THE ACACIA trees of the academic oval are silent witnesses to the travails of the denizens of the Diliman campus of the University of the Philippines.
As a homage to my second home for a decade, I ran 10 kilometers (five rounds of the 2.2-kilometer loop) to cap my golden year last December.
The 10-kilometer run symbolizes 10 years, or one fifth of my 50 years of existence, as one of the Iskolar ng Bayan.
Canopied by over a hundred years old sturdy acacia trees, the Diliman academic oval is a pollution-free haven not just for runners, but also for bikers.
A favorite photo backdrop is the scenic view of the way the branches of the trees from the left side of the street meet with those from the right side, forming some kind of archway. They are now part of UP culture and heritage.
Most of the trees are as old as the campus itself. They offer much needed shade and bring in a relieving breeze even in the scorching heat.
The acacias, botanically known as Albizia saman, were the first trees planted after the transfer of UP to Diliman in the late 1940s.
The hard adobe grounds had to be blasted to allow them to take root.
Since then, says the UP website, the trees have spoken eloquently of UP Diliman’s fast and robust growth. Now larger-than-life, acacias hold sway at the academic center, providing shade where there was once only grassland.
The UP web site added: Like UP and the country’s colonial past, they are also “dominant and lingering, roots long and winding, beautiful and scary at the same time; and as exotic species, forever imposed, a stranger to the land.”
A UP alumna once wrote: “The way the branches completely extend out from the tree’s trunk, like arms stretching out from the body, portrays how the students are pushed to their limits, especially academically. Yet despite that, the acacia trees and the students alike, remain standing strong amidst all of that expanding, growing even more used to it as the years go by.”
For the Hebrews, acacia is believed to be the wood that Moses was instructed to use when building the Ark of the Covenant that encased the two tablets of the Ten Commandments.
Before the pandemic, the oval is divided into three lanes—with the outermost part dedicated to motorists and the innermost for joggers and bikers. Motorists are now prohibited to traverse major portions of the oval.
The loop has seen many events including rallies, UP Fair and lantern parades.
I was born in the same period when the First Quarter Storm (FQS) was associated with anti-Martial Law protests, mostly led by UP students and faculty.
I was barely two months old when the nine-day uprising called “Diliman Commune” from February 1 to 9, 1971 became an evidence of UP’s role as the “bastion of activism” since the early days of the Marcos dictatorship. The academic oval was my solace as a student at the UP School of Economics from 1987 to 1991 and later at the UP College of Law from 1992 to 1998.
After engaging in graphs, formulas and laws of supply and demand as an Economics major, I crossed the street to pursue my law degree.
Traversing the path of legal education was hard to the exponential power. I was a working student then as a newspaper reporter by day before rushing to my evening classes.
“Serve the people. Do not betray your humanity,” says my professor and Supreme Court Associate Justice Marvic Leonen. It was also in UP that I became roommates with Buddy Zabala and Raymund Marasigan of Eraserheads for two years (1989 to 1991) at the Molave dorm.
Because the band members often used our room to play their instruments and practice, I often ended up going out to study somewhere else, as I could not take the “noise”. As a supportive roommate, I watched them perform during the annual UP Fair at the Sunken Garden at a time when they were just starting to make waves inside the campus.
It was beyond my comprehension that the “noise” that I tried to avoid made them known as one of the most successful, critically acclaimed, and significant bands in OPM history.
The oval is also home to the annual Lantern Parade, which was inspired by the folk practice of carrying lanterns of various shapes and sizes to light the way to the early morning December masses or misa de gallo during the Spanish period.
Ten years inside the university makes one cherish the concept of academic freedom.
The campus molded us to fight for the causes we believe in; trained us for the skills we need to communicate ideas and rally others to effect changes in society.
All educational institutions, including UP, must be maintained as safe havens for civilized and intelligent discourse of all beliefs and forms of democratic expression, where students and teachers can discuss freely without fear of censorship or retaliation. The acacia trees will continue to be witnesses to UP’s existence as an institution with a critical eye on social and historical issues.
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Peyups is the moniker of the University of the Philippines. Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, e-mail info@sapalovelez.com, or call 0917-5025808 or 0908-8665786./PN