On this week's episode of Wild Card, actor Ted Danson says it's possible to embrace your regrets. I wish I hadn't become a liar, you know, early in life, but even your wounds you kind of have fondness for if you've lived through it and made amends and all of that stuff. I'm Rachel Martin. Join us for NPR's Wild Card Podcast, the game where cards control the conversation. In the very beginning, the start of time, there were only three things.
The ocean, the sky, and a single bird in constant flight. One day, the bird grew tired. It swooped down, flying over the sea, looking for a place to land. Its wings stirred up the sea so much that the waves rose and crashed against the sky. Desperate to calm the sea, the sky rained down boulders. These boulders became the islands of the Philippines. The sky told the tired bird to build its nest on one of these islands.
Once on land, the bird was struck by a bamboo stock that was blowing in the breeze, annoyed, it pecked at the bamboo. The first Philippines emerged from these bamboo stocks. The first man, Malakas, which means strength. And the first woman, Magandah, who was beautiful. And that's how the world began, with Malakas and Magandah, the first man and woman, according to Filipino legend. The legend was passed down for generations, from person to person, year to year.
But in the 20th century, Malakas and Magandah would come alive again, resurrected by two people. They're almost Ramaldas. If you will allow me, I'll marry you right now. Ferdinand, Marcos, and Imelda, Romaldes. Marcos was very fond of sort of projecting the two of them in the role of the first man and woman of the Philippines emerging from these mythical bamboo stocks beginning of time. So he was the strong man and she was the beautiful one. And this really how they saw themselves.
Ferdinand, Marcos ruled the Philippines for 21 years. First as a democratically elected president, and later as a brutal and oppressive dictator, all the while, with Imelda decide. And they leaned hard into this legend. They even commissioned portraits of themselves emerging from the broken bamboo stocks of legend. Marcos bare-chested looking chiseled with a knife in hand. Imelda swad in white gauze, her black hair, windswept, her gaze almost ethereal.
These were spot as their image making of the new society they were going to build. A mythical notion of power, they stood at the very origin of the nation and therefore they were entitled to rule it. You know that they had a special calling to rule the nation. At this point you might be wondering why are we talking about the marcoses?
Reconcils of the Marcos of the Philippines Ferdinand, Marcos of the Philippines Ferdinand, Marcos of the Philippines or as he's more commonly known, Bong Bong Marcos. The sole son of dictator Ferdinand Marcos was elected president of the Philippines in 2022 and he's bringing his legend back to life. Now the younger Marcos Jr. is promising a return to the golden age of his father's rule. The Philippines shall continue to be a friend to all, an enemy to none.
The United States assigned a deal allowing large numbers of its troops to return to the Philippines for the first time in three decades. U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin met Marcos and Manila on Thursday. Our alliance makes both of our democracies more secure and helps uphold a free Indo-Pacific. Bong Bong Marcos pulled off a landslide victory winning more than double the votes of his closest opponent. When he was sworn in as president, it was almost as if history was repeating itself.
A Marcos would once again rule the Philippines. Welcome to the epic of Marcos. In this tale of a family that's larger than life, one man lies at the center. Ferdinand Marcos Sr. But the figures that surround him are just as important. Emelda, his muse, Bong Bong, his heir, and the United States, his faithful sidekick. By following the story of the Marcos family, we can see the blueprint for authoritarianism clearly.
How melodrama, paranoia, love, betrayal, and a hunger for power collide to create a dynasty. I'm Rondandeel Fattaf. And I'm Romteen Arablui. On this episode of Thureline from NPR, producer Christina Kim chronicles how Ferdinand Marcos orchestrated his rise and lamented his fall. And how the Marcoses that remain are engineering the family's resurrection. Hi, this is Lauren Scum from Chicago, Illinois. And you are listening to Thureline. New from the embedded podcast.
What happens when three Republican women challenge their own party? Maybe we need to speak out a little bit bolder. Maybe we need to do something to get people's attention. They have a front row seat to democracy. Now, you do too. Listen to supermajority from NPR's embedded in WPLN. Hey there, this is Felix Contreras. And I'm Ana Maria Serra from the Alt Latino podcast.
