Book launch of Prof. Jose Maria Sison’s Combat Neoliberal Globalization and The Guerrilla is like a Poet; plus a rare cultural performance of Prof.Sison with the youth cultural brigade from Anakbayan-Europe, Revolutionaire Eenheid (Revolutionary Unity) and Linangan.#
The rare cultural performance of Prof. Jose Maria Sison
https://josemariasison.org/prof-sisons-latest-book-launched-with-rare-cultural-performance/
PRESS RELEASE
Issued by the sponsors of the book launch of Pro. Jose Maria Sison’s Combat Neoliberal Globalization
July 17, 2017
PROF. SISON’S LATEST BOOK LAUNCHED WITH RARE CULTURAL PERFORMANCE
Professor Jose Maria Sison gamely joined young cultural activists in performing his poem “The Guerrilla is Like a Poet, by singing and reciting the poem while the other cultural performers act out the poem.
This was the highlight of the book launch of Professor Sison’s latest book Combat Neoliberal Globalization (Volume 3 of Selected Writings 2009-2015) and renewed distribution of the book of poems titled, The Guerrilla is Like a Poet, last July 15, 2017 at the Nassaukerk Social Hall in Amsterdam.
Solidarity activists and several compatriots have noted that Professor Sison seldom reads and performs his own poetry in public performances, and his performance during the booklaunch was a rare peek into his poetic and thespian skills.
Unknown to many, Professor Sison has also been a devoted theater artist who has worked with the likes of Lino Brocka and Ishmael Bernal during his years at the University of the Philippines in Diliman, Quezon City. Sison is currently nominated as National Artist for Literature by the Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP).
During the book launch, Yasmin Ahmed, a young activist of the Revolutionaire Eenheid of the Netherlands stressed the importance of Sison’s books in understanding current global events and social, economic and political conditions obtaining not only in the Philippines but also in imperialist countries like the Netherlands.
Ahmed specifically noted the inclusion of statements and letters of condolences and solidarity in Sison’s latest book. She said those statements are not only expressions of grief and solidarity of the author but more importantly an expression of utmost recognition of the contributions of those fallen individuals to the anti-imperialist struggle and to the creation of a world without exploitation and oppression.
Marlon Lacsamana, LGBTQ activist and member of Migrante Den Haag, noted in his review of Sison’s The Guerrilla is Like a Poet, that one has to go through the book to discover what is hidden inside. Like the guerrillas, he said, they are hidden but you know they are there fighting for social justice.
“A guerrilla will continue to fight until injustice is eliminated, and a poet will continue to write until he runs out of inspiration. The people are the inspiration to which the guerrilla will fight, and the poet will write, Lacsamana concluded.
In his brief remarks, Professor Sison gave his audience an overview of the current events and the global capitalist crisis. This has been brought about by neoliberal globalization and the incessant wars unleashed by the US and its NATO allies since the years of 1989 to 1991 when revisionist ruling cliques rapidly, openly and fully restored capitalism in their countries and the Soviet Union collapsed.
He pointed out the intensification of the inter-imperialist contradictions and the struggle for a redivision of the world because of the emergence and rise of China and Russia as capitalist powers. This has resulted in further economic and financial crises and wars and the further strategic decline of the US.
He declared that these conditions cause intolerable suffering and drive the people to resist imperialism and all reaction and strive for national, democracy and socialism. Thus, the world is now in transition to the resurgence and advance of the revolutionary proletariat and oppressed peoples and nations in the anti-imperialist movement and world proletarian revolution.
On the political situation in the Philippines, Sison said the Duterte government is buffeted by a worsening crisis of the ruling system and is accountable for aggravating this crisis. He noted that Duterte has not realized any substantial economic and social policy changes for the better in his one year in office, and has continued to renege on his political promises, specifically to respect agreements inked in the peace negotiations, like the agreement on human rights and international humanitarian law, by not releasing political prisoners.
