Invitation from the Movement Against Tyranny

Dear Fellow Lasallians,

We received this invitation from the Movement Against Tyranny [MAT] calling on all freedom-loving Filipinos to gather at the Luneta on December 10, International Human Rights Day, from 4-8 p.m. Because of time constraints to...

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Homily of Msgr. Gerry Santos, First Friday Mass, Office of the Ombudsman

First Reflection: The Readings – from Lamentations to Curses

The Babylonian Exile is one of the most painful chapters in the history of the Jewish people. It lasted for 70 years when King Nebuchadnezzar held Israel captive in Babylon. The reading describes the prayer of lamentations of the high priest. Take note before the exile, the prophets like Jeremiah and Ezekiel warned of the imminent danger of defeat and exile. Yet Israel did not heed the call to change.

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Laudato Si Grants

As a network of Lasallian educational institutions, De La Salle Philippines is committed to societal transformation through innovations in curriculum, pedagogy, community engagement and research. 

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BAYAN GUMISING!

Homily delivered by Archbishop Socrates B Villegas at the Cathedral of Saint John the Evangelist Dagupan City on September 21, 2017 at 12 noon.

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Lord, Heal our Land : A summon to prayer and action from the CBCP

Dear Brothers and Partners, 

We share with you the Pastoral Letter of the Catholic Bishop’s Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), Lord, Heal Our Land. We enjoin your communities to heed the call of our pastors to pray for the healing of our nation.  Let us mourn for the poor and powerless who have fallen victim to the relentless killings, violence and impunity that have marked our nation’s search for well-being.  Let us pray for the comfortable and the fearful, who have succumbed to indifference and apathy. 

Through whatever means that is appropriate to your community, let us express our solidarity with the Church, by observing the forty days of prayer from September 23 to November 1.   In our contemplation of these mysteries we live, may the consciousness we seek be ours and may our grieving bear fruit in acts of courage and compassion. 

Fraternally, 

JJ FSC

 

KEEPING VIGIL OVER OUR NATION’S FUTURE: A Call to Radical Mourning For the Loss of Our Vision

 

KEEPING VIGIL OVER OUR NATION’S FUTURE: A Call to Radical Mourning For the Loss of Our Vision

Dear Lasallians,

I am inviting you to raise our voices in silent protest over the deaths that have gone unmourned since our government undertook its efforts to eradicate the menace of illegal drugs from our communities.

We mourn for those who have lost their lives on mere suspicion of being drug addicts and drug pushers. We mourn for those who, because they are too poor and too afraid, cannot fight for their right to life and due process. We mourn for those whose lives have been reduced to statistics and who are now mere proofs to demonstrate the power of those in authority to procure for us, through whatever means, their twisted vision of an orderly society.

We mourn for the loss of our rights when we allow the police to enter our homes without warrants of arrest. We are slowly witnessing an order where we are being seduced to secede to those in authority our basic rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution. The promise of peace and order and well-being is a sham for what this usurpation of our rights has obtained for us is nothing but fear.

We mourn for ourselves, when we allow our vision for our nation to grow dim. When, because of our exasperation with the long march to authentic freedom, have allowed ourselves to be seduced by quick results. Authentic transformation cannot be the result of handing over to one entity, our responsibility to create the kinds of communities we long to see. If we truly desire peace and well-being in our communities, we must see ourselves as its principal authors. Let us, in our mourning, re-affirm our right and our responsibility to be the agents of the change we want to see.

I enjoin you all to keep vigil then over our nation’s future. Let us offer a minute of silence every 8:24 pm (or 8:24 am during school days) in our communities as we mourn the many deaths that have befallen our nation. In our communities, let us create a wave of awareness over the need to guard our basic rights and freedoms.

Let us courageously re-affirm our conviction in our identity as a people of power – as a people who can create and will what is good for our country. Let us stand side-by-side again so that we will not have to live in fear. Let us refuse to bequeath to our children a nation deprived of a vision of its better self.

(sgd.)
Br. Jose Mari Jimenez FSC
Auxiliary Visitor, Lasallian East Asia District

Appointment of Br. Armin Luistro FSC as De La Salle Philippines President

03 July 2017

Dear Fellow Lasallians,

Greetings!

It is with great pleasure that we, the members of the National Mission Council of De La Salle Philippines (DLSP) welcome back Br. Armin Luistro FSC to DLSP with his appointment as President effective 01 July 2017. Br. Armin will be completing Br. Jose Mari Jimenez FSC’s (Br. JJ) unexpired term as DLSP President until March 2020.

