IKE Nature itself,
variety is the fortune and plight of humankind on Earth. Thousands of languages
and dialects spoken and written by thousands of ethnic groups on thousands of
islands make travel and tourism exciting, fair trade imperative, documentation
challenging and reportage illuminating.
Would discourse not be enlightening when individuals from
every nation under heaven collect themselves in Angkor Wat, or Borobudur, or the
Banawe Rice Terraces, or any other wonder in the world?
This planet-wide multiplicity is magnetized and levitates on
the miscellany of households, clans, villages and tribes as well as that of
cyber-communities, fan clubs, lightning rallies, holiday shoppers and concert
goers. Each barangay, each city and each province offers a menu of identities
and commonalties, and each club, crowd and class a parallel carte du jour of
personalities. Ilocanos can congregate around the Leaning Tower of Laoag,
Cebuanos troop to the Osmeña House, Davaoenos trek to Mount Apo, and visitors
are welcome to partake of local life.
Like the Amazing Race, a person and his cronies can start
from Jakarta, transfer to Insular Malaysia on Borneo, pass by the Istana in
Brunei, fly to Manila for coffee, then shop in Bangkok, remember the victims of
World War Two in Changi, pay homage to Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi, picnic along the
lakeshore of Nam Ngum, and stay overnight in Yangon.
Heterogeneity thus banishes monotony from public and private
lives. More importantly, it underscores the primacy of free choice as the human
value.
A person is born into a family, but selects his companions
for life. He gets his basic education from the neighborhood school, yet seeks
scholarship grants overseas. His milk language is mixed with English. He is
baptized into his parents’ faith, but the road to Damascus is obscured by maya,
waylaying him into the barracks religion. He can shift his abode from hemisphere
to hemisphere.
A person’s ability and willingness to choose guarantees his
inherent freedom to travel, express his likes and dislikes, associate with his
fellows, and pursue happiness. His power to choose is best enjoyed in a system
where he can exercise his rights and duties directly or through delegated
authority.
In this system, ideally a democracy, the person can relate to
others of similar creed, color, class and capability without fear or favor, or
he can broaden his contacts to dissimilar beliefs, races, status and
professions, or he can withdraw to the privacy of his homestead without
ostracism or interruption from busybodies. He can even change his name,
citizenship, or gender.
The resiliency to manage change is not confined to the
territory of one’s home state. With Asean as the new framework, the individual
can offer his services to ten Southeast Asian countries. He can, for instance,
pen a column for his newspaper that then gets syndicated in the region. Thus,
his freedom to write reverberates in the region.
A painter paints for personal edification. Yet his art is
shipped from gallery to gallery and viewed in turn by Malays, Thais, Khmers,
Vietnamese and Polynesians.
An environmentalist wants to raise popular consciousness
about global warming by biking in selected routes across the Far East. His cause
is facilitated in Asean since he can travel visa-free for 15 days at a stretch
in each member-country.
Be it economies of scale or a cacophony of particularities,
the solitary seeker encounters the Asean as an enlarged proving ground.
Can diversities be harmonized however?
The maverick, the ascetic and the psychotic may flourish in
their aloneness in a democratic setting. But the mainstream man, the
conventional and the conformist want stability in order to enjoy private
freedom. Hence, to minimize his fears, the isolated soul gains a mind to unite
with others into commonwealths.
Common consent, a standard of right and wrong, plain laws,
rational governance and impartial judges make society an acceptable arena for
the mutual preservation of lives and secure enlargement of estates.
For the citizens of the ten Southeast Asian states, the Bali
Concord II of October 7, 2003, the Kuala Lumpur Declaration of November 27, 1971
and the Bali Concord I of February 24, 1976 provide the casing for the
fulfillment of liberties and ambitions.
These Asean Declarations stipulate that Asean territory shall
be one contiguous Asean Community by 2020, created a Zone of Peace, Freedom and
Neutrality in Southeast Asia, and identified three pillars of cooperation
(political and security, economic, and socio-cultural).
It remains to be seen whether these regional pronouncements
are robust enough to safeguard the Bill of Rights in the face of variable Asian
capitalisms (guanxi, crony, ersatz, booty). The state capitalism wielded by the
Dragon of East Asia, transnational corporations propagating genetically-modified
organisms in drought-stricken economies, the heroin-producing Golden Triangle
and fascist cults threaten both diversity and democracy.
Our brief excursion into the relationship of diversity to
democracy was prompted by a re-reading of a Rizal biography. It was in his first
trans-oceanic passage and first visit to a non-Hispanic colony when Rizal
grasped the links among Western liberal democracy, the right to travel and free
thought in an Oriental locale.
In Singapore, "Rizal saw a modern city for the first time. He
was intensely interested in the improvements. Especially did the assured
position of the natives, confident in their rights and not fearful of the
authorities, arouse his admiration. Great was the contrast between the fear of
their rulers shown by the Filipinos and the confidence which the natives of
Singapore seemed to have in their government." [Austin Craig, "Lineage, Life,
and Labors of Jose Rizal, Philippine Patriot," Manila, 1913]
Hence, to corroborate Rizal’s lead, all Southeast Asians ought to read Rizal,
Tan Malaka, Lee Kuan Yew, Ho Chi Minh, and other regional principals.