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Sep. 5th, 2008

Filipino Haydee Yorac: A Flash Of Brilliance

Now that the air is once again thick with talk about graft and corruption in government, I cannot help but think that genuine public servants do belong to an endangered specie. It makes me miss people who have gone before us like Haydee Yorac. She was a flash of brilliance in a society that was always on the lookout for role models in government.

Haydee Yorac was awarded the 2004 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service. Here is the citation that was read during the presentation ceremonies:

Democracy has deep roots in the Philippines, yet its authority continues to be tested. Years of dictatorship, graft in high places, and the corruption of the electoral process by 'goons, guns and gold' have left many Filipinos cynical not only about democracy but about government itself -- all the more so because government seems repeatedly to fall short of its promises and goals. In such a climate, serving in government can be thankless. Yet, Haydee Yorac, a lawyer and professor of law, has repeatedly answered the call to serve. In doing so, she has confounded the cynics and shown that even the most intractable problems can yield to solutions if they are attacked honestly and with vigor.

Haydee Yorac hails from a small Visayan town where her father was mayor and her mother taught school. She moved on to the University of the Philippines and its College of Law and passed the bar in 1963. As a young law instructor at her alma mater, she became politically active and opposed the Vietnam War. When Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law, she was jailed for over three months and, afterwards, moved to the forefront of the legal fight to restore democracy. People came to know her as outspoken, incorruptible, and fearless.

After the People Power Revolution, Yorac served seven years as a national election commissioner, organizing elections in contested, far-flung areas of the country and lending her considerable reputation to the hopeful project of restoring integrity to the country's electoral process. As chair of the National Unification Commission in 1992 and 1993, she met face-to-face with the government's armed opponents and astutely identified grounds for negotiation and peace; her commission's insightful report became a trusted blueprint for the country's peace process. Yorac then shifted to private practice until, in 2001, she was named chair of the Presidential Commission on Good Government, or PCGG.

In 1986, President Corazon Aquino created the PCGG in her very first executive order. Its mandate was to restore to the Philippines vast amounts of wealth stolen by Marcos and his family and friends. This was a difficult task. The commission launched case after case and the years passed. By the time Yorac was named its eleventh chair, it had recovered only two billion out of an estimated ten billion dollars of the Marcos hoard. Many people said that the PCGG was on a fool's errand. Yorac proved them wrong.

Advancing on all fronts, she strengthened the commission's staff with talented young lawyers. She cultivated good working relations with the commission's collaborating agencies. She brought order to its chaotic files, computerizing them for the first time. And she stoked the fires under hundreds of stalled cases and long-running legal battles.

Stunning victories followed. On her watch, the PCGG recovered for the national treasury $683 million from Marcos's Swiss bank accounts. It also secured court decisions favorable to the government regarding shares worth billions of pesos in the United Coconut Planters Bank and San Miguel Corporation. These are the commission's largest gains since its establishment, a boon both for the Philippine agrarian reform program and, not incidentally, for the country's faith in justice.

Even so, many hundreds of PCGG cases remain unresolved. Yorac continues to move them through the courts impatiently. Slowed by recent illnesses, the feisty, sixty-three-year-old Yorac has had to work from her sickbed. She knows she will not complete the task herself. Others will rise to it. "No one is indispensable," she reminds us all. "Making a difference is enough."

In electing Haydee Yorac to receive the 2004 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Government Service, the board of trustees recognizes her building confidence in government through service of exceptional integrity and rigor and her unwavering pursuit of the rule of law in the Philippines.


And here is Haydee Yorac's acceptance speech:

Chairman and Trustees of the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, Distinguished Guests, Fellow Awardees and Dear Friends,

I would like to thank the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation and those who have taken part in the selection process for bestowing this honor upon me. I feel humbled by this recognition because I know I did not do it alone. There are so many other unsung public servants who have made their respective contributions in making the public office truly a public trust.

Our values and personal convictions dictate the direction that we take and the stand that we make on moral issues that affect our work, in particular, and the country, in general. The desire to make government more effective and efficient in its mandate of good governance is of paramount importance. It is the driving force that compels many of us to accept responsibilities in government, despite the odds.

