Filming Biblical Interpretations from the Ground: Anti-Empire Matthean Interpretations in Huwag Kang Papatay (2017) and the Philippine “Drug War”
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Non-Jesus Film: Huwag Kang Papatay as a Documentary Film
2.1. Basic Characteristics as a Documentary
2.2. Available Formats
2.3. Funding
2.4. Film Production and Credits
2.5. Plot
- 00:00: The documentary begins with Duterte, speaking behind the podium with the seal of the presidency, exaggeratedly claiming that there were 3,000,000 drug addicts in the Philippines and that he would be happy to kill them.
- 00:16: The screen turns black, and the title appears in all capitals: “Huwag Kang Papatay.”
- 00:22: It is followed by footage from within a moving car with sirens blazing and running towards one of the extrajudicially killed alleged drug personalities lying on the street amidst the darkness of the night. Spectators are seen while the Scene of the Crime Operatives (SOCO) check the dead person and gathers evidence.
- 1:01: The first conflict is articulated by a middle-aged man who describes the EJK victim as someone who does not even engage in drinking, with the follow-up of a woman reporter’s query regarding the slain man being on the drug watchlist. The hypothesis of the old man that the drug watch list was there to paint the EJK victim as a bad person, his refutation of the claim of the list and the apparent denial of the person using drugs will be the repeated scenario for many, if not most, of the EJK victims. The covering of the man with a blanket and the simultaneous clicking of the cameras by journalists symbolically encapsulate the recurrent scenarios for most of the EJK victims in the country.
- 1:40: The next scene is again set in a car with a news report in the vernacular, giving the statistics of the early EJK days. Human Rights Watch already reported that 24 out of the 32 cases investigated found that the police were responsible for the executions. There is already a critique on the justification that the victims were killed because they tried to fight or resist (nanlaban) the police officers amidst the anti-drug operations. The news report underlines how this police declaration contrasts with the witnesses’ claim that the victim was already surrendering when they were killed. The report continues with the information that Duterte and his cohorts might be held responsible for the crimes against humanity lodged at the International Criminal Court when the Philippines was still a member.
- 2:28: There is a change to daytime and a scene inside a car. It shows an oncoming garbage dump truck signaling the location of Payatas and the introduction of Fr. Pilario. He narrates how he has been ministering to the Ina ng Lupang Pangako Parish by presiding at masses since the 1990s. In between shots of Fr. Pilario inviting women to join the mass, he narrates the mother’s fear amidst the many EJKs happening in their midst.
- 3:25: Fr. Pilario hugs and condoles the mother of a 35-year-old EJK victim, Constantino Y. De Juan (12 August 1981–6 December 2016), in their shanty. The mother narrates how her son was warned about the bounty on his head, how he tried to avoid the threat of death, his efforts to cook for the birthday of his daughter Joan and his happiness to see his children, and how his life was cut short with the gunshots, even if his children were asked to leave him and despite his pleadings to spare him given his many children. Fr. Pilario talks to Mr. De Juan’s young daughter, who tried to hug and protect her father. Fr. Pilario asks her about her father’s final words. She responds that her father asked her not to leave and neglect her siblings. The scene continues with Fr. Pilario blessing Mr. De Juan’s coffin followed by his invitation to sing the Lord’s Prayer in the vernacular amidst his crying mother and children and others. A funeral scene follows Fr. Pilario’s narration of Mr. De Juan’s supplication that he be spared for the sake of his seven children. This section ends with Fr. Pilario holding the old woman’s hand while he checks on how she will take care of them, and she makes a tearful promise that she will strive to do so despite her old age.
- 6:49: The scene changes to nighttime, where other EJK victims are lying on the road surrounded by spectators. Duterte’s voice is heard, and he is seen reiterating his campaign until the last pusher and the last drug lord are killed, without mentioning the word killing but demonstrating it with his finger slitting his throat.
- 7:10: Fr. Pilario condoles and listens to the widows and orphans of the EJKs in Payatas. Mothers and widows tearfully narrate how their loved ones were killed. They gather inside a parish hall along with young children, with one child wearing an oversized t-shirt with the words “Never give up.” Mrs. De Juan speaks of the difficulty of caring for her seven grandchildren with their father gone and the mother not being around. The scene continues with Fr. Pilario leading a prayer for the victims of violence.
