(Eulogy for Lory) by By Jerome Bailen
Written on April 1, 1976
Lory was a complex person and she impressed people who knew her in different ways.
As a new instructor at the Department of Anthropology at the UP, I knew her as a brilliant student and as a very promising colleague. In fact, even before she finished her degree, she was offered a job, that of being my teaching assistant in Social Anthropology which she willingly accepted and took on with great enthusiasm. She belongs to the rare and unfortunately vanishing breed of students who gave more than what was necessary to a task; who would cover a whole blue book instead of only a page or two in answering an examination question and who would invariably submit a 30 paged term paper instead of the 5-10 pages minimally required for a course. She gave more of herself than what was expected in every task she addressed herself to.
These and other related incidents bear witness not only to Lory’s capacity for serious work but of her tendency to think of the needs of others before that of her own. She could have been a definite asset to the UP Department of Anthropology or to any Department elsewhere had she wanted a more prosaic and routinary existence.
But the question she grappled with and the burning issues to which she unhesitatingly flung herself were bigger than the narrow and sometimes meaningless pre-occupations of a great many university departments.
Maria Lorena Barros died March 24, 1976 in the service of the people – these were the poignant words written on an unpretentious piece of faded cartolina on the bulletin board of the UP Dept. of Anthropology. The Sacred Book tells us that “greater love hath no man than this – that he lay down his life for his friends.” But more than that, Lory’s courageous example has affirmed for us man’s essential humanity – which is man’s capacity to transcend his own basic and selfish needs and selflessly offer himself to a cause greater than any of all of us.
Such a beautiful eulogy. It captured the essence of Lorie's person. And only people who truly knew Lorie before she developed into the revolutionary that she became known as could have written this. I don't want to remember Lorie the way she died but the way she lived. She was indeed courageous and offered her life for the cause she believed in. But stripped of her ideology, Lorie can and should be admired for, as you said, her "capacity for serious work", "her tendency to think of others first". I can add: her talent as a poet and essayist, her intellect, her being a loving and caring person...etc. Even those who captured and imprisoned her respected her (this was my impression from stories told)becaues of her graciousness.
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