Why is UP the Bastion of Student Activism?

On the evening of January 18,Ā the UP Office of the Student Regent shared on TwitterĀ the letterĀ Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana wrote UP President Danilo Concepcion,Ā stating that theĀ Department of National DefenseĀ has terminated effective January 15Ā its decades-long accord with theĀ University of the Philippines.Ā "The UP-DND Accord disallows PNP/AFP to conduct military or police operations in any campus within the UP system without prior notification to UP officials. It is the outcome of countless sacrifices of UP students to fight for our democratic rights, to defend our academic freedom," the UP Office of the Student Regent wrote.Ā (via @reportr)
"We highly condemn this move as an attempt to encroach on our academic freedoms and remove safe spaces from our campuses!"Ā Ā
Following the news, #DefendUP trended on Twitter with over 30,000Ā reactions toĀ the letter as of posting.
-Ā Additional reporting by Ysabel Y Yuzon
Why is UP the Bastion of Student Activism?
As recent as November 2020, theĀ University of the PhilippinesĀ also made headlines after it led a pack of universities in a nationwide call for an academic break following monster storms that struck during the pandemic. The President'sĀ weekly speech to the nation, he made special mention of UP,Ā threatening to defund itĀ over students supposed ties to communist rebels. School authoritiesĀ denied this.
Being red-tagged isn't news to UP. The university'sĀ activist waysĀ is often tagged in a "slippery slope"Ā toĀ the more extreme ideas of communism, analysts have said. However, it has heightened in recent yearsĀ whenĀ internet trollsĀ would accuse students and faculty of being "aktibista" or "bayaran" at the slightestĀ expression of dissent.
The universityĀ has always been this way, regardless of who sits in office. In its century-old existence, it has long committed itself to becoming aĀ "bastion of student activism"Ā in the Philippines.
In 1925, fourth UP President Rafael Palma envisioned the university as thatĀ "by the people, for the people". ThisĀ placedĀ social and political problemsĀ underĀ the realm of the university's teachings. UP insists that as a public institution, its loyalty will always lie in the tax-paying publicĀ whom it shall serve, and not the tax-collecting government.
Activism is a UP way of life
Multiple political upheavals have seen UP's participation especially duringĀ Martial Law.Ā TheĀ Diliman Commune way back in February of 1971 is remembered to this day as most historic.
Students and faculty heldĀ aĀ barricade inside the campus for nine daysĀ to prevent state entities from entering. It was a protest in defense ofĀ human rights, academic freedom, and freedom of speech and expression.Ā
"The Diliman Communeās message of a university in solidarity with the people opposed to spiraling prices and a university ready to defend itself against attacks by state forces remains relevant to this day," wrote formerĀ DSWD secretary Judy TaguiwaloĀ in 2011.
Throughout budget cuts, tuition fee hikes, election fraud, corruption in government, and human rights abuses, members of the UP community stood in opposition to president after president so long as it mattered.Ā
"Our silence, when we have the ability to speak is in itself a cause of injustice. Remember these words: the line of fire is always a place of honor," UP alumnus andĀ Supreme Court Associate Justice Marvic LeonenĀ quotedĀ Martial Law activist Lean AlejandroĀ in his 2020 Bar oath-taking address.
When activism is no more in UP, that's when the problem starts
UP isn't free from criticism despite championingĀ a just society.Ā Ā
DictatorĀ Ferdinand MarcosĀ himself was a product of UP, along with many politicians and government personalities who have become subjects of public contempt.
Inside campus, student elections andĀ public officialsĀ are not free from scrutiny. There are also instances ofĀ fraternity-related violenceĀ andĀ leaked group chatsĀ that show how discriminatory beliefs continue to exist in the minds of students.Ā Ā
As students often describe it: UP is aĀ microcosm of Philippine society. It is not perfect.
In a speech by lawyer and activistĀ Raffy AquinoĀ for the UP Nameless Project in 2013, he recalled a scene from his freshman year in the university as he walked one of its halls.
Professor Francisco Nemenzo, then newly-installed dean of the collegeĀ who would eventually become UP President, was being interviewed by aĀ TV anchor.Ā
āWhat can you say about the problem of activism in UP, now that you are a dean?" the newsman asked.Ā
Aquino recalled Nemenzo's answerĀ which he saidĀ without missing a beat:
āSo whatās the problem?Ā If there is no more activism in UP, then that would be a problem."
This story originally appeared onĀ reportr.world.
* Minor edits have been made by the Candymag.com editors.