Br. Armin brings with him a wealth of experience as a leader: from 1997 to 2004, he served as the Visitor of the De La Salle Brothers Philippine District; in 2005 he was our first DLSP Network President, when DLSP was still in its incipient phase; and more recently, he ended his appointment as Education Secretary under the administration of President Benigno Aquino III being one of the proponents of the administration’s major education program, the K to 12 Basic Education Program. 

We also would like to take this opportunity to thank Br. JJ for his service as our DLSP Network President for the last five years, from 2012 to 2017.  He will remain a member of the National Mission Council, and will focus on his work as the Auxiliary Visitor for Strategic Planning and District Development of the Lasallian East Asia District (LEAD).

Let us give our unwavering support to both Brs. Armin and JJ in their respective tasks for the Lasallian Mission in the Philippines and in LEAD.

Thank you.

In St. La Salle,

(sgd.)
Br. Jose Pardo, AFSC
Co-chair, National Mission Council

(sgd.)
Br. Paul Kok Chee Ho FSC
Co-chair, National Mission Council

World Wildlife Day

The Philippines is one of the 17 megadiverse countries of the world.  It houses two-thirds of the earth’s biodiversity of the world’s plant and animal species. According to Convention on Biological diversity, the Philippines has “49% of terrestrial wildlife…ranks fourth in bird endemism. The Philippines is also one of the world’s biodiversity hotspots, thus making it one of the top global conservation areas (https://www.cbd.int/countries/profile/)."

Dr. Bjorn S. Santos welcomed as 7th De La Salle Araneta University President

The university welcomed Dr. Bjorn S. Santos as its seventh De La Salle Araneta University President last October 4. Dr. Santos concurrently serves as the university’s Vice Chancellor for Academics and Research (VCAR), and Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine and Agricultural Sciences, among others. 

Dr. Bjorn finished his bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Engineering from the University of the Philippines – Los Baños (UPLB) in Laguna. He went on to take both his master’s and doctorate degrees in Biological and Agricultural Engineering at the Texas A&M University – College Station in Texas, USA, with a specialization in power and machinery, and renewable energy.

Dr. Santos started his career in the academe as a full-time instructor at De La Salle University – Canlubang in Laguna, where he handled courses in Trigonometry, Engineering Graphics, Strength of Materials, Materials of Engineering, and Introduction to Environmental Engineering. From 2008 - 2013, he was a graduate research/teaching assistant at the Texas A&M University – College Station’s Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering. In 2014, he also had a brief teaching stint at the Department of Biology in De La Salle University before he went to the university to assume the VCAR post.

With his educational background and extensive experience as an administrator, Dr. Santos was elected by the Board of Trustees as University President after a candidate search which started as early as December 2015.

Dr. Santos is a member of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, and one of the founding officers of the UPLB Alumni Association Texas Chapter. He successfully passed the 2004 Professional Agricultural Engineering Licensure Examination, placing second.

DLSP Statement on the Supreme Court Decision on the Marcos' Burial

Never Forget!

 

There can be no moving on without an accounting of the past, no forgiveness without remorse and apology. There can be no justice without accountability. There can be no justice with impunity.

We are thus deeply despondent over the Supreme Court’s (SC) failure to stand on what is just by affirming Ferdinand Marcos’ planned burial at the Libingan ng mga Bayani (LNMB). The Court, on the petition against the President's order for the burial of Marcos' remains in the LNMB, has sadly chosen to err on the side of technicality rather than that of history.

Marcos is not a hero. He was an oppressive ruler and a dictator. The empowering experience and triumph of all freedom-loving Filipinos over authoritarianism through People Power 1 in February 1986 is a clear rejection of the Marcos regime.  He remains answerable for many counts of atrocities and human rights violations as well as ill-gotten wealth. 

The SC decision, an ominous development, reflects the weakness of our democracy to exact accountability from leaders who abused and are abusing their power. Unfortunately, after EDSA People Power 1, the task of deepening and consolidating our democracy by strengthening our institutions, including the courts, has not been assiduously pursued. The same weakness has now been taken advantage of by the Marcos family.

This challenges our schools all the more, to help clarify for and with younger generations and those who engage us, the lessons borne out of a scrupulous study of history, citizenship, accountability, and good governance. 

We therefore call on all our Lasallian teachers and partners to strengthen all their educational and community engagement efforts and programs towards a deepening of our people's appreciation for democracy and human rights.  Let us join with like-minded groups to create more robust advocacy on these issues.