On the matter of peace talks, Professor Sison stressed that the NDFP continues to be open to the peace process and for continuing the peace talks. He however specifically noted as negative and nonconducive to peace negotiations Duterte’s threat to proclaim martial law nationwide and the continuing carpet bombings of many communities in northern Luzon, the Visayas and Mindanao that have killed many people and have displaced entire communities. He said that because of these the NDFP needs to do tough talking in the upcoming back channel talks between the GRP and NDFP scheduled in the Netherlands.
Many in the audience lined up to have their books signed by Professor Sison at the conclusion of the book launch.
The book launch was organized by Migrante Den Haag, Kabalikat, MKSP, Pinay sa Holland Gabriela, Revolutionaire Eenheid, Anakbayan Europe, Linangan Arts and Culture Network, Migrante Amsterdam, ICCHRP, FREN and NFS.#
For reference:
Mitchy Mallorca Saturay
Linangan Arts and Culture Network
mm_saturay@yahoo.com
Free education now: Anakbayan lauds UP students for tactical victory
Warns UP admin against retracting decision to stop tuition collection
Youth group Anakbayan lauds the students of the University of the Philippines for pushing the university administration to stop tuition and other fees collection in UP Diliman.
This tactical victory is ultimately a product of the students’ long history collective action and unwavering commitment to uphold the Filipino youth and people’s right to education.
In the past days, iskolars ng bayan walked out of their midterm classes in their hundreds in spite of the break in regular classes.
UP Diliman Chancellor Michael Tan announced last night to a mass of students still gathered in protest at the Quezon Hall after a day-long protest that no tuition and miscellaneous fees shall be collected from UP Diliman students this coming enrolment.
“There will be no tuition collection until government is clear about their plan. They are not clear yet as to how much subsidy there will be: partial or complete, and who will be eligible. Until they clarify we will not collect any amount from students,” said Chancellor Tan.
The UP Presidential Advisory Council has also reportedly recommended the implementation of a no tuition collection policy for the whole UP system.
We call on iskolars ng bayan to not let up the pressure on the UP administration lest it retracts UP Diliman’s decision to stop tuition collection. We warn of massive protests, walkouts, student strikes, barricades, and campus occupations should such treachery takes place.
Whether this measure will push through is now up to the intensified mass struggles of iskolars ng bayan, in concert with the rest of the UP community and the Filipino, to defend this tactical gain.
Free tuition implementation in UP should also serve as a final call for the immediate junking of the deceptive socialized tuition system in UP. This scam has resulted in tuition rates to increase from P40 per unit in 1989 to the current base tuition of P1,500 per unit, which has made UP gravely inaccessible to the poor majority.
The struggle against neoliberal attacks on education that has intensified UP’s role as a privatized profit-making institution and as a producer of cheap semi-skilled and skilled labor for export continues.
Nevertheless, this is one more step towards achieving a truly nationalist, scientific, and mass-oriented education. Its full attainment lies in the struggle to transform a rotten ruling system that denies the right to education.
URGENT APPEAL FOR ACTION: Military operations in Lianga, Surigao del Sur displace Lumad community, less than a year after returning home
From Tinay Palabay of KARAPATAN
Dear friends,
Military elements in full combat gear conducted operations in nine (9) communities in the mountain areas of Lianga, San Miguel and San Agustin in Surigao del Sur since July 2, 2017. These communities have recently just returned home in September 2016, after spending a year in an evacuation center in Tandag City. Residents witnessed the brutal killing of their leaders on September 1, 2015, which prompted their evacuation. Now, amid martial law and continuing militarization, these indigenous communities are again threatened by military operations.
Join us in condemning the renewed military operations, threats and harassment in indigenous communities. Let us support the demand to junk the Duterte administration’s counterinsurgency program Oplan Kapayapaan, as well as the immediate lifting of martial law in Mindanao.
BACKGROUND OF THE INCIDENT:
On September 1, 2015, MAPASU (Malahutayong Pagkigbisog Alang sa Sumusunod) chairperson Dionel Campos and Kiwagan Datu Juvello Sinzo were brutally killed in front of more than 200 residents of Km. 16 and Han-ayan, Brgy. Diatagon, Lianga, Surigao del Sur. Residents, teachers, and students were forcibly gathered by composite elements of the 75th Infantry Battalion-Philippine Army (IBPA) and paramilitary group Magahat/Bagani in Km. 16 to witness the execution of their leaders. After killing Campos and Sinzo, paramilitary forces threatened the entire community, saying they will all be massacred if they do not leave. After the military and paramilitary elements left, the dead body of ALCADEV (Alternative Learning Center for Agricultural and Livelihood Development) executive director Emerito Samarca was found in the faculty guest room of the school compound. The entire incident came to be known as the Lianga massacre.
