Review of the Book: Jose Maria Sison:At
Home in the World, Portrait of a
Revolutionary,
Conversations with Ninotchka Rosca, 258 pp.
By
Edberto M. Villegas
Jose Maria Sison:At Home in the World,
is not just a book about a person but a treatise on the world situation and
a philosophy of life. Written in a vivid and biting style, in the tradition
of the great revolutionary essayists like Lenin and Mao-tse-tung , it is
both a comprehensive critique of imperialism and an affirmation of the life
of a revolutionary. This semi-autobiography, as the book is presented as a
conversation with Ninotshka Rosca, uses the method of dialectical
materialism in analyzing contemporary world history and the future of the
socialist movement. The identification of the major and minor contradictions
that are wracking the international order is the method that enables
Joema(nickname of Jose Maria Sison) to lay bare the nature of oppressions of
the world people and the Filipino people in particular. His evaluation of
the contradictions in the revolutionary movement in the Philippines from the
inception of the first Communist Party in the country to the present very
well illustrates the dialectics of quantitative to qualitative developments
of social forces.
The book is also a dialogue on
the nature of terror. Since Joema was included in the list of foreign
terrorists by the United States with the connivance of the Philippine
government, the world media controlled by US imperialism has started a
vilification campaign against him. But to Joema, terrorism is the use of
violence, particularly genocide, to perpetuate an unjust social structure,
from which the terrorists and their subalterns profit. It is also the
hypocritical use of moral ascendancy to cover up the ambition of the few to
conquer and exploit the many. In the history of the world, US imperialism is
the qualifier for the title of being the greatest terrorist. The only
country which has ever used the atomic bomb to wipe out hundred of thousands
of peoples, the US, under the influence of monopoly capitalism, now
sanctimoniously prohibits the use of nuclear weapons by weaker countries to
defend themselves. In human history, it is the country that has waged the
most wars and has spread the widest starvation and hopelessness to the
majority of the world population caused by the rapacious drive for profit of
its transnational corporations. Today, more people are starving, at least
1.5 billion, according to the UN, than ever in the history of humankind, and
this amidst the overproduction of goods by the TNCs. Indeed, the capitalist
system has become moribund and destructive for humanity. And Joema is at the
forefront of the struggle to dismantle this oppressive system, both in the
Philippines and in the international arena. Who therefore is the terrorist?
One who is persecuted because of one’s commitment to end injustice to the
world people or those who perpetuate this injustice, while proclaiming to
all and sundry that they are the defender of freedom?
Between the five chapters of the
book are interspersed poems written by Joema, mostly while in prison for
nine years under the martial rule of the dictator Marcos. These poems are
like beacons showing the way for those who would choose to embrace a great
cause ,poems where suffering itself becomes creative because it makes the
victim stronger in spirit to continue to fight for his cause. Waging
revolution to end oppression to Joema is the affirmation of life itself,
even its celebration, so that a revolutionary must be able to enjoy living,
savoring the pleasures of comradeship with others in times of merrymaking
like singing, dancing, drinking and conversing. A revolutionary must not be
dour, nor always appears to be grim and determined, self-righteous and
arrogant, but must have the capacity to laugh at oneself and make fun of the
little foibles of living. In other words, the revolutionary must be one of
the people and must learn to participate and delight in the happiness of the
masses.
A leading merit of the book is
the kind of questions that Nitnotchka Rosca asks of Joema, which are
logically sequenced to draw the most from the latter’s life and views of the
world. Arrriving at the end of the book, it is as if Ninotchka has drained
to the bottom all that is within Joema.. The questions themselves are sharp
probing of the world situation and without them, one doubts whether the book
would have presented a thorough analysis of the international order as it
did. Nitnotchka also treats Joema as a natural fellow, asking the most
intimate and challenging, sometimes embarrassing, questions from him. This
may be because Ninotchka and Joema have long been close friends since their
academic days some forty years ago at the University of the Philippines, and
both have lived a life of exile.
But what I consider to be of the
utmost significance of the book is that it is written in the midst of the
struggle of peoples to liberate themselves from oppression. It is not a
book written by an academic watching the turmoil of the world, perched on
his pedestal, nor by a paid analyst to please some vested interests, but by
individuals locked in deadly battle with the scourge of humanity, US
imperialism. It is not an epilogue to Joema’s life, nor his memoirs as those
who impact on history often write about their lives. Joema, while
contributing his part to the book, lives in constant threat to his person by
the agents of US imperialism as there had been attempted assassinations on
his life. He has been deprived of the basic necessities of life by the Dutch
government, under the pressures of the US since his listing as an
international terrorist. The support for his subsistence is supposed to be
guaranteed to him by Dutch laws while living in the Nederland as a political
refugee. Without a passport, Joema is indeed a man of the world, but he is
happy to be at home in the world actively engaged in the fight against his
mortal enemy side by side with the workers, peasants, and other marginalized
classes and sectors of the world. And he is prepared to die in the process
of this great combat against imperialism even without seeing the dawn of
victory in his country nor in the world.
The 258 pages book is easy
reading as it presents the otherwise complex nature of the world’s political
economy in a very clear and simple style. The book could appeal to all
individuals seeking to understand the tumult and crisis of contemporary
times, especially those who desire to change the world for the better. It is
a guide and inspiration for all revolutionaries and would-be
revolutionaries, young and old, who are continuously searching for meaning
for the life dedicated to struggle and self-sacrifice.