This week, we offer you a peek behind the curtain into the creative process for one of Latin music's most prolific composers and producers. Ana and I visited with Edgar Barreira in his home studio while he broke down track by track some of his greatest hits. You may not know his name, but you know his work. On the next Alt Latino podcast from NPR. You know that one person who hangs out at all the same places as you and his friends with all your friends, but you're not friends?
Well, two pop stars are confronting that tension head on in a new song. And the internet is eating it up. And while these singers are healing, it seems like a lot of people still want to see a fight. But why? Listen on its been a minute from NPR. Part 1 This is the first time I've ever met someone like this. This nation can be great again. This is a story that starts with a murder. It's a dark and rainy night.
Newly elected Filipino congressman Julio Nalundasin contend and full after a dinner with friends. Steps out to the wash basin on his porch to brush his teeth. When from the shadows, a single shot explodes. His body falls limped to the ground. Nalundasin was murdered. The prime suspect was a young man named Fernan Ann Marcos. It was 1935 in Nalocos, Norte, a northern Philippines province. Fernan Marcos was then an 18-year-old student at the University of the Philippines.
He was home for the elections. Elections that Fernan's father, Mariano, had just lost to none other than... Julio Nalundasin, a politician who was the rival of Mariano Marcos. That's Sheila Coronel, a professor and director of the Tony Stubil Center for investigative journalism at Columbia University. Nalundasin and his followers were seen parading around the town. And in front of Marcos's house with a coffin that said Marcos is dead.
And that really riled up the Marcos' sort of pouring salt into wound that was still fresh. When Nalundasin's body lying in cold blood, all eyes turned to Fernan Marcos. He was a champion marksman at the University of Rifle in Pistol Team. He was seen to be the most plausible suspect. A smoking gun loomed with the young Fernan at the center of it all. But he didn't bulk. Instead, as his case was appealed and sent up to the Supreme Court, his name became known across all the Philippine Islands.
The myth, the legend of the Marcos name, was in the making. He famously defended himself. He acted at his own lawyer in an all-white suit. It was a well-covered trial because he was this young man who was studying to be a lawyer. It was about to take the bar. He was at the top of his class. And the justices acquitted him of the murder. The main reason the justice has acquitted him was that they said it would be a pity to have someone with such promise. Go to jail.
I think the myth there was here was a brilliant man who defended his family's honor and acquitted himself. So, Marcos, instead of denying the murder, has made it flipped around and made it a myth about his brilliance. And part of his inevitability, this man was saved for greater things. And the justices saw that. That this was part of his destiny. So, that started the Marcos legend. Propagating myths about himself and his family almost from the time that he came out in public life.
Ferdinand Marcos never quite fit in. He was not modern or cosmopolitan. He was looked down upon by his classmates. But suddenly, with this trial, his name was known throughout the country. A gunshot had split the bamboo and begun to unlock his future. He believed that he was destined to rule the country. A destiny that seemed far off so long as the Philippines remained a colony, first of Spain and then the US. The United States has always been a looming presence in Philippine life.
In 1898, under the command of Admiral Duey, the American fleet defeated the Spaniards and the United States occupied the Philippines. We were a few things for a US colony for years. Our little brown brothers would need 50 or 100 years of close supervision to develop anything resembling Anglo-Saxon political principles and skills. William Taft, US governor of the Philippines. The colonial rule brought American education, American military, American democracy.
Influences that were forced upon the Filipino people after losing a bloody conflict with the US. The Philippines was America's first democracy building project, way before Iraq or Afghanistan. Because it was democracy introduced by empire. From the US perspective, colonization was not a pression, colonization was a gift. A professor of history in Southeast Asian studies at the University of Washington in Seattle.
It was a gift that they were giving these benign people currently experiencing disorder and stuff like that. For all Filipinos, there is a single political goal, independence. Yet before the dream of independence could be realized, came World War II, the bombing of the Open City of Manila on 2016 December 1941. When the Japanese invaded the Philippines, 200,000 plus Filipinos fought for the US. Fernand Marcos was one of them.