Following the incident, around 2,700 individuals from twenty-six (26) communities evacuated to Tandag City on the same day. They were only able to return to their communities last September 3, 2016, after strong international and national campaign forcing military elements to withdraw from the communities.
In 2015, trumped up charges of trafficking were filed against eleven (11) Lumad school volunteer teachers and community leaders, while in evacuation.
Since their return, residents of 26 communities have been rebuilding their farms, homes, schools and livelihood. Lumad schools run by TRIFPSS (Tribal Filipino Program of Surigao del Sur) and ALCADEV started holding regular classes for the school year 2017-2018 this June.
Upon President Rodrigo Duterte’s declaration of martial law in Mindanao on May 23, 2017, a checkpoint was placed in front of the military detachment in Post 1, Brgy. Diatagon, Lianga, requiring residents and visitors to show their ID or write their names in a logbook.
ACCOUNT OF THE INCIDENTS:
On July 2, 2017, at around 2am, about 60 soldiers of the 75th IBPA in full combat uniform were seen gathered at a detachment in Post 1, Brgy. St. Christine, Lianga, Surigao del Sur. They were later seen going towards the other communities.
On July 3, 2017 at around 6am, the same number of soldiers from the 75th IBPA were seen in Km. 6, Brgy. St. Christine, Lianga, Surigao del Sur. Later that day, more soldiers from the 36th IBPA and 16th Special Forces Battalion (SFB), all in full combat uniform, arrived in the Lumad communities of Hayon and Sangay Brgy. Libas Sud, San Miguel. These communities are located on the other side of the mountain, adjacent to the Lumad communities in Lianga.
On July 4, 2017, soldiers were seen in the communities of Tambonon and Bishop in Brgy. Bolhoon, San Miguel. These two communities are also located on the other side of the mountain, near the Lumad communities of Lianga.
Meanwhile, residents of Emerald in Brgy. Diatagon and Panukmoan saw soldiers in combat jungle uniform in the farm areas of their community, prompting them to evacuate near community centers. Residents of Mike, Km. 16 and Km. 14 evacuated to Han-ayan and stayed in the Lumad schools of TRIFPSS and ALCADEV along with the students and volunteer teachers.
On July 5 to 6, 2017, at around 11 pm to midnight, while the residents slept, bomber planes flew over the said communities, circling about 15 times. Residents from 9 Lumad communities — Han-yan, Mike, Km. 14, Km. 15, Km. 16, Manluy-a, Kabuluhan, Panukmoan and Decoy — all of Brgy. Diatagon, Lianga evacuated to and arrived in Emerald at around 6 o’clock in the morning. The residents, fearing for their lives given the harassment and threats that they have been constantly subjected to, thought it best to move out.
As of this writing, about 2,043 men, women and children are staying in the school grounds and classrooms of the Simowao Tribal Community School, located about 9 kilometers from the national highway and poblacion of Brgy. Diatagon.
Reports of food blockade have also been reported by the teachers, as military checkpoints prevent relief from entering evacuation centers. This is despite the desperate need for food and other assistance for evacuees.
Filipinos fight forced migration
by Stu Harrison
Manila is known as a metropolis of shopping malls — a sign, some would say, of the success of consumer capitalism.
But in the shadow of the sprawling Araneta Center, Migrante International fights against the effects of a labor export policy that forces millions to leave the country looking for work.
It is a policy that led Jennifer Dalquez, like so many other young Filipinos, to leave the Philippines in search of a secure future. Instead, she became a victim of circumstance. Forced to defend herself against an employer who was attempting to rape her knife-point, which led to her place on death row in the UAE.
