Over gallons and gallons of tuba ---the quintessentially
popular Filipino beverage made out of palm or coconut trees--- I once in a
while congregate with some friends from the neighborhood. I am not really so
inclined to wallow on the native wine but lately, I had the keenest desire to
socialize with the people I know just across the street and thus, I had grown
fonder and fonder of the bittersweet taste of tuba every time I went out and
join the men from the neighborhood. I wasn't as outgoing as I am now before
where I usually stay indoor even during the weekends, reading piles of
magazines and newspapers with the television always blaring in the living room.
But once about six months ago, a familiar face from our vicinity invited me to a birthday celebration and there were just a lot of drinking that day and then I tasted tuba as the tip of my tongue felt the rich saccharine quality of the beverage that went with a touch of savory bitterness at the end. Not that it was the first time that I have tasted the native drink. When I was in college, I clearly remember one sojourn into the mountainside just outside the city limits and during a stopover to a very small but neat sari-sari store, we were offered to buy a gallon of fresh tuba just newly taken out of the palms of the coconut tree just standing by that store. One of my companions was very adventurous that day and so we sat down to finish about two gallons of tuba. The first time I tasted it, I thought it was so smooth to the taste and so cool as it enters the mouth. There was one problem for me though about the drink---the smell is a little bit overpowering especially when you already have more than what you should be drinking.
But once about six months ago, a familiar face from our vicinity invited me to a birthday celebration and there were just a lot of drinking that day and then I tasted tuba as the tip of my tongue felt the rich saccharine quality of the beverage that went with a touch of savory bitterness at the end. Not that it was the first time that I have tasted the native drink. When I was in college, I clearly remember one sojourn into the mountainside just outside the city limits and during a stopover to a very small but neat sari-sari store, we were offered to buy a gallon of fresh tuba just newly taken out of the palms of the coconut tree just standing by that store. One of my companions was very adventurous that day and so we sat down to finish about two gallons of tuba. The first time I tasted it, I thought it was so smooth to the taste and so cool as it enters the mouth. There was one problem for me though about the drink---the smell is a little bit overpowering especially when you already have more than what you should be drinking.
But now, I can easily ignore the stench. Perhaps, one can
get used to it through some time and become oblivious to the smell completely.
One of my friend from the neighborhood once declaimed that tuba is the grape
wine of the Philippines, that by drinking it, we somehow recollect a part of
the life of Our Lord Jesus Christ, where in the past He had often convened with
His disciples through bottles and bottles of grape wine. I responded quite
positively to this very keen observation from a friend and I said that maybe,
if Our Lord Christ were born in our country, He would have enjoyed the exotic
taste of tuba.
Tuba is actually constituted by fermenting the sap extracted
from the palm leaves of coconut trees. It is the beverage of choice among the
people from the lowlands as well as the hinterlands---the farmers, the
fishermen, the laborers and even the tricycle drivers. You could say it is the
condiment that soothes the ailing bodice of the masses, the magical wine that
inspires the laborer to labor for more and the rural lover to serenade more
ardently and sing more ballads, with gusto, while the moon is so full at
twilight time.
Through this magical wine, I have known many new friends
that speak to me and relate to me like they have known me for a thousand years.
We converse at times of some vacuous things in life, some foolishness of youth,
about some fleeting things like love and lovers, even of such frivolous things
as the number of stars in the sky, and we became gleeful somehow of these
fleeting things and our laughters resonate through the windy atmosphere of our
neighborhood. But sometime, we talk of the more salient part of life, like the
families we are responsible for, the children we rear and educate as well as
the harshness of the economy and the stinging effect of rising prices to our
shallow pockets.
Lustre Street, if you could only observed more closely, is a
cornucopia of everyday reality. Some part of the neighborhood consists of the
better-positioned in life with their houses newly-painted while they parade
their classy automobiles as they pass by us. In the larger portion of the
community dwells the more humble inhabitants and even the poorer ones, as small
wooden houses outnumber the large ones by a ratio of fifty to one. Most of my
friends are carpenters and masons while others drive the pedicab and some sell
fish in the market. And then there are some of them who take their daily bread
by carrying sacks and sacks of copra over their very young bodies, day-in and
day-out. I have learned that a laborer in the port area earns only about fifty
pesos after carrying sacks and sacks of load for almost a day. I find these
situation so sad and regrettable. I wonder if the fifty pesos would suffice to
answer the cost of food on the table, the fare to workplaces and for the
education of their children. I guess, not. I guess they could not do anything
but accept the lack of so many things in life. And I guess, with tuba on hand,
they often cure the tiredness of their swollen muscles and empty stomachs through
gallons and gallons of it, as if the native drink is the narcotic that relieves
all the pains of poverty.
And then there are those who just do not have any form of
permanent livelihood, who merely stands by the street while waiting for some
opportunity for work. They often ask if somebody needed to have the grasses cut
in their lawns or if they needed repairs on their toilets. They are often still
so young to carry copra at the port area or whose frailty in physique is not as
virile fit for a port laborer.
Even those friends I have who are accomplished carpenters
and masons, they often complain that many times, work is harder to find. A
group of them---Nonoy, Dan and Erwin---had just finished six-month worth of
construction work on a plea market but now, they have gone for almost two weeks
without work, and of course without any income for their households. Nyor Tony
and another Dan on the one hand are still waiting for a certain Peter to arrive
from out-of-town in order for their work on a bungalow within the neighborhood
to resume. They too had not worked for many weeks. Toti and Paco have been
contracted for some painting jobs just once a week and so they still have a
problem where to source their daily bread during the rest of the week. Dodong
was luckier. He had found employment in a government project in Barangay Ayala
and pay is more than average.
Often, the people I know in the neighborhood paints the
whole picture of hardship and constant struggle by the Filipino people at
present where even those who are willing to work upon harsh conditions still
could not find work. Even for carpenters and masons, the opportunity to find
the means of livelihood is still very difficult, like threading the very small
eye of a needle. Where in the world our country had gone too? To the dogs?
There is a sort of panic in my mind thinking how many of our fellow countrymen
have long endured the harshness of poverty and lack of opportunity. If only our
senators and congressmen, jueteng lords, tycoons, hardware owners, the cabinet
members, the President herself, the big business people, the bankers, the
mayors and the governors, the political strategists, the U.S. envoys, the
ambassadors, the mall owners, the manufacturers and the lot could even just for
one day see for themselves first hand, upon close inspection and somehow
experience the difficulties many of our countrymen suffers everyday, every time
the sun rises from the east and settles in the west, then perhaps they would
stop all their follies, all their bickering like who has the bigger pork barrel
and who has lesser. If they could only fully comprehend the extent of our
people's suffering, then maybe they'd all become less greedy and not full of
self-interest as they are right now, as suddenly they would be patriotic and
altruistic enough to help alleviate the plight of the poor amongst us, not next
year or next month, but now, this moment, ahora mismo!
And so with my carpenter friends who sometimes have work and
most of the time logging around and walking about because work is not at hand,
I just said to them once that I wish there would be more buildings to be
constructed, more houses to be built, more roads to be paved, more walls to be
painted, more sand and gravel to be melded and more cement to be poured. By
then, they can have work almost all the time.
1 Comments
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