In the fierce and hopeless battles that followed, there were four Filipinos soldiers for every American soldier. The war was brutal, with estimates of civilian and military deaths ranging from half a million to a million. But not long after World War II ended, on July 4th, 1946. The Philippines was finally granted that a loosive thing they'd long hoped for. Independence. America keeps her pledge to free the Philippines. And the Philippine flag is hoisted as a new nation is born.
The destiny Fernand Marcos had dreamed up for himself was now within striking distance. And he wasn't about to let the opportunity slip through his fingers. So just like with the murder trial, he dialed up the drama. He claimed to have won so many battles during the war that he has more medals, 32 medals, more than Audim Murphy, who is the American World War II hero. Some of those medals are now suspected to be false, and his war record is disputed.
He was not that heroic, larger than life, hero of the Second World War, that he said he was, that was the basis of his election campaign when he ran for Senator. But it didn't matter. The mid-the-sea of blood World War II had wrought, Marcos managed to emerge from the bamboo stocks as Malacas, the mythical strongman, the original man. His transformation was nearly complete. The only thing he was missing was his magandar.
He found her in a young woman Marcos would later call his secret weapon, Amelda. It is not expensive to be beautiful. It takes all the little effort to be presentable and beautiful. Beauty is a discipline. She was like a movie star. She was like a celebrity. She was beautiful. She had this incredible long hair. She was Miss Thisa, mixed face, she had light skin, very imposing figure.
Despite being born into a political dynasty, Amelda grew up in poverty after her father squandered the family's fortunes. And so she had to go to work, but she didn't have inheritance money. Amelda's big break came when she entered a beauty contest in Manila. She didn't win, but her presence made a splash, garnering the attention of many men, including Fernandan Marcos. This guy is a future president. This guy is brilliant. This guy is everything.
He is single and he is a real bachelor. He is brilliant. He's got all the potential. He's legendary. He is just a...whoever will not marry this guy is stupid. He immediately fell in love with her. And part of the Marcos myth is that they engaged in what he called an 11-day coup courtship. Eleven days. And with that, the 20th century Malacas and Magandá set out to build the Marcos myth together. He and Amelda were quite a glamorous couple. They were likened to John and Jackie Kennedy.
They were like...they like to promote themselves as the Philippine Camelot. Camelot. A fictional castle that King Arthur was said to have ruled with wisdom and benevolence. It was the word that captured the enduring mystique around JFK and Jackie Kennedy. A word that encapsulated their youth, their vitality and their charm. A model for Fernan and Amelda. JFK and Jackie knew that if you look wealthy and healthy, then people believe that you are.
And believeability is a politician's greatest asset. Marcos was around, in his mid-40s, in Malda was 36, in 1965. And they were a good-looking couple. And they sort of were represented the new Philippines. He's the warrior, or author, you know, the hero who reversed the Supreme Court conviction. And he said he had lots of war medals. This is Teleta Spíritu, she's an associate professor at Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts.
An author of passionate revolutions, the media and the rise and fall of the Marcos regime. People saw her as something like a star. She appealed to the most marginalized Filipinos. And like every star, Amelda needed a signature look. And Teleta's dad, who was actually Amelda's personal dressmaker, helped her create a tutorial persona that was both modern and traditional.
He designed this silhouette that became her signature, which is the tall, terino, long gown, full length, like empire waist and butterfly sleeves. These tall, poofy sleeves that went from shoulder to the bicep became the new symbol of modernity, of a new age coming to the Philippines. It looked like a Filipino-ized or an indigenous version of Jacqueline Onassis Kennedy. Fernanon and Amelda were seen as a breath of fresh air, after a devastating war, and after so many years of being colonized.
The strong man and the beauty, capable and charming, stern but loving. If you looked especially at the foreign coverage at that time, there were scenes like this new leaders who were coming forward to lead this country and bring about the promise of Filipino progress and democracy. The stage was set for Fernan Marcos to run in the 1965 presidential election. Fernan and Amelda campaigned with pizzazz. Fernan gave rousing speeches. There are still a thousand rivers to be crossed.