When I recently visited Migrante’s national office, the parents of Dalquez were living with migrant organisers and gaining assistance from the organisation in their campaign to have their daughter freed.

But after a surprise acquittal on June 19, she now only faces a sentence of a further 2.5 years for allegedly stealing her employer’s cell phone.
The labor export policy, officially denied by the government, was first introduced under President Ferdinand Marcos’s regime. While Martial Law was toppled, the policy continued and has intensified over recent years.
But for the hardworking organisers of Migrante the death penalty acquittal provided an important breakthrough and great moment of relief and celebration.
As Jennifer’s mother, Alicia Dalquez told Gulf News, “I am overwhelmed with joy. The whole family is happy now that she’s acquitted … She called me on Monday night and I told her she has been acquitted. She cried because she was very happy that she can finally come home after two-and-a-half years. I told her to be good and be faithful because Allah will help her.
“When I relayed the good news to her children, Mohajid, 9, and Abdurahim, 6, the latter just cried. I did too, and our tears are not of sorrow but of joy.”
Similarly, Migrante Middle East coordinator Nhel Morona told Gulf News, “We will keep on praying in the spirit of Ramadan, that the UAE government will allow her to join her family in the Philippines at the earliest”.
Dalquez’s story is far from unusual. Migrante International formed in 1996 following the hanging of a Singapore based domestic worker, Flor Contemplacion. The case brought huge outrage against the Philippine government for failing to act to save her life.
Another significant case was Angelo Dela Cruz who was kidnapped and held hostage in Iraq in 2004 before a viral storm of activity from Migrante and others pressured the government to pull Filipino troops out of that country and saving dela Cruz from her captors.
Still ongoing is the case of Mary Jane Veloso who faces the death penalty in Indonesia for allegedly unknowingly becoming a drug trafficker on behalf of her recruiter.
During a family visit in March, a Migrante spokesperson explained that “Mary Jane cheerfully shared her experiences and skills she learned in prison and will use these in the future to help her family. She professed her innocence [of] the charges against her, and that in her heart, she [has] already forgiven her recruiters but fervently wished that the recruiters will admit what they did to her”.
“As she bade goodbye to her family, she wished that she can soon enjoy their company outside the prison walls and without prison guards hovering around them. She longingly told her expectant children that she is praying hard for her to come home by December to celebrate Christmas with them.”
Since its formation, Migrante and its 200 affiliates in 23 countries have handled thousands of welfare and rights cases, including cases of deaths, rape and sex-trafficking, wage cuts and maltreatment, anti-migrant policies and laws, evacuation in times of war and better services and support for overseas workers.
However, Migrante is not simply a legal support or welfare service, it is an organisation that also actively campaigns, holds street protests and combines with other movements of the oppressed to overturn policy and fight for a new Philippines, one truly based on the fight for self-sustaining economy based on national industrialisation, agrarian reform and human rights.
It is on this wider program of change that Migrante hopes it can undo the problems of Philippine society, including forced migration.
As Migrante Middle East coordinator Nhel Morona explained, “Her [Dalquez’s] victory is a victory of each Filipino migrant and their families who are never tired of seeking justice.”
To the graduating UP student-activists
http://www.manilatoday.net/graduating-student-activists/
Photos of students donning the iconic ‘sablay’ (the graduation costume of the University of the Philippines or UP) partnered with a 1,500 characters of caption are now flooding Facebook. Uniquely UP sablay photo shoots are set in different locations varying from the usual photo studios to the more mundane—in bushes, roadsides, and beachfront, and to the uncommon as underwater. It is literally everywhere. Graduates are relishing their victory from the four or more years battle to finally wear the iconic gold, green and maroon sash and receive the premier state university’s diploma.
The June graduation is another distinction of UP from most schools since its adoption of the academic calendar shift just 2 years ago.
But another striking distinction of UP’s graduation from that of other colleges and universities is the usual occurrence of protest rallies. Midway through the graduation rites, one student would usually shout angrily ‘Im-per-yalismo!’ and then a throng of graduates would make a thunderous reply ‘I-bag-sak!’ and the long list of chants would follow.
