MANILA-The Philippines is better known throughout the world as the cradle of international beauty queens, boxing, billiards, chess, and other athletic champions, and even show biz personalities and fashion models.
Actually, apart from them, our country has produced inventors, scientists, writers and journalists who are, I hesitate to use this obnoxious phrase, "world class." I would rather call them "unknown heroes." This is to say, not known by a lot of their fellow Filipinos.
First in this list is a Filipino, Antonio Miranda, who co-founded the city of Los Angeles, California in 1781.
Next, Filipino doctor Abelardo Aguilar,
who co-discovered “Ilosone,” an anti-biotic better known by its scientific name
“Erythromycin.”
They are followed by Marc Loinaz, a
Filipino inventor from New Jersey, who first made the one-chip video camera;
Edward Sanchez, a Mensa member, who bagged the grand prize in the first
Philippine Search for Product excellence in Information Technology.
We all know that Thomas Edison invented
the electric bulb, and the fluorescent lighting was thought of by Nicola Tesla.
But the “fluorescent lamp” was invented by a Filipino, Agapito Flores.
Do you know that the personal physician
of then US President Bill Clinton was a Filipino doctor? She is Eleanor
“Connie” Concepcion Mariano, the youngest captain in the U.S. Navy, at the
time.
Of course, many know that Carlos P.
Romulo, as editor and publisher of The Philippines Herald, was the first
Filipino and Asian to win the coveted Pulitzer Prize for his newspaper reports
warning against Japan’s
military plans to wage war in Asia and the
Pacific in 1941. Oh, after the war, he became an ambassador to Washington and
the United Nations, and got elected as the first Filipino and Asian to the
prestigious post of president of the United Nations General Assembly. (The
first two Filipino-Americans to garner the same Pulitzer Prize, 56 years later,
were Alex Tizon and Byron Acohito, both of The Seattle Times.)
And now, let us recall the so-called
world-class Filipino champions, starting with Eugene Torre, the first ever
chess grandmaster who won the title at the Chess Olympiad in Nice, France
in 1974. (Other Filipino chess players have become grandmasters, after Torre.)
So far, we have two Filipino beauties
that have been crowned Miss Universe. Gloria Diaz in 1969 and Margie Moran in
1973. Many other beauties have won international awards like Gemma Cruz,
daughter of the beauteous journalist Chitang Guerrero-Nakpil.
Anne Bayle of Manila became an international super model
who modeled for major designers like Calvin Klein, Chanel, Christian Lacroix,
Donna Karin, Gianni Versace, and Yves Saint Laurent.
Here are other interesting historical
facts about the Philippines and
the foremost Filipino national hero Dr. Jose Rizal:
The University of San Carlos (USC) in Cebu City is
the oldest university not only in this country but in all Asia.
It was founded in 1595, making it older than Harvard
University in America. The University of Santo Tomas,
established in 1611, is Asia?s second oldest
university.
Filipinos were first introduced to the
English language by the British who occupied Manila in 1762, and not by the Americans who
eventually colonized this country after defeating the Spanish colonizers before
the turn of the 20th century. Since then, the Philippines
has become the world’s third largest English-speaking nation, next to the Britain and the United States.
When a distinguished British
traveler-writer A. Henry Savage saw Mayon Volcano in Bicol in 1903, he was
thrilled by the sight and wrote: “Mayon is the most beautiful mountain I have
ever seen, the world-renowned Fujiyama (Mt.
Fuji) of Japan sinks into perfect
insignificance by comparison." Mayon is indeed the world’s “most perfect
cone.”
Later on, after visiting our country, Honolulu journalist John Griffin wrote in part: “What’s
still impressive to me about the Philippines is the friendliness of
the people, their sense of humor."
And finally, do you know that Dr. Jose
Rizal, our National Hero, could read and write at the age of 2, and he grew up
to speak more than 20 languages, among others, English, German, French,
Chinese, and Latin. And before he was executed by the Spaniards, his last words
were: “Consummatum est!”
We Filipinos ought to be proud that we
belong to a race of heroes, known and unknown.