bro Ramon Fio [a]
W Bro Khris Albano, G Standard Bearer
 [Dalisay Lodge No 14 GLP]
Bro Rajeev Kalra
Bro Oscar 'Ohkah' Eugenio
Bro Oliver Gadista
Bro Rommel Cruz
Bro Justin Bayliff
VW Bro Remigio 'Romy" Nieto [a], PDGDC
Bro Crezalde 'Zaldy' Pagala
Bro Bienvenido Palad
Bro Miguel Vicente Santiago
Bro Roberto 'Obet' Castor
Bro Kim Siv Hour
W Bro Ian Harrison [resigned]
Bro JoMar Crisostomo
Bro Arnel Santos
Bro Noel Gosiengfiao
RW Bro Brian Malcolm Potter, PJGW [a]
Bro Dr Raul Amor [a]
Bro Alexander 'Alex' Casas [a]
Bro Timothy 'Tim' Glanville
Bro Gerardo 'Gerry' Musa [a]
Bro James 'Jim' Holdsworth [a]
Bro Sebastian 'Bong" Canicula III, FCF
Bro Ferdinand Sitchon, FCF
Bro Reggie Acre, EAF
W Bro Arnel DM Landicho, [a], Grand Sword Bearer
[Lodge Camden No 217]
Bro Gothemberg Roque, EA
[a] Affiliated

Lodge Committees 2011-2012

Management Committee

WM - VW Bro Rudy Romerosa, PDGDC
SW - Bro Manny Santos
JW - Bro Manny Placido
Lodge Officers

Trustees

RW Bro Fidel Pamplona, JGW
RW Bro Manny Maniago, SGW
VW Bro Rudy Romerosa, PDGDC
Bro Mario Baylon Jr
Bro Manny Santos

Ritual, Mentoring & Education Committee

DC - RW Bro Rey Porras, PJGW
Assistant Director of Ceremonies
Senior Warden - Bro Manny Santos
Education Officer
Membership Officer[s]- W Bro Rolly Manarang
and other qualified members

Nominations/Benevolence Committee

WM - VW Bro Rudy Romerosa, PDGDC
SW - Bro Manny Santos
JW - Bro Manny Placido
Secreatry - RW Bro Manny Maniago, SGW
Treasurer - RW Bro Fidel Pamplona, JGW
and Trustees

masoniCare [Caring] Committee

masoniCare Officer - Bro Fred Sese
masoniCare Officer - Bro Tony Saputil
Secretary - RW Bro Manny Maniago, SGW
Treasurer - RW Bro Fidel Pamplona, JGW
& other interested Officers & Members

Auditors

Bro Roland Martinez
Bro Vedasto 'Ved' Reyes

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Officers for 2011-2012



From left: RW Bro Manny Maniago, VW Bro Rudy Romerosa & RW Bro Fidel Pamplona
[Photo courtesy of W Bro Romy Nieto]

Worshipful Master - VW Bro Rodolfo 'Rudy' Romerosa, PDGDC

Immediate Past Master - RW Bro Fidencio 'Fidel' Pamplona, JGW

Senior Warden - Bro Manuel 'Manny' Santos

Junior Warden -  Bro Manuel 'Manny' Placido

Chaplain - W Bro Jacinto 'Jack' Sta Maria

Treasurer - RW Bro Fidencio 'Fidel' Pamplona, JGW

Secretary - RW Bro Emmanuel 'Manny' Maniago, SGW

Director of Ceremonies - RW Bro Rey Porras, PGJW

Senior Deacon - Bro Mario Baylon Jr

Junior Deacon - Bro Micvi 'Mick' Fidel

Director of Music - W Bro Herminigildo 'Hermie' Mateo

Organist [via computer]  - Bro Edward 'Ed' Banting

Membership Officer[s] - W Bro Rolando 'Rolly' Manarang

masoniCare [Caring] Officers - Bro Afredo 'Fred' Sese & Bro Antonio 'Tony' Saputil

Inner Guard - Bro Myles Jose Eusebio

Stewards - Bro Larry Pamplona, Bro Daniel Placido, Bro Richard Eusebio & Bro Paolo Beringuel

Tyler - TBA

Lodge Mentor/Education Officer - RW Bro Rey Porras, PJGW [PRGC]


Regional Grand Councillor - RW Bro William 'Bill' McBey [Jennie]

District Grand Inspector of Workings - VW Bro Paul Larbalestier [Diana] 

Looking Back: Rizal as teacher and pupil

By: Ambeth R. Ocampo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
Tuesday, November 15th, 2011
 
"Last weekend I accompanied the Reading Association of the Philippines on a pilgrimage to Dapitan. Since most of the members were teachers, I advised them to soak in the atmosphere of the place and appreciate being able to literally tread the ground Jose Rizal walked on during his exile there from 1892-1896. To me as a teacher, the most relevant artifacts on display were the original table and blackboard (actually just a slab of Philippine hardwood) that Rizal used in his makeshift school for boys there. Everything else in Dapitan is a reconstruction of the original structures that once stood there. Thus, Dapitan, like Emilio Aguinaldo’s eccentric mansion in Kawit, is one of my favorite historic sites because it has not changed much since our heroes lived there.