Taking pride of being the bastion of academic freedom and excellence, UP, its graduates and the whole academic community have made these usually anti-government, anti-capitalist, anti-status quo protests an enduring tradition. Given the ever narrowing democratic space within the university and in the whole country, the ever zealous activists, in turn, have utilized all available platforms including graduation ceremonies to send their message of nationalism and common welfare to the broader public. In some instances, these protests are coordinated with college administrations and are even formally integrated into the official graduation program. Last 2016, UP Diliman installed an enormous tarpaulin bearing the statement “Serve the People” supposedly as a challenge to the new graduates to give back to the country and partake in nation-building. Graduation protests usually culminate with a chant that was derived from the same Serve the People slogan, “Iskolar ng Bayan tumungo sa kanayunan, paglingkuran ang samabayanan”. During these protests, most if not all graduates join in chanting and even in raising their clenched left fists while singing the final stanzas of UP Naming Mahal. But beyond the clichéd remarks, the silly ‘wag magpakain sa sistema’ statements, the unity in chanting, the important question remains to be: what does serving the people really mean?
Historically, UP gave its best and the brightest in complete and selfless service to the national democratic revolution. Its chemists, engineers, artists and thinkers went to the hills, took up arms, fought a dictatorship in the 1970s, and sowed the seeds of what would become the most enduring revolutionary movement in Asia and the world and the most formidable foe of the government. From Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong’s eloquent words, Filipino youth revolutionaries used the slogan ‘Serve the People’ as their own battle cry. They took it as an inspiration for their own struggle in the Philippines together with Prof. Jose Maria Sison’s book, Philippine Society and Revolution. Using the lessons provided by the university’s liberal education and the ideals taught by the harsh social realities outside its campus, these sons and daughters of UP had the sense of serving the people by going to the hinterlands where most of the country’s population is, to establish a revolutionary, democratic and socially just government.
Years after the fall of the dictatorship, the meaning of the phrase “Serve the People” did not change. Its message even reverberated in a society that remains to be market-driven, plagued by massive inequality, hunger, and poverty. The nationalist fervor of UP did not wane as many Iskolar ng Bayan continued to march to the mountains and serve the cause of the national democratic revolution.
However, serving the people may be construed as that which can take in many forms and several differing degrees. Service can be parsed as staying in the country as a doctor, however, serving only the richest folks in Makati or Taguig and retaining an ostentatious lifestyle. Or, helping build the country’s economy as an economic planner who ensures that wealth flows only towards one direction – only to the affluent families of the nation. Or, service to the people by becoming a cohort of a legislator who has plundered the public coffers by the billions.
The particularity of the chant “Iskolar ng Bayan tumungo sa kanayunan, paglingkuran ang samabayanan” gives clarity and preciseness to the call to serve the people.
In the situation of an industrially backward and feudal Philippines, service is definitely not like those listed above. Hence, the meaning of the challenge “Serve the People” in a historical, moral and practical context of the country is the offering of oneself to the fight for national liberation, not anything less. It is the conscious act of embodying the hopes of the people and elevating these aspirations into greater collective interest. To participate in a movement that aims to overthrow a government that systematically murders millions of its poor citizens in favor of a ruling one percent is plain, genuine service to the people. And risking one’s life for such is a fitting response to a challenge that requires superlatives. There are many positions to fill in the revolution ranging from literacy teachers to the Mamanwa indigenous peoples of Leyte; organizers of peasant communities in Samar; leaders of fisherfolk in Biliran; researcher for farmers’ associations; or ultimately, a full-fledged guerrilla fighter of the New People’s Army.
Activists know all too well that the principal method to achieve the goal of a just society is to slay the monsters that are imperialism, feudalism, and bureaucrat capitalism. And to do so is not by sitting idly in the comforts of an air-conditioned office or in front of a laptop hovering over videos of cats and cakes but by severing ties with the corrupt establishment. It is a painful but necessary process of cutting the umbilical cord that ties the youth to the system that saw their birth and that of their fore-parents. The goal is also a reminder that activism should not be synthetic that comes only from textbooks and lectures. It should not also be transient, that only gives adventure and thrill in college life. That activism springs from the deepest recesses of the soul, from actual life.
