During the hight of the flooding of typhoon “Ondoy”, a TV star - TopicsExpress



          

During the hight of the flooding of typhoon “Ondoy”, a TV star and matinee idol used his speedboat to come to the aid of a pretty damsel (an actress) in distress. Another actor who is a surfer in full surfing gear saved his neighbors using his surfing board. Then there is the member of the judiciary who used his expensive jetski to rescue people who were stranded in their rooftops. I am not saying that these are not heroic acts, but what grabbed my attention and tugged at my heart, however, is the news story buried deep inside the pages of the newspaper of an ordinary Filipino who did an extraordinary act of heroism. He, by the way, has an unusual name that probably accounts for his unusual act. The real hero of the flooding of typhoon “Ondoy” was Muelmar Magallanes, a teen-ager (18 years old) who at the height of the flooding last Saturday brought home to safety some 30 people. They say he did it just by using his innate swimming skills (he is described as an “excellent swimmer” by neighbors) and sheer strength. But I wonder whether there is more to Muelmar than just his swimming skills and strength. What propelled him to put others first before self in the face of real danger to one’s life? At first, he saved his family by tying a rope to his waist and with it pulled his younger siblings and parents to dry land. After being told that his neighbors were endangered in their rooftops by the raging waters, he next dragged them one by one to safety. He could have stopped then. Yet he braved the deep and murky waters once more after he saw a woman and her baby in a styrofoam being swept away by the strong current. He swam mightily towards them and pushed mother and child towards the safe shore where others took over. But, probably exhausted and tired at this point, he himself got swept away in an instant by the rampaging waters. That was the last time they saw him alive. They found his lifeless body the next day. “He saved others but he could not save himself”, people say at his wake afterwards. But his parents were not surprised at what had happened to their son. “He always had a good heart”, his mother said. “He has always been a brave boy”, his father added. Aside from his atypical name, Muelmar, which most likely is from his parents’ names Samuel and Maria, the other thing that struck me is his youth. I wonder whether he is in school, though I am sure he is not from Ateneo or La Salle. Does he have a girlfriend? Has he ever played a play station? Or any video game, for that matter? Does he know what a jetski is? Has he ever seen a surfboard? Or did he spend his boyhood summers learning how to swim in the waters of the river that overflowed and finally killed him? They say also that he was a construction worker. In any case, the extra-ordinary heroism of a young man with an unusual name happened in a place called “Bagong Silangan” or New Dawn. Will his death now bring a new dawn to his place? To his country, the Philippines? I wonder.
Posted on: Thu, 25 Jul 2013 12:53:33 +0000

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