Ruben Cusipag with his wife Tess |
By Edwin C. Mercurio
Ruben Cusipag, a veteran journalist who was detained as a political prisoner during in the early days of Martial Law in the Philippines in 1972 passed away yesterday. Cusipagmigrated to Canada by late 1974.
Ruben Cusipag, a veteran journalist who was detained as a political prisoner during in the early days of Martial Law in the Philippines in 1972 passed away yesterday. Cusipagmigrated to Canada by late 1974.
Cusipagwas
the co-founder of Atin Ito in early1976. Atin Ito (This is Ours) was one of the
first Filipino-Canadian newspapers wherein he wrote political editorials
condemning the repressiveMarcos
dictatorship in the Philippines.
In 1978,
he put up his own publication,Balita where hepromised to provide “frank,
sincere, and honest-to-goodness discussion of the Philippine problems.”
“He made
a distinct effort for an equitable and balanced perspective on the issues.
Balita played a key role in exposing abuses of the Marcos regime back home.
Then it concentrated on reporting local news, focusing on issues that concerned
Filipino-Canadians,” an editorial by the Philippine Inquirer stated.
His exemplary
work as a journalist and active involvement in the growing Filipino-Canadian
community earned him many awards, one of them includes the “Most Outstanding Filipino-Canadian” award.
Ruben
would be the first to help and offer his services to any journalist coming from
the Philippines. Thus, “Balita had become the vehicle of transplanted
journalists and writers from the home country, as well as training ground and
start for most younger journalists, editors and others in the now numerous
Filipino community publications in Toronto, Canada,” an editorial from the
Philippine Inquirer noted.
The first
person to be sought by Canadian mainstream media for his comments and political
views on major breaking news in the Philippines, Cusipag and Balita had become
a byword in many homes for Philippine news in the Filipino-Canadian Community.
To pay homage
to his hardworking compatriots he dealt with in his early immigrant days in
Canada, he wrote the book “Portrait of Filipino Canadians in Ontario.”
I recall
a Canadian lawyer who took my passport while I was processing my political
asylum application and who charged me a hefty fee of $5,000.00 without doing anything. That lawyer was
scolded by Cusipag in a terse editorial in Balita. The lawyer promptly returned
my passport and refunded 90% of the money my sister paid him.
In 1996, Cusipag
was seriously injured in a car accidentand had to stay in the hospital for
therapy while his wife Tess took over supervision of the newspaper. Ruben’s
work for the Filipino-Canadian community and his legacy earned him the support
of advertisers even when he was wheel-chair bound and lost his public speaking
ability. Today, Balita is considered as the number one and largest newspaper in
circulation in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) and suburbs. Its writers include
many veteran journalists from the Philippines, the USA and correspondents from
other parts of the world.
His wife
Tess Cusipag, a teacher by profession resigned as executive assistant for a
Canadian firm to take personal care of Ruben and continue her husband’s
mission.
It is an
honour to be one of his close friends and fellow practicing journalist. Ruben
Cusipag may no longer be with us but his legacy and that of his newspaper Balitawill
live on to serve the Filipino-Canadian community in its struggle and campaigns
for truth, accountability, justice, human rights and environmental concerns.
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