Amelda serenaded crowds with love songs. And they even had a motion picture made. Iguenuhit nang-dhan. Drawn by destiny is the English translation. Drawn by destiny was a movie all about Fernan Marcos' life that was, of course, heavily dramatized. And like most melodramas, it had a tantalizing love story. Miss Amelda Ramaldes. The future Mrs. Fernan Marcos. It really enhanced this idea of if I vote for Fernan, I'm voting for this romance.
At the end of the movie, which came out a few months before the actual election, Fernan is depicted as destined to become president. The eyes of all Asia and the entire world are upon Fernan E. Marcos, man of justice. It's a very early version of the blurring of the lines between politics and entertainment, a pseudo media event. And they were doing this in 1965. And it worked. I, suddenly, swear that I will pay for the end for chances to even feel the duties of president of the Philippines.
When he was inaugurated president in 1965, Marcos said this nation can be great again. They came at a time when people wanted to believe that the Philippines was a rising star, the Asian region, and that it had a bright future ahead of it, and that the Marcos' were going to lead them to that future. President Fernan Marcos strengthened the relationship with the US, which was caught up in the Vietnam War, and needed the Philippines nearby bases.
That is why I compliment the leaders of the Philippines in playing a role in Asian cooperation, economically, politically, and otherwise to bring about the peace that we all seek. And with the money from the US, he invested in the Philippines. He built more roads and schools, and helped the country produce enough rice to feed itself. Everything was clicking. The Philippines seemed to be entering a new era. But everything wasn't what it seemed. Marcos, Marcos, please, Marcos!
Coming up, the Marcos myth is tested. Hi, this is Delphine Salon from Rancho Co Camunga, California, and you are listening to Through Line from NPR. Meet to stay up to date on all the news, but just can't find the time. Try NPR's new Up First Newsletter. You'll get important stories, critical developments on breaking news, and perspectives on hot topics that you're totally free to pass off as your own. Sign up at mpr.org slash Up First Newsletter.
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Part 2. For a national development, what we need is discipline. I often wonder what I will be remembered in history for. Scholar, military hero, the new constitution, strong rallying point, or weak tyrant. In the late 1960s, I was still in grade school when there were student demonstrations. I was completely oblivious to what was going on, but I do remember being picked up from school. And there were the right police, were battling with protesters.
I remember having to duck under the car because there was so much chaos all around. Things started stirring up in Marcos's second term. After his reelection in 1969, Marcos' Camelot quickly devolved into chaos. There were protests for land reform. The country was swimming in debt. There were protests for workers' rights. Oil prices were up. There were protests for student rights. And a growing communist movement promised to shake up the elite rule that had never gone away.
Suddenly the tiktonic place was shifting because all the things that had been building up underneath were coming out to the surface and the ground was moving. And there was a political system that was unable to contain all of this moving tiktonic place in society. People were beginning to question Marcos' rule and the man behind the myth. Because for the average Filipino, life was not getting any better. Despite the changes being made, the money wasn't trickling down.
Watching all this, Marcos decided he needed to double down on the idea that he was the Philippines' destiny. In his diary, he wrote, This is your principal mission in life. Save the country again from the Maoists, the anarchists and the radicals. This is the message that I deduce. I have that feeling of certainty that I will end up with dictatorial powers if the situation continues. And the situation will continue.
And in 1972, after months of protest and unrest in the Philippines, President Fernan Marcos finally made his move. My here continent, I served the 21st of this month. I signed population number 1081, placing entire Philippines under martial law. Marcos is always to stay in power. The only way he could stay in power was to declare martial law and make himself dictator. Which is what he did in 1972. Overnight, streets that have been filled with the sounds of protest turned silent.
It was quiet. There were armed guards manning the barricades. The entry to the presidential palace was very restricted. And it was a very, very big difference from the kind of thriving bustling place it used to be. I am confident that we will guard ourselves with the Tena Dream. Although we formed society a new and rightful world. A new sound filled the air. There were songs associated with the martial law regime that we were all supposed to know by heart.
