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Tupas: Confessions of an anti-Ninotchka Rosca (formerly, actually)

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Sunday, August 05, 2007
Tupas: Confessions of an anti-Ninotchka Rosca (formerly, actually)
By Jeffrey M. Tupas
My Turn


THE red shawl failed to hide the Gabriela print on her tight red shirt that exposed those curves and female protrusions that she so confidently flaunt around, perhaps not really aware of it and if she has been, I bet she would still confidently show them off.

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Even her military-colored capri pants did its job perfectly; shaping her just right. Except for the fact that she is a well-known writer (stress twice on the word well-known), her hair -- with streaks of whites prominently running from her forehead down -- everything about her I was not expecting.

Over the past years, I was an anti-Ninotchka Rosca. She the woman described to me by a Philippine Daily Inquirer article as someone believed to have the penchant for drama, actually over-drama, that she was rumored to have her name changed from something else to Ninotchka.

I thought of her as someone really officious and dominant and anything else but meek. I thought of her as a ruthless bruha always ready to rip off the sorry flesh of hell-scared souls. I thought of her as someone I can never stand a minute. I thought of her as someone like Salman Rushdie who, a friend has told me, never talked to people.

I thought of her as someone who would never ever sign reluctant fan's notebook. I thought of her as someone overrated.

And so I confess: I am the reluctant fan. Actually, a reluctant and shameless fan who thought of not going to Kanto Bar and meet Ninotchka in the flesh but decided anyway to get through into the already thick crowd of women activists, men activists, gay activists, and all sort of activists, poets, writers and journalists.

Sweating perhaps because of excitement, I sat beside Sun.Star Davao's wonder woman, Stella Estremera, and Ms. M Roque... while everyone around waited in great expectation for the recipient of the 1993 American Book Award for excellence in literature (for her book Twice Blessed) to finally, er, talk to us. I was there to give myself a chance. No... actually, to give Ninotchka a chance.

She was easy to spot. Had I been somebody out to hurt her, I could have easily perpetuated such a plan effortlessly. Had I been somebody out to hurt her, I could have just crossed the already crowded room--grabbed her long hair or sprayed her face with capsicum gas until she choked and get a temporary blindness and that would have been sweet and perfect.

But no. I am no longer anti-Ninotchka Rosca although I still believe that she chose the name Ninotchka -- name herself Ninotchka -- for the reason that it sounded... weird?

And weird how everything I painted of the woman inside my head over these years changed the moment she opened her mouth. I mean, that I am reading her latest book did not change much of my unfair perception of

the person but a brief encounter did. Like, while I was looking at her from my table, her back against us, I felt that she was talking to me. Well, her hair, actually.

And so she was there before us -- wearing that Gabriela red shirt and a military-colored capri pants and I could not help but think of the definition of the word contradiction. For how can one woman, who experienced the pains of being sent to jail during the Marcos years, wear the color of the dictator's machinery of oppression and death?

While I was asking myself whether or not to go to Kanto Bar for the Ninotchka event, I was thinking of a number of questions to possibly throw her, topping them was to know how much creativity does one person has to have to ever choose a name like Ninotchka. Or, was it liberating to name oneself Ninotchka?

But everything I had inside my mind turned into a blur when she spoke in a demeanor comparable to that of a—virgin. I swear, she’s so sweet that listening to her speak would make one wonder of how really bad Marcos was to ever jail someone like her. She looked so harmless and she spoke as if she cannot even prick someone else’s pimple…hello!

But of course, back then, she was considered a threat. For how can't they not be threatened by someone who confessed to not having a life at all? In her opening statement, Ninotchka said: "Walang buhay... I can't tell you the story of my life or you might be scandalized."

Then she sniggered.

At the end of the event, I found myself pushing through the still thick crowd to get Ninotchka's signature. When it was finally my turn, I could not think of anything to tell the woman but this:

"I am supposed to bring a book you wrote but I found out that it's already signed... can you instead sign my notebook?"

"What's your name?"

"Jepoi... that's p-o-i... J-E-P-O-I."

"What does it mean?"

"It means nothing. I am a Jeffrey."

And this she wrote:

Jepoi...
Maging masaya sana ang buhay mo!
Ninotchka Rosca
Davao, 2007

And btw, later that night, I was told that the only Davao daily she's reading online is Sun.Star and the online news mag Davao Today.

For more Philippine news, visit Sun.Star General Santos.

For Bisaya stories from Davao. Click here.

(August 5, 2007 issue)
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