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Introduction
What is the value of myth
in the modern world? Why tell more
stories?
Myths help us in the
continuing work of defining our identities as Filipinos, as we get fragmented
and assimilated, as we adopt and adapt, as we narrow and broaden our concept of
what it means to be us. This is, in
essence, what we have lost, and what we yearn to find – pieces that we know to
ours, to be us, that we can take back
into ourselves even as we grow as individuals, as a people, in an increasingly
multi-cultural world.
Our core culture is what
we share in common: whether we never left the islands, or became immigrants to
blessed America, or were born and raised in a country that has become a new
homeland. There is no denying our
heritage even as we choose whatever else we add to it. The old stories are imbedded in our bones,
the old songs ring in our blood. Acceptance of this primal Filipino-ness,
articulated through our literature, empowers us to negotiate all our tomorrows
with a finer sense of distinctiveness.
Our stories make us who and what we are.
To move into the future
we need to understand our past. We need
to understand what we have lost. We need
to seek, to find, to ask, to answer.
We need to claim and
reclaim, interpret and reinterpret, and invent (for how soon does today become
yesterday?) and reinvent the myths of our heartland, transforming the elements
of the past into the fundamentals of the future. We need to contemporize magic and wonder, reimagining
the deathless marvels of the old with the fresh insight – and pain - of the
modern world, and create new stories that honor where we came from. At the same time, we need to speak about
where we are and where we long to be. We
need to remember and we need to create new memories – new mythologies that make
sense to us, that have meaning, that have relevance, that have truth.
And thus this anthology,
these stories and poems – kwentos –
of lost things, which use Philippine myths as jumping off points to articulate
and make tangible this sense of questing and of questioning.
Now go, read, and find.
Dean Francis Alfar
Manila 2013
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