Bagang Taksilang, also known as the March of the New Society, heard here, is a song to let the remembers singing as a child. In it, a new society, the one Marcos promised to bring, is heralded as a new birth, with the Marcos as the country's all powerful saviors. A lot of the mid-making really happened and had absolute power already.
I remember as a child, like my mother telling us, like, you know, if you did something wrong, she would actually say don't do that the president would get angry with you. There was nothing else on television, there was nothing else on the radio, everywhere you look was written in a magazine. I've always claimed to be some kind of a soldier for beauty and the soldier for love. Marcos literally had a bust of himself carved an amount inside.
Nagitla, Nagitla. The Marcos' controlled everything people saw. Anything that showed Marcos weak or sick was censored. Anything about the family well was censored. Any critical news was censored. Anything that showed a mildest double chin, for example, even photographs were censored. Political opponents were jailed and silenced. The message was clear. I was growing up, over and over on the radio and TV, what it meant was that for the country to progress we need discipline.
And that discipline meant, you know, they had to obey the ruler. The rulers who were benevolent and benign, and that would lead them to greatness. Now everybody seems to be involved in the destiny, not only of himself, but of the entire country and of the entire nation. And this is what we have been hoping and praying for. He saw himself as the culmination of the long struggle to build an independent and proud country.
And so he commissioned historians to write history books that said his new society was the inevitable end of this thriving for national greatness. Fernand and Amelda made themselves seem like the past, the present, and the future of the Philippines. I grew up blinded by this monumentality, by this pageantry. All that I do and we in government must do before the republic and for you. But what was actually happening was that he was replacing the old elite, right?
Like the old elite families, he was replacing it with his own network of crony families. But at the time, no one knew the extent of the corruption. And so while some Filipinos opposed Marco's declaration of martial law, others believed it was a necessary step to rein in the instability that had seized the country. For the most part, it was tolerated, including by the United States.
If the United States now were to throw in the towel and come home, and the communist took over South Vietnam, then all over Southeast Asia, all over the Pacific, in the midi, in Europe, in the world, the United States would suffer a blow. Remember, this was the time that the US was fighting wars in Vietnam. This was the time of the Domino theory, when Americans didn't want any of the Domino's to fall. Marco's knew this, so he played up the communist threat in the Philippines.
Marco's could not have survived without active US support. And just like he promised the Filipino people stability at home, he promised it on the global stage as well. He was creating a narrative, so he's saying that there's this threat and I'm in power, and while I'm in power, I'm not going to let this over-commerce. I'm going to be the strong man, jump on my horse and save the day. He got American support also because the Americans needed their basis in the Philippines.
And Marco's would guarantee that access to military bases in the Philippines. It was an offer the US couldn't refuse. And President after President recognized Marco's role. President, Mrs. Marco's, the United States deeply values its close friendship and alliance with the Philippines. But Fernan and Amelda weren't just interested in winning over the Filipino people or the US. They had their eyes on the whole world.
They understood that the most important ingredient in their recipe for power, beyond rewriting history books, building monuments, or having friends in high places, was to put on a good show. And that's exactly what they did. In 1974, they hosted the Miss Universe pageant. And now competing for the 1974 title and crown with an honor guard from the Philippine Military Academy. Here are the most beautiful barrels in the universe!
And the famous thriller in Manila fight between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier. Muhammad Ali Ali! It was like they put a spell on the world, especially Amelda. She was everywhere as the de facto global diplomat of the Philippines, visiting with heads of state in China. I am happy to report that we return from this my state visited the people of the Republic of China with another mission accomplished. Addressing the United Nations. For too long have we been divided by selfish materialist drives.
All while still looking the part. First lady, I have to flaunt, practically flaunt love and beauty. So that the 50 million Filipinos will see what is to love and what is to positively feel and what is perfection. The Melda moccas may have used millions of dollars of taxpayer's money to purchase what she thought were Italian masterpiece paintings. Amelda reportedly spent $3 million in a single shopping trip in New York City, as many in the Philippines faced poverty.
Using the Philippine intelligence budget as the equivalent of an American express gold card, Amelda Marcos traveled to such places as Kenya, Iraq and New York City. The total cost of the trips listed in these documents exceeds one and a half million dollars. What the world was seeing was a shiny veneer that the Marcos had constructed to conceal the underbelly of the regime. It was common for the military to come in burn villages. There was one instance where they inserted wires in my genitals.
