Saturday, January 19, 2008

Like bamboos in the wind.

My Father Goes to Court and How My Brother Leon Brought Home A Wife

The Filipino trait that is evident in both stories is the value given to family. While Bulosan explores the Filipino's jolly nature and queer "philosophy," and Arguilla our dependence on agriculture (growth, seasons) and capacity for love, family reigns most important in how the Bulosan's poor father defends his family's health and joy, and how Arguilla's Baldo seeks for what is best for his brother and family by testing Maria. (On an off note, the reference to papayas in My Brother Leon may have mirrored most Filipinos' desire to have white skin. Or, it could just be me being silly.) Close family ties is one value that, despite changes in our [youth's] turn to independence and our progress towards things like career and technology, remains in Filipinos up to this day.

What could also be realised in the first two stories is how resilient Filipinos can be. This could be seen not only in the message their plot relays but through the way each piece was composed. My Father Goes to Court, for one, is said to have been written for a foreign audience. The language by which it is structured showed how Filipino culture could be communicated, shared to others. In How My Brother Leon Brought Home a Wife, on the other hand, though its deeper meaning may not be easily grasped by people not familiar with the Filipino life and ideals, presents its strength in that itself: it is a story so simple, anyone would be able to relate to it - to the anxiety at welcoming a stranger as showed by Baldo, the confidence in love as exuded by Leon, and the power to prove one's self worthy of someone as seen in Maria - but only a people who have experienced the same kind of trials that the society from which the story airs can truly be feel in their hearts and be proud of with their souls.

No comments: