Books
Group avatar

Bookay-Ukay:Third World Booksale,Commune,Discussion Group,Church,Fraternity and Dance Troupe

Guys, Gals and anyone in between, Welcome to our Planet! Everyone is Welcome to Join!!!

Looking for books? A fulfilling love live with your very own boy toy?Like us on Facebook: Bookay-Ukay Pilipinas, we'll find you the titles that you're looking for.You may contact us through Dan the Man: 09054283125

OUR BOOKSTORE is LOCATED...more »

« more discussions

  • Joel G

    ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO, fellow Bookay-Ukay member, 1977-2010

    Save Changes Cancel
    Fellow Bookay-Ukay members,

    It is with extreme sadness to relate to you that a fellow Filipino Shelfarian and Bookay-Ukay group member here in Shelfari just passed away. He is poet, activist, journalist and writer ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO. He was 33 years old when he fatally succumbed to complications from diabetes last Friday, September 3, 2010, the same day his friends came together for a tribute/benefit aimed at raising funds for his then-recovery from serious illness.

    His Shelfari page is here: http://www.shelfari.com/alexander_martin_remollino

    The wake over his passing is now at the chapel of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) along Oxford Street in Cubao, Quezon City, very near Aurora Boulevard, across the street from Stella Maris College.

    Let me invite all Bookay-Ukay members here in Metro Manila to attend a tribute to Alex, set this coming TUESDAY, September 7, at the above-mentioned UCCP Chapel in Cubao starting at 6 pm. I hope to see you there and pay our last respects to a wonderful Filipino, fellow booklover and (mostly-lurking) fellow Bookay-Ukay member.
    Joel G started this discussion 2 years ago. ( reply | permalink )

3

replies
 
Sign in to participate in this discussion.
  • Joel G
    Save Changes Cancel

    Here is one webpage on ALEXANDER MARTIN REMOLLINO, featuring a compendium of some poems he has written, statements on his death, and photos and videos at the poetry reading night last Friday, September 3, when news of his death came:

    http://www.arkibongbayan.org/2010/2010-09Sept03-AR%20Poetry%20reading/slrcporytytrsfinh.htm

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Joel G
    Save Changes Cancel

    Here's an article posted on the rising alternative Philippine news site Bulatlat.com, where he wrote until recently (check out the page for more relevant links):

    http://www.bulatlat.com/main/2010/09/04/alexander-martin-remollino-journalist-poet-activist/?ref=nf

    Alexander Martin Remollino: Journalist, Poet, Activist
    By RONALYN V. OLEA
    Bulatlat.com

    Alexander Martin Remollino was a journalist, poet and activist who devoted the best years of his life to serving the Filipino people.

    During his college days at the University of Santo Tomas, Alex joined the League of Filipino Students (LFS) and participated in mass protests not only against tuition increases but also against problems confronting the public. His political activism never stopped even as he was forced to drop out of school due to financial constraints.

    In 2002, he worked briefly for Ibon Foundation as researcher and, later that year, started writing for Bulatlat.com, an alternative online magazine.

    Alex wrote in flawless English with ease; his writing skill enabled him to write about complex issues in a language understandable to the common reader. For nearly 10 years, Alex used his talent to expose the issues of the oppressed and the marginalized. With his writing chops, he could have chosen to work for the mainstream media where he could earn a more decent income but he opted to stay with Bulatlat to pursue the progressive, pro-people journalism the website is known for.

    The aspirations and the struggle of the Filipino people for genuine freedom and sovereignty, their quest for peace based on justice, the Moro and indigenous peoples’ struggle for self-determination — the mainstream media largely ignored these issues but Alex was there to consistently and passionately write about them.

    “The way it is, I compare my situation as a journalist with other journalists who work in other publications: even though they receive higher wages than we, the intellectual and professional environment in Bulatlat is more satisfying,” Alex said in an interview with a blogger in 2008. Such satisfaction emanates from writing about the daily struggles of the ordinary people that most in the mainstream media often ignore.

    While he also wrote for other publications to make ends meet, Alex never compromised his activist principles. In fact, he used these other venues to further inform the public about the plight of the Filipino masses.

    Alex was known for being taciturn but he minced no words about issues he felt strongly about. While he seldom talked about his personal circumstances and feelings, he was very active in political discussions.

    Alex used for his poetry the truths he gleaned from his journalism. Unlike other young poets who found muses from the imagined, Alex drew inspiration from the real sentiments and aspirations, agony and hope of the masses. What he would not share with friends and colleagues would end up in his poems, told more fervently, told more gracefully.

    Alex left Bulatlat in February this year and went on to work for Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (Bayan). There, he used his writing skills to help Bayan amplify its positions on the burning issues of the day and even took on the task of speaking about these. Even as his health began to deteriorate — he was later diagnosed as a diabetic; his vital organs had been so severely damaged he ended up at the ICU — Alex continued to perform the tasks assigned to him. To the very end, he remained a writer for the people. To the very end, he never wavered in his commitment to serve them.

    At 33, his life may have been short but what Alex did during the best years of his life will be remembered for quite sometime. ##

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • j.luna
    Save Changes Cancel

    Lubos kaming nakikiramay, sampu ng mga kasama sa Bookay-Ukay, sa pamilya at mga kaibigan ni Alex.

    Alex Padayon!

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • To reply to this discussion, please sign in.

Return to top