In the Philippines, the odds are made even more formidable by our experience of a dictatorship that ravaged our economy and shattered the morale of our people. Twenty years takes a long time to undo and, sometimes, it can really be frustrating! However, I have been favored with the support of well-meaning individuals and groups in this endeavor. Together, we have tried to do our best in regaining the public's trust in government.

The task is by no means completed, the goal is not yet reached. We continue to try and do our best and leave the rest in God's hands. Thank you and good evening.

Haydee Yorac was a public servant who gave her best to regain the public's trust in government. I admire the way she served the country until her dying days. May she always be remembered as a shining example to all of us!


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Jun. 5th, 2008

Fe del Mundo: The Filipino Doctor With A Big Heart

The other night, while watching the news, my mother pointed out to me a Filipino doctor named Fe del Mundo saying, "She was your doctor when you were a baby!". I didn't hear much of what was being reported so I decided to do my own research about her. 

She was a Ramon Magsaysay awardee for Public Service. Wow! In a world where so many medical practitioners are focused on using their profession as a tool to accumulate wealth, she's a breath of fresh air. 

The following is the citation for Dr. Fe del Mundo during the Ramon Magsaysay Award Presentation Ceremonies:

"Among the ironies of modernization in Southeast Asia is the grim fact that at least one-third of all children are more critically malnourished than were their grandparents' generation. 

Urbanization denies families opportunities to gather important foods for their diet. Fish, crab and other seafood, or vegetables and fruits growing semi-wild, are less available to migrants from a rural barrio to the city slums. Shifting from hand-pounded to machine-milled rice costs nutrients as does curtailment of breastfeeding in favor of diluted canned milk.

Malnutrition reduces resistance to disease and in itself is a major cause of illness and death. Respiratory infections, including tuberculosis, and gastrointestinal diseases continue to take a heavy toll among children in the Philippines. Schistosomiasis and malaria, in the remoter provinces where they occur, may, by their incidence and results, be cruel to the young.

Fe del Mundo chose to specialize in treating children while attending the College of Medicine at the University of the Philippines where she graduated first in her class of 70 in 1933. Postgraduate studies in pediatrics at Harvard and Columbia Universities led to a residency at Billings Hospital in Chicago and a research fellowship at the Harvard Medical School. Leaving attractive opportunities to remain in America, she returned home on the eve of World War II.

In enemy occupied Manila, the petite lady doctor organized a Children's Home, aided Allied Internees in Santo Tomas University premises and directed the Manila Children's Hospital. After liberation in 1945, she founded and was first Director of the North General Hospital, and she also joined the faculty of Santo Tomas University. For two decades she chaired the Pediatrics Department of Far Eastern University and last year edited a major compendium, Textbook of Pediatrics and Child Health.

The Children's Medical Center was started in 1957 as a 100-bed hospital on what had been a muddy plot in Quezon City, chiefly through the ingenuity, hard work and prayers of Dr. del Mundo. Donating her own house and property toward the funding, she also established there the Institute of Maternal and Child Health to train doctors, nurses and paramedical personnel. By 1962 teams starting rural rehydration centers were saving lives of infants dying of diarrhea. As international support was mustered these became full-fledged pediatric teams. 

Even before the Philippine government began encouraging population control in the late 1960's, Dr. del Mundo had rural units in distant Palawan and her father's home island of Marinduque teaching health, nutrition and family planning. In 1968, with funds provided through the National Economic Council and the United States Agency for International Development, the Institute established 100 family planning clinics in puericulture centers -- within five years these increased to 390. Distinguishing the Institute staff were the enthusiasm with which they enlisted acceptors, their critical assessment of their own shortcomings and careful accounting of their modest resources.

National and international recognition and honors have not caused Dr. del Mundo to slacken her effort nor lose sight of her purpose. The health of children -- upon whom the future depends -- continues to absorb the now 66 year old "little lady in tennis shoes" as it has for four decades, only today she has enlisted some of the ablest professional talents in the cause.

In electing Fe del Mundo to receive the 1977  Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service, the Board of Trustees recognizes her lifelong dedication as a physician extraordinary to needy Filipino children."

It's true that when you make service your first priority, not success, success will follow.

Woohoo! That's my Doc!

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