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Inspirational
Midsayap's First Lady is proud recipient of "Outstanding Teacher" award
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Sep 6, 2008 - 3:08:05 AM

By Gloria Jane Baylon

MANILA, Sept. 6 (PNA)--A classroom teacher at a public high school in the strife-torn town of Midsayap, North Cotabato in Mindanao, who is also the municipality's First Lady, is one of this year's Ten Outstanding Teachers of the Philippines (TOTP).

The victory of science teacher Ermie Rabara is the second time for the Dilangalen National High School--which was named to honor the ancestors of former Maguindanao district Rep. Didagen Dilangalen.

Midsayap hogged the national headlines recently because of fresh atrocities sparked by a clash of two lifestyles.

In 1995, English teacher Delilah Denila of the same high school was also a recipient of the coveted award. It is sponsored by the Metrobank Foundation in cooperation with, among others, the Department of Education (DepEd).

The high school is the only DepEd institution in the poblacion of the 5th-class municipality and is situated in an area known as Dilangalen. But Christian settlers in the site tend to call it "Baryo Dos"--which is how it's referred to in barangay language.

Rabara said there used to be Muslim students at Dilangalen, but they all have moved to other high schools where Muslims were the dominant students.

Metrobank Foundation writes of teacher Ermie:

"It is not Erm's academic preparation as an engineering graduate that makes her such an efficient teacher, but her sense of commitment to make learning fun and worthwhile.

"In addition, her ability to emphathize and deal with her student's difficulties--and exert extra effort to look after their own welfare--is what makes her truly outstanding."

Parts of what has become Dilangalen's Maguindanao constituency were former villages of Midsayap, which, even as late as the 1960s, was a municipality showing potentials of becoming North Cotabato's capital.

Alas, the strife shook Midsayap's personality to the core and, eventually, the then sleepy but upstart town of Kidapawan--where no Moros hardly resided--came to be the capital town.

TOTP winners receive their plaques and P100,000 cash prize directly from the Chief Executive--this time President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo--in ceremonies at Malacanang.

The Dilangalen clan belongs to Central Mindanao's ruling Muslim families, who wove friendships in blood compacts with Christian settlers in its townships. In those early days, Moro homesteads could be purchased by enterprising settlers, mostly degree-holders such as teachers, for a ganta (about 1.3 killos) of coffee beans per hectare.

Teacher Ermie's own husband, Mayor Manuel Rabara, is heir to a rich non-Muslim tradition infused into such townships as Midsayap, Libungan, Pigcawayan, Mlang, Aleosan, Pikit and Kidapawan by early settlers from Ilocanos, Negros, Cebu, Batangas.

These North Cotabato townships became famous recently particularly when another Midsayap settler, Gov. Jesus Sacdalan, joined the immigrant from Pangasinan and Mlang-based Vice Gov. Emmanuel Pinol, acted to torpedo renewed moves to annex some Christian-dominated barangays to some of the towns into a now-fizzled out Bangsmoro Juridical Entity.

Mayor Rabara's father, a lawyer who began government service as municipal secretary of Midsayap in the 1960s, was a prosecutor of another municipality when he was ambushed on his way to work and died in the hands of alleged Muslim assassins.

It was the height of the conflict between Muslims and Christians, when so-called "Ilagas (rat corps)" and gunmen of the incipient Muslim Independence Movement both believe they were born to kill.

Teacher Ermie never met her father-in-law, but she is proud that Dilangalen National High School forms part of the legacy that forever intertwines the good intentions of Muslims and Christians in her little corner of the world. (PNA)



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