"Dapitan was a social laboratory where Rizal put most of his ideas into action: he improved the town plaza and landscaped the ground with a relief map of Mindanao—a map that exists to this day; he taught the Dapiteños how to fish with a net and gave them their first taste of fluffy bread; he opened a sari-sari store, a school, and learned more about mangkukulam and herbal medicine in his effort to improve public health; he built a water supply system, tried his hand at the abaca- and brick-manufacturing business; he tilled the land and tended fruit-bearing trees on an estate bought from his winnings from the lottery.

"This is the Rizal that people have to re-discover in order to make him relevant to modern times. Rizal did not just write the “Noli me tangere,” the “El Filibusterismo,” and the “Ultimo Adios,” he wrote much more for a nation that does not read. Each time I go to Dapitan I re-read his letters to his family for here we see a plain Rizal, a Rizal without the overcoat, a Rizal who is heroic, although at the time those letters were written, he was yet to be executed to become a “National Hero” later.

"Anyone who reads the Rizal family correspondence will discover his nine sisters like Narcisa Lopez, his favorite, whose nickname Sisa is immortalized as a tragic character in the “Noli.” Sisa wrote him on Feb. 27, 1886, saying: “I suppose you don’t know yet that I’m now the mother of six children. In this letter you will see the names of the three older ones (in their own handwriting), and of the last ones, the older was Isabel, the deceased one, and the two, one girl and one boy, are called Consolación and Leoncio López, who is as fat as a melon. The children of Sra. Neneng are three: They are called Alfredo, Adela and Abelardo. Olimpia’s shortly will be three, like Sra. Neneng’s. The two who are not here are called Aristeo and Cesario; the older one called Aristeo, what a lively boy he is! His godfather is Sr. Paciano. He will be a useful boy when he gets older. At the age of two, he already knows a great deal. He is the only consolation of our parents, I tell you, because when you see this child, even if you are angry, you will be obliged to laugh, he is so funny.”

"Based on the above and the fact that Rizal came from a brood of 11 children, one can only wonder what his stand would be on the RH bill had he lived today. His large family was a constant ray of sunshine when he was homesick in Europe, and we can only imagine what joy Rizal got from letters. Another sister, Lucia Herbosa, in a letter dated Nov. 13, 1882, described a son born to her in 1882, whom they named Jose: “I amuse myself with José’s ear, which is like yours. I tell you that it is really like yours, but I pray that the likeness does not stop there, but that he may have your disposition, your goodness and diligence in good works.”

"In July 1886 Lucia’s husband wrote Rizal about their daughter Delfina who was suffering from “a little inflammation of (the) eye, which is the cause of her absence from school. What a pity she did not become a boy! She is bright and very studious. Her mother is always telling her not to read because her inflammation might worsen, but she is so hardheaded.” Imagine, a child insistent on reading! Twelve years later, in 1898, Delfina would assist Marcela Agoncillo in Hong Kong in the sewing and embroidering of the first Philippine flag.

"Even Paciano, Rizal’s older brother, was concerned about education, asking Rizal in July 1886: “Furnish me with information of the best schools there. We have many nephews, most of them promising. It is a pity that these ones should fall into the hands of teachers who teach unwillingly and do so only for show. It is true that they inculcate in children very sane principles, such as fear and humility, the first being the beginning of wisdom and the second of apostolic and civic virtue, but it is also true that fear and humility lead to dullness.” Rizal replied that “children are not allowed to be themselves, to make noise or to play. Instead, they are made to recite the rosary and novena until the poor youngsters become very sleepy and understand nothing of what is going on. Consequently, when they reach the age of reason, they pray just as they have prayed when they were children without understanding what they are saying; they fall asleep or think of nonsense. Nothing can destroy a thing more than the abuse of it, and praying can also be abused.”

"We must not forget that the Philippines’ National Hero was not born great, he evolved over time, developing as a hero amid interaction with his family."


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