From Positive News Media
Gordon pays tribute to WWII hero Wenceslao Vinzons
By
Sep 30, 2008 - 3:50:39 PM
MANILA, Oct 2 (PNA) -- Senator Richard J. Gordon on Tuesday called on the
nation to pay due respect and honor to a great Filipino World War II
hero, Wenceslao Vinzon, whose 98th birth anniversary (Sept. 29)
silently passed without the public glare, but whose acts of heroism are
more than enough to warrant national adulation.
"Lest
we all forget as a nation and as a people, yesterday we paid tribute to
a great man -- Wenceslao Vinzon. We honor his 98th birth anniversary
without the public glare," he said as he took the plenary floor at the
opening of the Senate session.
Vinzon
could have been "one of the country's greatest leaders" because of his
sacrifices in fighting the Japanese imperial army, said Gordon.
Vinzon,
who led an armed resistance against the Japanese in Camarines Norte as
soon as they landed in December 1941, was captured and killed after
refusing to submit to swear allegiance to the invading force. Later,
his entire family was also executed.
Gordon
is set to file a Senate resolution extending full support to efforts in
preparation for the nationwide activities and programs for the
centennial celebration Vinzon's natal anniversary.
The
senator stressed the need to retrieve from the past a sense of our
greatness as a people, saying that a people without pride in their past
will have no hope for the future.
"If
we want to move our country in the right direction, we have to look
back at our rich history as a nation and as a people, for then and only
then can we ably declare that we have conquered our future, he said.
He exhorted the youth to rise to the challenges set by our heroes.
"How
many of our youth today will rush to fight against a foreign invader,
without regard for their own lives? How many will forsake their life in
defiance of the enemy over a life of safety and servitude as a Japanese
collaborator? How many will forsake the lure of personal comfort and
prestige to serve their people?" asked Gordon.
Vinzon
was among the first Filipinos to organize the guerrilla resistance
after the Japanese invasion of the Philippines in 1941.
Betrayed
by a guerrilla turned informant, Vinzons was seized by the Japanese
military together with his father on July 8, 1942.
He
refused to pledge allegiance to his captors, and was brought to a
garrison in Daet where he was bayoneted to death on July 15, 1942.
Shortly thereafter, his father, wife, sister and two of his children were also executed by the Japanese. (PNA)
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