- 8:20: Footage is shown of men, women and children marching on a bridge with placards against EJKs, lamenting the loss of their loved ones, advocating for life and expressing what losing their loved ones means for them during the Christmas season, 2016. The people converge at Plaza Miranda in front of the well-known Quiapo Church, which is also the St. John the Baptist Parish and Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene in Manila. The footage shows the gathering of the urban poor and members of the cause-oriented group Urban Poor Associates staging their yearly Panunuluyan. It is a street theater staging of conflated Lukan and Matthean infancy narratives with a twist. It becomes a venue for them to publicly demonstrate their stance against the EJKs. They are not against solving drug addiction, but they want justice and the people’s rights to be respected.
- 9:34: The Panunuluyan continues but is succeeded by scenes from Mt 2:1−18 with the Herod actor declaring war against drugs, giving rights to the police to go after the drug personalities treated as criminals. The three wise men are shown agreeing with Herod but asking him to respect the rights of the poor. Herod is then shown knocking on an invisible door and killing the three wise men upon opening the door, followed by an evil laugh.
- 10:05: A post-demonstration press conference shows some of the Urban Poor Associates leaders, actors and other church leaders like Bishop Broderick Pabillo and Fr. Robert Reyes. Fr. Reyes, popularly known as the “running priest” and a staunch human rights and justice advocate, scolds those who pick on and kill low-level drug personalities. He flips the question regarding the addiction of human rights violators and politicians.
- 10:34: The scene shows Kalbaryo (Calvary), a street theater procession and demonstration of the urban poor resisting the EJKs. Timed during the Lenten season, the mise-en-scene represents the way of the cross, the way to Calvary, but with EJK victims prominently displayed and piled one on top of the other, with heads covered in plastic bags and masking tape, with the notorious cardboard signs identifying the victims as “I am a drug pusher” or “I am a drug addict”. Along with the urban poor men and women are the identifiable church workers (religious sisters, seminarians and priests) with placards demanding the cessation of drug-related human rights violations, killings and advocacies for approaches that solve the drug problem but save the victims. This is followed by a scene where the people and members of the (Roman Catholic) Church are shown marching and chanting the call to pray and to make a stand against the so-called “Drug War” and EJKs (culture of death) and to uphold the culture of life.
- 10:59: A dark, somber scene of a cross with lit candles and the pictures and names of EJK victims is shown, followed by a haunting sound depicting the lifeless bodies of the other EJK victims, men and women alike. Fr. Pilario’s words about his worries, considering those killed and his fear for the plight of the left-behind families, like the one of Mr. De Juan, are interspersed with shots of the lamenting families. Fr. Pilario asks the crucial question: Who gave these people the right to kill anyone? The camera shows the Kalbaryo street theater procession mixed with the Lenten practice of the Way of the Cross. Street actors show a half-naked man with thorns on his head bearing a cross and being flogged by actors playing the Roman soldiers. Fr. Reyes is shown participating in the procession/demonstration clad in his soutane. Fr. Pilario’s voice challenges the (Roman Catholic) Church to become more vocal, underlining that the silenced people need others who can voice their dissent. People carrying a huge placard are timely shown with the message: “Stop the killings. When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes a duty!”
- 12:01: The Kalbaryo procession continues. It shows men and women in white clothes smeared with red (signifying blood). They carry various crosses such as EJK, Death Penalty, low age of criminal liability, inadequate housing and others. Women representing the women accompanying Jesus in his ascent to Golgotha, followed by a vast throng of people with placards denouncing the EJKs and the “Drug War”, are seen being led by a masked person with a huge crown of thorns on his head. A tableau of Pieta is presented on the road along with a “Nanlaban” cardboard signage instead of INRI—the people bearing the social issues mentioned above as crosses are seen kneeling in the background. The sound of Pasyon, a sung version of Jesus’ passion, a widespread religious practice since the Spanish colonial times, is heard while the masked man crowned with thorns is tied to a cross as a spectacle. The image fades to black, and the end credits run.
- 12:21−47: The end credits.
2.6. Notable Characters
- Rodrigo Duterte-Philippine, the president (2016–2022), who ordered the so-called “Drug War” and repeatedly emphasized his desire to kill drug personalities (drug lords, pushers and addicts).
- The countless EJK victims who were killed on the streets, bullet holes in their bodies, either soaked in their blood, covered with cloth, or with cardboard messages stating that they were “drug pushers” or “drug addicts” and who should not be emulated.
- The SOCO police who investigated the crime scenes.
- The journalists, consisting of reporters (narration) and photojournalists assigned to cover the EJKs.
