Inside Bilibid, sports means life. And hope.

Rick Olivares

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Inside Bilibid, sports means life. And hope.
It’s rather unusual that Cebu native Marlon Cabullon loves tennis more than basketball

MANILA, Philippines – It’s rather unusual that Cebu native Marlon Cabullon loves tennis more than basketball.

The Queen City of the south has produced many a national basketball player, including current PBA standout June Mar Fajardo and many other stars in sports like football and track and field. Tennis, however, held serve in Marlon’s heart. 

Marlon grew up watching German great Boris Becker in the 1980s, and on the tennis court, imitated his one-handed backhand and diving volleys. “Si Becker… grabe,” Cabullon racks his head for those memories of a simpler time. “Patay kung patay yung laro.

(Becker… was something else. He played like there’s no tomorrow.)

“Kung maglaro ako noon mula umaga hanggang hapon,” said Marlon, showing his love for tennis. (I would play from sunrise to sundown.)

Some 30 years after Becker’s heyday and Cabullon’s youth, the Cebuano, now older with his face lined because of age and stress, and his skin bronzed from countless hours under the hot sun, is still playing tennis. From morning up to sunset. 

Now he has all the time to play. Since 2007 he has been incarcerated at the maximum security compound of the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa. While he isn’t in for reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment, he could be in here for anywhere between 12 -20 years for a drug offense that he admits “was a big mistake.”

Suffice to say that he is moving forward from a mistake that he is paying for. The past 9 years in jail have left him with many a day and night to ruminate about his poor choices and how the people you love pay for acts of stupidity.

Nandito ako mula umaga hanggang hapon,” emphasized New Bilibid’s tennis champion who has won many a prison tournament. “Dito sa tennis court, para akong nasa Cebu ulit. Nakakalimutan ko ang lahat. Pagbalik sa selda, napapaisip ako. Kung wala kaming sports program dito sa Bilibid ay ewan ko na kung saan ako pupulutin. Hindi ako humihingi ng simpatiya; nagkamali ako at ako’y nagbabayad.

(I’m normally here from morning till afternoon. Here on the tennis court, it’s as if I’m back in Cebu. I forget everything. When I get back to my jail cell, I get to think. Were it not for this sports program, I do not know what would have happened to me. I’m not asking for sympathy; I committed a mistake and I’m paying for it.”)

Three years ago, under the auspices of the Philippine Sports Commission’s Jolly Gomez, a jail outreach program, Sports and Recreational Office or SARO for short, was established.

While sports has always been a part of prison life, especially basketball, Gomez enhanced the program by organizing tennis, chess, and billiards tournaments with proper prizes while donating sports equipment. Under SARO, tennis pros like PJ Tierro and Johnny Arcilla have come over to play in doubles competition with members of the Muntinlupa Tennis Club. 

In fact, there will be an upcoming billiards tournament that will involve Efren “Bata” Reyes and Django Bustamante where the winners of the Bilibid-wide tournament will get to play the two world-class cue artists. 

Anthony Omega, New Bilibid’s Director of SARO, says the program is not only a huge hit with the 15,000-plus inmates of the prison but has helped boost morale while teaching them a lot of values.

“Sa basketball,” explained Omega, “may banggaan diyan at hindi maiiwasan ang away. Walang pinagkaiba yan sa laro sa labas. Pero sa tennis, chess, badminton, at sa billiards, malaking bagay yung sportsmanship lalo na kapag naglalaban yung mga iba’t ibang mga pangkat. Makita mo nagkakamayan pagkatapos ng laro.”

(In basketball, you cannot avoid the physicality that sometimes leads to fights. There is nothing different from the way the game is played outside Bilibid. However, for tennis, chess, badminton, and billiards, they inculcate sportsmanship especially when the different groups compete. You see players shaking hands after the game.)

He added, “Mabuting leksyon yan. Yung iba na hindi nakakulong for life, pagdating ng panahon, ay ibababa sila sa minimum security hangga’t makalabas sila. Nakakatulong din ito sa rehabilitation ng mga inmates. Hopefully, yung lessons na nakuha nila from SARO and yung Alternative Learning System (where inmates can enroll in classes for basic English, the arts, basic computer, automotive mechanics, building construction, practical electricity, tailoring, and radio and television mechanics among others), ay makakatulong sa kanila ‘pag nakalaya na sila.”

(These are good lessons. Those not jailed for life will one day be downgraded to minimum security until they are released. This will help with the rehabilitation of inmates. Hopefully, the lessons they got from SARO and the Alternative Learning System, will help them when they are freed. )

For others like Max Delmo who is in Munti for life, sports is his way of coping with his lot. He’s in for taking part in a massacre and has been in jail since 1997. He was supposed to face the death penalty but his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. 

Delmo understands the severity of his crime and like Marlon, doesn’t ask for sympathy or forgiveness. “Kapag nandito ka na sa loob, doon mo lang malalaman kung ano yung tunay na mahalaga sa buhay mo – pamilya mo, Diyos, at trabaho. Mga tao tulad ko? Hindi ko alam kung makakalaya ako pero dito subukan ko na lang maging maayos na tao.”

(When you’re already inside here, that’s the only time you realize what is truly important in your life – your family, God, and work. For people like me? I don’t know if I’ll ever be released but here I’ll just try to be a good person.)

Delmo, a Laguna native who is also the president of the Maximum Tennis Club (MTC) is grateful for tennis. It occupies his days and helps him fight stress and despair. The Tennis Club was established in June of 1997 when jailed former congressman Romeo Jalosjos had the tennis court built in the compound of Batang City Jail, one of the 12 gangs inside the prison.

Today, the MTC has over 500 members who pay their membership dues (P150 a month that pays for the maintenance of the court and the scorekeeper). “The payment teaches everyone responsibility,” points out Omega. 

Added Gomez, “More than anything, it gives them self-worth that they can be good at something and it builds their self-esteem.” 

On April 19, the 18th Anniversary tournament of the MTC will kick off between members who have been divided into two teams – Team Duterte and Team Binay.

Asked about the choice of names, one inmate who goes by the name of Boy (not his real name) explained, “Napakasama ng krimen sa labas. Parang weird sabihin yan dahil mga kriminal kaming lahat dito. Pero pagkatapos mo pag-isipan lahat ng mga sala mo, lahat ng mali mo, ay gusto mo magbago. Halos kaming lahat ay may pamilya sa labas. Natatakot din kaming may mangyari sa mga pamilya namin. Kaya gusto rin namin gawan ng paraan ni Rody Duterte.”

(The peace and order situation outside is really bad. It seems weird to say that because we’re all criminals here. But after you have ruminated on all your sins, your mistakes, you want to change. Almost all of us have families outside and we also fear for their safety. That’s why we also want to be able to do something for Rody Duterte.)

It’s a supreme and ironic statement at once. But it does show the dichotomy of life inside.

By 12 noon, after a sumptuous dinner of bangus and sinigang na baboy with the MTC, the PSC Commissioner and I prepare to leave. “Aalis na kami (We’re leaving),” I say.

Some of the inmates accompany us all the way to the gate, but stop when they reach the part where they are strictly forbidden to enter or loiter. – Rappler.com

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