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Luna Mencias Street: ‘Lolo to live on’

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Luna Mencias Street: ‘Lolo to live on’
This serves as a lesson for us that we need to tell and retell our history and pass on the great stories of those who came before us
LEGACY. Dr. Bonifacio Mencias chose the hills of San Juan to build a home for his nurse wife Barbara Sacro and their children, who followed in his footsteps as doctors and journalists. Photo from Margarita Mencias Castaneda's archives

Our family members in 3 continents are celebrating the result of our virtual reunion literally to protect our family name.

“Today we have…good news that Mandaluyong City is to keep the name of Luna Mencias,” my niece Mariel Kierulf Asiddao announced April 7 on Change.org.

She had just launched an online petition to dismiss a proposed ordinance renaming a street that honors revolutionary hero General Antonio Luna and epidemiologist and World War II guerrilla sympathizer Dr Bonifacio Lopez Mencias, her maternal greatgrandfather. (READ: Don’t rename Luna Mencias Street)

The online petition that generated 200 signatures in some 24 hours was one of several outreach campaigns the Menciases initiated against the proposed ordinance.

Asiddao, 28, drew international support when she informed relatives in and beyond the Philippines of the effort to replace the name of the street.

I joined her aunts and uncles in Illinois, California, British Columbia, and the shores of Benin, Africa, crowded cyberspace with strong sentiments we condensed into a letter dated March 1, 2015 to dismiss the proposal.  

We addressed our appeal to the National Historical Commission of the Philippines and mayors and council members of San Juan and Mandaluyong, the cities traversed by the national road bearing their patriach’s name. We topped their packet with letters from my late mother’s sisters – Dr Mencias’ surviving daughters Pilar Mencias Kierulf of Glendora, California, and Margarita Mencias Castañeda of San Juan City.

Having heard of of the proposal, Asiddao and her mother, my cousin Marian Kierulf Asiddao, on February 24, attended a hearing in San Juan City bearing flyers attesting to the heroism of their ancestor.  

Dr Mencias was Dean of Faculty at the University of Santo Tomas College of Medicine from 1938 until he was captured by soldiers of the Japanese Army in January 1945, along with his son Eleno Mencias, for tending to wounded WWII guerrillas. The future Dr Eleno Mencias escaped from Fort Santiago, but his father was never seen nor heard from since. UST records say he is believed to have been executed.

Touched by Dr Bonifacio Mencias’ martyrdom, city founders affixed his name to that of “A Luna” as the new name of the street where the former had built a home in the 1930s for his nurse wife Barbara Sacro and their 6 children.

Nine branches of the family have continuously lived on the street for almost 80 years.

Proponents in a proposal dated February 26, 2015 sought to rename the street after another deceased resident, Congress member Rufino D. Antonio, an architect who served one term in the Philippine legislature. He is remembered for leading the move in the 1970s to annex the Philippines as the 51st of the United States of America.

On the day of the hearing April 7 in Mandaluyong City, Asiddao, her sister Joanne Asiddao, her aunt, and my sister Consuelo Q. de Leon, uncle Gerardo M. Castañeda and cousin Francoise K. Bejasa, learned that the NCHP had objected to renaming Luna Mencias on policy grounds.

They found out that the commission in a letter dated March 12 signed by Chairwoman Maria Serena Diokno “advised Mandaluyong to keep the name of the street…agrees with the historical significance of Dr Mencias’ actions…and also advised that the name of the place has been sanctified by usage.

On the day of the hearing April 7 in Mandaluyong City, Asiddao, her sister Joanne Asiddao, her aunt and my sister Consuelo Q. de Leon, uncle Gerardo M. Castañeda and cousin Francoise K. Bejasa, learned that the NCHP had objected to renaming Luna Mencias on policy grounds,” Asiddao said in her update on Change.org.

The same was contained in the NHCP reply, also dated March 12, to our family appeal. 

Republic Act 10066 or the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 states that streets in existence for 50 years or more are “sanctified by usage, and therefore considered historic,” the letter stressed.

“We have communicated our position to the San Juan and Mandaluyong city councils,” Diokno added.

The commission in a letter also dated March 12, 2015 to Mandaluyong Sanggunian Secretary Jimmy Acebal suggested that the pro-Antonio camp “consider other significant ways to honor” the late lawmaker “such as naming a new or unnamed street or structure after him.”

A street abutting Luna Mencias on the Mandaluyong end is already named after Antonio.

Asiddao applauded the Mandaluyong city council for agreeing to the “need to educate people about history so that stories such as those of Dr Mencias will not be forgotten.”

We burned Viber with positive reinforcement after disclosure of the city council decision following the NHCP dictum.

“We commend chairwoman Diokno and commission members for adhering to their mandate to protect historic sites such as our street,” Asiddao said.  “We thank everyone who supported and encouraged us in our appeal.”

style=”line-height: 1.5;”>My family learned an invaluable civics lesson from the experience. We are also grateful to the Antonios for inadvertently reuniting our clan throughout the globe.

“The proposed ordinance was a blessing,” said my cousin Socorro Mencias Kierulf-Gonzalez, a paralegal in Los Angeles. “It brought to light Lolo Boni’s significant contribution to Philippine history.”

The outcome “pleased” her mother Pilar M. Kierulf, 89, who recalled that Janet Walker, a US expatriate living on Luna Mencias who had befriended the family, had instigated the move to honor Dr Mencias after the end of WWII.

Our cousin Dr. Zita M. Castañeda Ong of Chicago told PNews her mother, Margarita M. Castañeda, 85, was elated that her father will “not be forgotten.”

“All this is not for naught,” said Mariel Asiddao, who spearheaded the outreach, “because we are keeping alive the legacy of people not celebrated in history books.” She had immersed herself in UST archives and several search engines to uncover facts about her ancestor. Armed with the result of her copious research, she, her aunt, and cousin walked confidently into the April 7 hearing in Mandaluyong City, where the decision turned in their favor.

“This serves as a lesson for us that we need to tell and retell our history and pass on the great stories of those who came before us,” the executive at an information technology company who is pursuing her MBA at the University of the Philippines in Diliman concluded her victory statement. – Rappler.com 

Cherie M. Querol Moreno is the elder daughter of Rosario Mencias Querol, eldest of Dr. Bonifacio Mencias’ six children.

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