The Kalayaan Hall of the Malacanang Palace |
Lunch at the Metropolitan Museum hosted by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas |
Either way, it is exciting for us Mabuhay Guides to be involved in a "balik-bayani" (returning heroes) tour for the 3rd Conference of the Filipino Diaspora which was conducted on that very same day to commemorate our renewed independence from the Marcos dictatorship 29 years ago. Participants to the Balik-bayani tour were overseas Filipino workers who have returned to Manila after self-imposed exile in different countries all over the world. All seven jeepneys had at least 20-30 participants. A lot of them left the Philippines to seek protection from other governments or to establish a base from which to launch a mechanism to counter the abuses of the Martial Law regime of many years ago.
Me with Chef Laudico |
The pick-up point was at the historic Manila Hotel. The first stop was supposed to be at the Malacanang Museum. However, because of the volume of participants we were asked to delay the tour of the palace until 11 a.m. We had to make a short stop at the San Miguel Pro Cathedral within the periphery of the presidential palace. It was quite a stretch as the museum staff had to accommodate earlier tour groups that packed the museum.
Menu Card of lunch served by Chef Laudico's |
After a winding tour of the Kalayaan hall and museum we had to gather all the participants and proceeded to the Metropolitan Museum of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas complex. The main focus of this part of the tour was the gold collection of the museum and the works of the 17th and 18th century masters on display at the Met.
fish fillet on a bed of pasta with malunggay pesto |
After the short tour, the guest were treated to a sumptuous lunch by renowned husband and wife chefs Roland and Jackie Laudico. By two p.m., guests were led to their assigned jeepneys and given a brief tour of the National Museum and then back to the Manila Hotel. It was interesting to see how the guests observed the many changes that Manila has undergone after 29 years. Some participants had not been back in the country since they left. Some, who had entrenched themselves as upstanding citizens of their adoptive countries, have managed to make yearly visits if only to touch base with their native land that seemed to be choking under the Marcos regime.
For those of us who have stayed behind and surived... the more things change, the more they stay the same...