Friday, February 8, 2008

A Winning Oratorical Piece

TO BE FREE IS TO BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ONE'S SELF


This was title of my oration in which I won the Gold (I was in high school then,1988). My english teacher gave me a cut out piece of newspaper which I knew it was from an editorial portion, such speech was a challange since I had the only different oratorical piece, among the 10 contestants. As they say "save the best for last" I was the last to orate and because it was different the judges listened and liked the piece that for a fact it was longer than the monotunous piece the previous 9 orated. The speech is as follows:




As a teenager I find my self through an akward age

When I am niether man nor child, and by the way I feel, neither animal, mineral nor vegtable. . . when my voice cascades down from high C to B flat minor and every pimple assumes the proportions of Taal Volcano.

I am prone to anxiety, fear freaquent changes of mood, sensitive to criticism.

I spen sleepless nights worriying about bad breath, homework and the exquisite agonies of unrequited love.

It is the age when I feel the first stirrings of man's primodial urge.... TO BE FREE!

To be free to pursue the pleasures of youth,

to watch TV and use the telephone for hours on end .......

FREE to settle arguments with my brothers and sisters with a kick in the pants.

"Papa, I WANT TO BE FREE TO DO WHAT I WISH"

My father's answer was short and devastating:

"As long as I provide you with the roof over your head and the clothes you wear, YOU ARE NOT FREE, my son. TO BE FREE IS TO BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ONE SELF."

Even as I stand before you, our country the Philippines stands before the rest of the world as the first democracy in all of Asia --- still in it's AWKWARD AGE, a nation not quite yet a nation,

trying to be politically independent while economically insecure, and every bit as PRONE to

ANXIETY, FEAR, FREAQUENT CHANGE OF MOOD and SENSITIVE TO CRITICISM as I ever am in my own AWKWARD AGE.

Here democracy first dawned over the high tide of WESTERN COLONIALISM at the end of the last century.

Yet in 1989, we Filipinos dared to rise against the tide of history and to declare ourselves free, the first in all of Asia to brake the shackels of Western colonialism.

Even in 1946 when we regained our independence, we were still the first nation to achieve independence from the colonial powers.

As the oldest democracy in Asia, we watch other people in our part of the world painfully following our footsteps, fighting and dying for the same dream. Elsewhere in Asia, a Buddhist monk douses himself with gasoline, lights a match and burns in the glow of a lost cause... an Indonesian student waves his placard over the street-barricades to the vision of a distant dream, in the teeth of machine gun bullets... a Chinese peasant makes a daring dash for freedom to the border, is shot and lies dying in a ditch, and his eyes search those of the people just across, so near they see him and take pity on him. The Buddhist monk, the Indonesian student, the Chinese peasant and millions of Asians look to the Philippines for lessons learned in the struggle for democratic freedom, and wonder, after all, as they watch us grapple with graft and corruption, smuggling, political goons, high prices, unemployment, murder, treason and so on into the long and lamentable catalogue of human crime -- and wonder after all, whether the lessons we learned are worth learning at all. We have learned one thing: that the death of tyranny does not automatically mean the birth of democracy. Democracy has a mind of its own, and does not necessarily follow a successful revolution against despotic rule. What was started on the bleak December morn when Rizal was led to martyrdom in Bagumbayan is still by far unfinished. You can destroy a tyranny quickly, you must build freedom slowly. Freedom must be renewed like soil after yielding good crops, must be rewound like a faithful clock, exercised like a healthy muscle. Vigilance is the price of liberty -- a little civil thinking everyday, shouting your mouth off against crime and corruption, voting in season, and demanding from your representative that he be representative. Another lesson we learned is this: Democracy in its turn does not automatically mean prosperity. For prosperity also has a mind of its own, and does not follow democracy around like a faithful dog. Prosperity too must be earned... by land reform and industrialization; by postponing consumption to build up savings and investments, passing up the temporal joys of English Leather for an extra clink into the piggy bank; by patronizing our local industries; and most of all, by a policy of protectionism that promotes economic development and national self-reliance. To be free is to be responsible for oneself. To put our lessons hard to work is the greatest need of all. For today, Communism is coming up like thunder, dedicated to the proposition that prosperity and greatness can only be attained at the price of freedom. We owe it to ourselves and to the rest of Asia, to prove otherwise: that freedom and democracy can lead to economic prosperity and national greatness. To remain free, we have no choice. For the price of failure is great. Take the case of that boy in a hovel in Intramuros who was asked to take care of a baby sister who cried all day and all night because she was hungry. The parents were out... the father looking for a job, always looking and never finding one… .the mother, searching the garbage cans for scraps and rotten bananas. The baby cried so much that it twisted the mind of the brother who watched over her... he reached out with his hands on the baby’s neck and... killed her. My friends, when you come home at night from your office or factory, and lay your head on your pillow to claim the rest you earned at the end of a long day... between the closing of your eyes and the coming of sleep...in that twilight zone of wakefulness where thoughts and plans and prayers dwell -- Think. Plan. And pray. Pray that our nation shall under God prosper in freedom, and survive to greatness through its awkward Awkward Age.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

who is the author of the piece? thank you!

Ma.kryzza yla said...

i do really like the message of you piece.. whoever you are thank you :)

Anonymous said...

very moving! thanks :)

Anonymous said...

who is the author of the piece? thanks

jhanejohn said...

I DO REALLY WANT TO KNOw WHO IS THE AUTHOR OF THIS PIECE..he is a very good author:)










kleujsgxbz said...

thanks i'll use it as my piece





Anonymous said...

may piece po ba kayo about drugs?

Anonymous said...

I will use it as my piece. A great piece :)

Anonymous said...

Who is the author of that piece?I'm quietly curious.He is so amazing. :)

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said....:)
I really like the message of your piece... thank you for your piece you create because it help me a lot on how to make an oration piece.... :)

Anonymous said...

who is the author of the piece? great piece! thanks :))

Anonymous said...

Great!