Let us oppose every effort to distort our nation’s story.  We shall endeavor to re-tell our story so that we remain true to the values we have fought for and for which many have given up their lives.  The oppressiveness of Marcos’ Martial Law must not be forgotten.  

 

NEVER AGAIN!

 

 

Br. Jose Mari L. Jimenez FSC

President, De La Salle Philippines (DLSP)

10 November 2016

Pastoral Letter from the President of De La Salle Philippines

ENGAGING CIVIL AUTHORITIES IN BUILDING AN INCLUSIVE & LIFE-GIVING SOCIETY: A CALL FOR LASALLIANS TO MAKE A STAND AGAINST THE CULTURE OF DEATH

 

Dear Lasallians,

As a Catholic and a Filipino, I am deeply disturbed by the spate of killings that have attended this administration's pronouncements regarding its anti-crime and illegal-drugs campaign. Media reports indicate that from 10 May to 15 July 2016, cases of drug and crime-related killings have risen to 408* casualties and continue to rise. While these figures are alarming in themselves, what troubles me even more as an educator is the absence of a significant public outcry against the blatant contempt for the human life and the rule of law that these extra-judicial killings represent.

This disregard for the inalienable value of human life and the public silence that gives tacit support for such disregard does not bode well for the vision of a just and humane society enshrined in our Constitution. What these extrajudicial killings demonstrate is how desperate many people have become in the face of the issues of drugs and criminality.  The approval of so-called solutions that deny the sanctity of human life and respect for each person's right to due process amounts to a crisis of faith in the possibility of governing our nation by reason and the rule of law. These lethal acts and the attitudes that ground them undermine the fundamental respect for human dignity and the obligations of human solidarity which are the foundation of social life. We need to remind everyone that if we want a just and peaceful society, our means must partake of our ends.  You cannot build a culture that respects life while relying principally on the instruments of death.

It is appropriate to recall here the much publicized pronouncement of Pope Francis on 21 February 2016 when he called for the abolition of the death penalty. “The commandment ‘You shall not kill’ has absolute value and applies to both the innocent and the guilty.... It must not be forgotten that the inviolable and God-given right to life also belongs to the criminal." Behind these prophetic words is the vision of a God who refuses to give up on anyone, a God whose mercy embraces all without distinction. As Christians and Catholics, we give witness to the truth about God when we defend the right to life as unconditional. We give witness to the mercy we have received in Christ when we seek to rehabilitate rather than execute wrongdoers.

Furthermore, it is a mistake to believe that we can create a peaceful society by denying those suspected of wrongdoing their fundamental rights to life and to due legal process. The doctrine of the common good rejects any notion that the good of the majority may be attained by violating the fundamental rights of any member of society. It is a mistake to think the respect for the dignity of each individual and the pursuit of the common good are in competition or opposed to one another; indeed protecting and promoting the rights and welfare of each individual is constitutive of the common good. What is needed to create a better society is that all cooperate in insuring the promotion of each one's dignity, rights and responsibilities without exception (Solicitude Rei Socialis 1980).

Thus, while we resonate with our government's desire to address in a resolute way the problems of crime, drug-addiction and corruption, we need to insure that this is done within the framework of the law and the principles of human dignity and the common good enshrined in both our Constitution and in Catholic Social Teaching. To this end, our schools should critically engage civil authorities to insure that effective solutions to these social ills be pursued in the just and right way.

I urge our Lasallian educational communities - Brothers, faculty, students, personnel parents and alumni - to take up this urgent task. We need to engage civil authorities, not as adversaries, but as partners in building communities that reflect the values of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality and peace enshrined in our Constitution. In our various educational spaces, let us teach young people to reflect critically and equip them with the values and skills they need to help create a society that upholds human dignity, solidarity and the common good. Let us embed these three principles in our own school cultures, in our curricula, indeed in the understanding of the professions we educate our students towards. Furthermore, let us use the resources and influence of our schools to help create more life-giving conditions for those disadvantaged communities within our reach where often, the young and the poor become vulnerable to the machinations of corrupt and criminal elements.

Let us not allow violence to rule us but in every circumstance be vigilant and zealous in upholding the dignity and rights of all as befits responsible citizens and followers of Christ. 

Fraternally,

Br. Jose Mari Jimenez FSC
President, De La Salle Philippines
Auxiliary Visitor, De La Salle Brothers – Philippines

21 July 2016

*Based on ABS-CBN count on drug related killings