Gather the men and the children and put them in naval ships where the women were routinely raped. I know personally so many people are who had been tortured. I know people who have disappeared. I know people who have been killed. Throughout the 1970s and early 80s, the two faces of the Marcos regime, the spectacle of opulence and the violent suppression, were in a constant delicate dance.
But the growing communist insurgency, which actually grew strength under Marcos, and the growing middle class discontent, were once again turning the Philippines into a powder keg. All it needed was a spark. The turning point came in 1983 when Ninoia Quino, former senator, was killed. Benigno Ninoia Quino was one of Marcos' loudest critics and political opponents. After spending eight years in prison, he and his wife Goratón, Coria Quino, were exiled to the US to receive medical treatment.
Quino returned to the Philippines with the hopes of restoring democracy. He was shot right on the tarmac of Manila Airport. And many people believed it was Marcos or his wife or one of somebody in the Marcos camp, who was responsible for his killing. An independent investigation of the murder would later find that it was Filipino military personnel who planned and carried out the assassination plot.
But for the Filipino people, it didn't matter who pulled the trigger. Quino's death became a clarion call for change. It really showed the brazenness of the Marcos regime and the impunity with which they ruled. That really dramatized, especially for the middle class, that, you know, this regime was no longer tolerable. Beginning in 1983, political opposition to Marcos became more and more open. Buckling under pressure, including from the US, Marcos promised to hold elections.
Ninoia Quino's widow, Cory, ran against Marcos. She built herself as a housewife without political experience. I admit that I have no experience in cheating, stealing, lying, or assassinating political opponents. It resonated. Filipinos can see that, oh, I can really identify with that housewife because she suffered. Marcos won in what many knew was a stolen election. But even if he was able to strong arm the polls, he lost the narrative battle.
The Marcos' had lost control of the story that they had been telling for more than a decade. The terms of melodrama kind of like shifts on them, right? They can't control the melodrama anymore. Marcos was no longer the legendary Malacas. A melda, no longer maganda. She's become, sorry, the opposite of that. She is like a monstrous figure. It's difficult to identify with. After the sham elections, the opposition to Marcos was at a fever pitch.
By late February, marches were being held every day on the Pifanio de Los Santos Avenue, or Edsa, escalating to what is now called the People Power Revolution. One more name, like my father just woke everyone up and said, we're going! To lead this father, a melda's famous dressmaker, had already severed ties with the Marcos'. And after years of cultivating a melda's image, he was ready for a change. My father, like, dragging us out the bed, packing us into the family car.
My mom handing out washcloths in case there was tear gas. And then just going, getting emotional, because it was like, I imagine I'm 15 at this point. So I remember being home and trying to keep up with home, not knowing if we were going back to school, not knowing what was going to happen. And then an amazing thing is, we didn't know what to expect, but once we got to Edsa, which is this main thoroughfare, we saw all the cars.
I asked you now to become, not to be prepared to express your power of the people. It was a peaceful protest. It was just everyone was there. There was a lot of prayer going on, and when I mean prayer, I mean praying the Rosary. So, you know, like nuns with megaphones leading the Rosary. Sheila Coronel was also there. By this time she was a journalist working for the Manila Times, a newspaper that had just reopened after being shut down during martial law.
On that fourth night, I was dedicated to the presidential palace, and there was already an angry, big, angry crowd gathered there. And I remember, I don't know if I'm imagining it, but I remember hearing the word of helicopters. Those of the helicopters that were taking the Marcus family out of the presidential palace. The marcuses were airlifted by US security forces to Hawaii. And when the marcuses left, nobody manned the barcades anymore or the palace gates.
So, the crowd just searched in and I was part of that crowd. It was like a giant wave that crashed through the gates of the palace. You walked into the dining room, the bedroom, the closet with a meldice, thousand plus pairs of shoes. It was unbelievable, it felt really unreal to be the discodalty. Fernanann and a meldice marcuses 21-year reign as the leaders of the Philippines had come to an end. Marcus legacy as a dictator was set in stone, or so it seemed.
