If
there’s one blogger-journalist who has hit
hardest on Michael V. Fariñas, both when he was mayor of Laoag and in his
tenure as vice mayor cut short by a tragic accident last night, it could be me.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipSrJFVQHlXp5F_o8fuBCNEIauekgUL4r7oOgpVM8v2izKO15xD8Gr0L0NBJCbodniwDb20_m32FJja1Vhk6saAOTJXXfP3GfHcQMf_NBbSlEWHYW-V0YOA-Wg6Y9mQb_Fw68DPA4R664/s1600/Riknakem.jpg)
Was I afraid? I wasn’t. At
all. I think Sir Michael fully embraced critics like me—and here I remember my
late friend Steve Barreiro who also wrote explosive columns on MVF—as an
important part of a democratic city. To his credit, MVF never caused injury nor
harm to me or my family, and my commentaries notwithstanding, he always flashed
for me a smile and extended a firm handshake each time we cross paths. As he
does to other people, he prepends my name with “Apo” as in “Apo Herdy.”
On one occasion some years
ago, I told him: “Sir, you are my favorite mayor,” to which he replied with a
chuckle, “Paborito a tirtiraen.”
(You’re fond of hitting me.) Then we had a nice photo together. His wife, mayor
Chevylle and his kids are also very nice to me.
Last April, in what would be
our last encounter, MVF visited us at home during the “last night” of the wake
for my dad. Surrounded by barangay captains, including my brother Herry, he
stayed for almost seven hours until almost the break of dawn. I sat right
beside him for about half an hour during which he told me how he has always
respected my thoughts and how he chooses not to get affected by criticisms and
unfair accusations and how he prefers to “just do his job.”
Never that night or ever did
he tell me to shut up or tone down.
I love living in a city where
a person can freely and responsibly express views, no matter how uncomfortable
it may be to the powerful. That is why as a dutiful son of Laoag, I share my
thoughts and talents in the ways I know, always with pure intentions, always with
humility, and a dash of courage.
MVF helped make that
possible. He consciously made Laoag a fertile ground to write, a safe place to
disagree, a conducive place for the practice of journalism.
I thus say that MVF, simply
by being MVF—with all his human strengths and frailties—helped me nurture a
career in writing.
For that, I am thankful.
So long, Sir Michael. Rest
now. May God be with you.
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