We howl our slogans in the streets to convince the unconvinced of our ideals, and we can be more effective if we live up to it.
Finally, may this serve as an invitation to reexamine our creed, review our assumptions, and interrogate ourselves: who are we for?
Book Launching-JMS, Combat Neoliberal Globalization
July 15, 2017
Nassaukerk Social Hall
De Wittenstraat 114, Amsterdam
Join us!
Anakbayan Europe joins IAMR7 in Berlin

Report by Kyle Baleva, organising committee, Anakbayan-Europe
28 June 2017, Berlin, Germany — Migrant organizations such as Migrante-Europe and International Migrants Alliance (IMA) Europe, along with progressive organizations in Europe like DIEM25 and Coalition against Trump have let their voice be heard in the IAMR7 Berlin. Their message is clear: Migrants and refugees are forced to leave their homes because of poverty, wars of aggression and climate change. In their host countries, they are used as cheap labor and scapegoats. Solve the root causes of migration! The day ended with the delegates from the various organizations marching to the foreign ministry where the GFMD is being held. We then handed over a joint statement to a member of the German parliament and foreign ministry.
The sentiment of the organizations in the IAMR7 are very relevant to the Filipino people. Thousands of Filipinos leave their homeland every day to escape the poverty and unemployment rampant in the Philippines caused by the semi-feudal character and lack of national industrialization in the country. Anakbayan Europe joined this demonstration to show their solidarity with migrants and refugees from other countries and to show their support for the message of the IAMR7. It was also a prime opportunity to strengthen our ties with other progressive organizations in Europe.
Solve the root causes of migration! Long live international solidarity!
For photos, videos, and speeches during the speak out: www.iamr7berlin.wordpress.com
TINIG: May-June 2017
http://www.anakbayan.org/tinig-mayo-hunyo-2017/
Heto na ang Mayo-Hunyo 2017 edisyon ng Tinig ng Kabataang Makabayan, opisyal na pahayagan ng Anakbayan!
PDF: http://www.anakbayan.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Tinig-Mayo-Hunyo-2017.pdf
Issuu: http://issuu.com/anakbayanphils/docs/tinig_mayo-hunyo_2017
Scribd: https://www.scribd.com/document/350949468/Tinig-Mayo-Hunyo-2017-pdf
Nilalaman ng pahayagan ang sumusunod:
Editoryal: Labanan ang Martial Law ng rehimeng Duterte!
Padagundungin ang mga protesta para sa edukasyon at karapatan!
100,000 kumilos sa Mayo Uno 2017
Tax reform ng rehimeng Duterte, kontra-mahirap
Kampuhan sa DepEd at Ched laban sa K-12 at patuloy na paniningil sa edukasyon
Panibagong tangka ng Ched para sa pagtanggal sa Pilipino at Panitikan sa kolehiyo
Matagumpay na pagbawi ng Marbai sa lupang inangkin ng Lapanday
Marahas na pagbuwag ng welga ng mga manggagawa ng Shin Sun
Isla ng Panay at Guimaras naparalisa sa matagumpay na welga laban sa jeepney phaseout
GRP- NDFP peacetalk. How to put it forward?
Hosted by Ugnayang Pilipino sa Belgium
It was early 90’s when I first saw the couple, Benito Tiamson and Wilma Austria in Sierra Madre. She was then explaning the second great rectification movement in the Philippine revolution.
Two decades later, I was lucky to see them again in Europe as NDFP’s peace consultants.
With the widrawal of president Duterte’s government from the 5th round of peacetalk set in Holland early this month, the prospects of peaceful resolution of the armed conflict in the Philippines faces a rough journey.
Benito and Wilma joined the armed struggle as youths, now they are grand parents, but still vigorously participating in the national democratic movement, becoming a celebrity and ganining respects and adulation from the present generation of Filipino youth activists.
Come and join me, enjoy their company and learn from them in the discussion groups organized by Ugnayang Pilipino sa Belgium (UPB), on Saturday, 24 June 2017 in Brussels, Belgium.





