Coming up, the return of the Marcus family. Hi, my name is Kevin Billin from Cicero, Indiana. And you're listening to Through Line via NPR. NPR brings you the updates you need on the day's biggest headlines. And it narrowly past the debt ceiling bill that will prevent the country from defaulting on its loans. Stories from across the world. Knowing how to forage and to live with the land is integral to a niece culture. And down your block. From CPR news, this is Colorado Matters.
And you can find all of that and more in your pocket. Download the NPR app today. Part 3. Together we shall rise again. I have an... I have a responsibility of upholding integrity of holding our debt sacred, the vibrating, the late President Marcus in the Philippines, his motherland. It was my father's fervent wish that when he came to the end of his days, that he would be buried in the simple soldier's ceremony. It was quiet, the family was there, all dressed up. Melda was clad in all black.
Bang bang Marcus, Fernand's only son and namesake, were a crisp white baron Tagalog. The National Filipino shirt, his father always wore. He was a burl with a 21 gun, with all the ceremony. And it was filmed in a very theatrical fashion. It was kind of the kind of epic propaganda that was prevalent during the Marcus era. Fernand Marcus had died in exile in Hawaii in 1989, nearly three decades before this moment when he was finally buried in Manila. Yes, you heard that right.
For almost 30 years, Marcus' body was preserved above ground unburied. And this moment in 2016 when he was finally laid to rest was no ordinary funeral. For Melda and for the family, I mean clearly just vindication. Ever since returning from exile in the early 90s, Melda had made it her rallying cry to bring Fernand Marcus' body back to the Philippines. She used that corpse precisely to forge, to continue this melodrama, a story about deprivation, a story about loss, a story about disrespect.
By casting herself as a grieving widow, a Melda could distract attention from the countless charges of corruption she and her family faced, and continue to face by the way, for reportedly embezzling billions of dollars from state coffers. So she pumped up the drama and the spectacle. She refused to bury Marcus and instead kept his body on display, albeit with a wig and waxed face, according to the mortician. They built this huge mausoleum in Elokos, around it.
And if you go there, you sort of enter, it's very somber, there's classical music and so forth. And it was right beside this building called Malakanyang of the Norse Malakanyang being the name of the presidential palace. So they built a kind of replica. Like a venerated saint or holy man, Marcus' corpse waited. After previous presidents had refused, Marcus aburial in the National Heroes' cemetery.
Duterte allowed it. President Rodrigo Duterte, the strong man populist known for silencing journalists and extrajudicial killings. We thank President Rodrigo Duterte for his recognition of my father's service to the nation. The burial wasn't just a symbolic act. It was a rewriting of history. Fishely, Marcus is now a hero. And so that reversed what we thought was already the judgment of history that Marcus was not a hero, that Marcus was a dictator who plundered the country.
It must be the heroes that my father asked us all to be and finally bring the Filipino nation together and finally bring the Filipinos to greatness. The same year Fernand Marcus was buried, his son Bong Bong ran for Vice President. The Marcus family was back and ready to play a big role in the Philippines again. This is a historic moment for us all. I feel it deep within me. You, the people, have spoken and it is resounding.
In 2022, Fernand and Bong Bong Marcus became the President of the Philippines. Years of drumming up nostalgia paid off. You could say that the current presidency of Bong Bong Marcus is a culmination of this world drama. We just need to keep this connection. Because it is my father's birthday. So we are celebrating also Marcus Day. The Marcus family knows the power of history.
And while Bong Bong has an employed historians to rewrite history books, he's using the tools of the 21st century to recast his father's regime as a golden age. He's on YouTube and TikTok. My father had a vision, a dream for our country. And he wanted to reach that dream by building this nation up. Let us return. There's even a full length feature movie called Made in Malakanyang about the Marcus' last days in the Philippines before they were exiled. Get them out of the Philippines.
Executive produced by Senator Imi Marcus, Bong Bong's sister. The content is over the top, emotive, and like any good story, easy to get wrapped up in. But in this version of events, there's no mention of the billions of dollars the family is accused of stealing. The thousands tortured, were the more than 2,000 people killed during the regime.
What you're getting now is the struggles, real struggle, between the historians who are concerned about historical record, versus propagandists who are more intent in creating this image of Marcus' myth of Marcus. It's all per the reason why the hero's burial was so important to the family. It tied a bow on the story they've been selling. People just have fuzzy memories of the Marcus' history.
The relationship between the United States and the Philippines and the state of the Arctic is very deep bruised. And the Americans have conveniently forgotten that they supported Marcus. They supported torture and human rights violations. After meeting with President Bong Bong Marcus in 2022, President Biden tweeted, quote, Our nation's relationship is rooted in democracy, common history, and people to people ties.
But missing from the tweet, the importance of Filipino military bases right now, as US tensions with China continue to rise. And even within the Philippines, the historical record has never been fully sealed. The Philippines didn't do a good job of revising textbooks to show the next generation who really happened during the Marcus era. The majority of the Filipino electorate doesn't have any personal memories of martial law.
Instead, they've only witnessed the instability of the government to combat poverty, tackle corruption, or build more infrastructure. Which is why, according to Sheila Coronel, for many Filipinos, the nostalgic idea that the Philippines was once great and could be again with the Marcus family at the helm is so appealing. The new generation of Filipinos have profound alienation from democratic politics.
Unlike my generation that lives with dictatorship and had seeded and believed in the transformative power of democracy, this generation is disillusioned with democracy. They're connected with incompetence, gridlock, ineptness, with an inability to do anything about the problems of society. So Filipinos have fresh memories of the disappointments of democracy. And so maybe they're much more open to other fantasies. So the Marcuses have capitalized on that.
And they're saying, look, we are not elites. They're still saying that. This liberal elites have fooled you, have deceived you. They have not lived up to their promises. What's at stake is a particular understanding of the way power works. I can't say it then off. It's like we can't think that dictatorships happen in the third world. We have this false sense of security. If we think that we've been saved, we've been spared from it.
History has been written everywhere. Vladimir Putin is revising history to show that Ukraine has always been part of Russia. Nurendra Modi is recasting Indian history as primarily as Hindu history.
So the use of history, even here in the United States, the use of history to justify autocracy, the suppression of dissent, to mythologize certain rulers, and to demonize certain political, religious, or ethnic groups, is prevalent around the world and the Marcuses are part of what's an emerging and very dangerous global trend. That's it for this week's show. I'm Randa Dilfattach. I'm Ramteen Arabley and you've been listening to Thurline from NPR. This episode was produced by me and Lauren Swoo.
Julie Kane. Anya Steinberg. Yolanda Sangwayni. Kasey Meiner. Grisdina Kim. Devon Kadiama. Your Donner's Tisfazoon. Thank you to Miao Gonzalez, Lenny Gonzalez, Carla Estevez, and Phil Harrell for their voiceover work. Backtracking for this episode was done by Kevin Volkowen. This episode was mixed by Robert Rodriguez. Music for this episode was composed by Ramteen and his band Drop Electric, which includes Anya Mizani. Navid Marvi. Shou Fujihara.
Also thanks to Michael Ratner, Johannes Durdy, Michael Sullivan, Vincent Nye, Kathleen Gutierrez, Richard Frances, Nick Smith, Brett Nile, Jerry Holmes, and Anya Grunnit. And as always, if you have an idea or like something you heard on the show, please write us at Thurline at npr.org. Before you go, we want to let you know about another story that takes place in the Philippines. It's from our colleagues over at the Sunday Story on the Upverse Podcast.
Since 2016, more than 8,000 people have been killed as part of former president Rodrigo Tuterte's infamous war on drugs. When Ferdinand Marcos Jr. took office in 2022, he made a bold claim. He said the Philippines would end this spree of state-sanctioned killings of alleged drug users and focus on rehabilitation instead. NPR's Emily Feng recently visited the Philippines to see how things are going, and she found that things have not changed as much as she expected.
Here her reporting on the Sunday Story on NPR's Upverse Podcast, wherever you listen.