- Fr. Danny Pilario, the Vincentian priest and SVST Dean at the time of the film production and volunteer priest working at the Ina ng Lupang Pangako Parish, Payatas, Quezon City. He is a supporter of the families left behind by the EJK victims, like Mrs. De Juan, as shown in the film. He helped organize them as members of Project “Support for Orphans and Widows” (SOW). He theologizes from their context.
- Mothers, Orphans and Widows of the EJK victims, especially Mrs. De Juan, who laments and shows her resilience amidst the need to care for her grandchildren after her son was extrajudicially killed.
- Unnamed actors of the Panunuluyan and Kalbaryo from the Urban Poor Associates, who channeled their performative interpretation of the infancy and passion narratives into street theater as the embodiment of their dissent against “Tokhang” and the EJKs as well as the recontextualization of anti-Roman Empire sentiments in Matthew’s texts.
2.7. Notable Visuals
- The opening visuals are arresting. Clad in a black t-shirt, with the backdrop of the Philippine flag and the seal of the presidency, Duterte looks at the camera, which zooms in and, devoid of any expression, declares that he will be happy to slaughter the alleged 3,000,000 addicts just like what Hitler did in killing the Jews.
- The title page of pure black with the all-capital writing of “HUWAG KANG PAPATAY” (Thou shall not kill, based on Exodus 20:13, most likely KJV: “Thou shalt not kill”) is displayed as a stark and immediate contrast to the opening scene. The use of the KJV citation in the English subtitle instead of the more recent “You shall not murder” (NRSV) gives it a more archaic ring of divine prohibition.
- The first scene within the car, where a news report runs in the background, sirens blazing, while the car moves towards the first scene of an extrajudicially killed man lying on the street, provides a vibe of the experiences of the night crawlers—the journalists assigned to cover the so-called “Drug War” and the EJKs.
- One scene shows the close-up shots of the EJK victims with bullet wounds while the statistics and report from Human Rights Watch are played, underlining the police’s responsibility for the killings, the counter-testimony of the witnesses against the nanlaban claim and the image of a young boy tending to the remains of an EJK victim in a coffin.
- The scene of the wake for Mr. Constantino De Juan, with Fr. Pilario speaking with his mother and daughter, followed by singing of the Lord’s Prayer in the vernacular amidst the crying and lamentations of his bereaved family and the few who condoled with them.
- The urban poor people’s Panunuluyan (an adaptation of Mary and Joseph looking for an inn based on Luke 2 and Herod’s command to kill the young children in Mt 2:16−18) is a notable visual. This event is street theater and a demonstration calling on Duterte to stop the killings and is held in front of the Minor Basilica of the Black Nazarene in Quiapo, Manila. The camera focuses on the massive signage on the church’s façade that says “HUWAG KANG PAPATAY” (Thou shalt not kill, Ex 20:13). The visuals and the narrated plea to stop the EJKs work in synergy to deliver the message. This event is a vital scene in the documentary because Duterte’s populist and macho branding helped in his election as president (See Curato and Yonaha 2021). Yet, the message of the urban poor is now telling him to listen to them and to stop the bloody and divisive EJKs that result in a lot of orphans, widows and bereaved parents. The location is crucial, too, because the Basilica is less than 2 kilometers away or about 25 minutes on foot from the Malacanan Palace, the official residence of the Philippine president. The urban poor’s call is followed by rap music about the fearful silence reigning in the land because of the killings, sung by a young person with a jester mask. The rap song accompanies the staging of Mary and Joseph going from house to house to find a safe space for the birth of Jesus. They knock at a bullet-ridden “Door of Violence.”
- The urban poor people’s staging of the street theater Kalbaryo to demonstrate against the continuing killing during the Lenten season in 2017 is also a notable visual. The enumeration of the issues that make them suffer, as described by the crosses and the placards, are effective ways of communicating their grievances and dissent. The presence of more distinguishable men and women from the Roman Catholic Church expressing their opposition to the human rights violations of the so-called “Drug War” heightens the visual effect of the need to discuss the Roman Catholic Church’s response to the divisive and deadly anti-narcotic operation.
2.8. Notable Sounds
- In the opening scene, Duterte makes a parallel between a contested number of 3,000,000 drug addicts in the Philippines with an erroneous reference to the “3,000,000 Jews” killed by Hitler during the Shoah and says, “I’d be happy to slaughter them.” This scene is followed by ominous music that gives way to the title of the documentary.
- Other notable sounds are that of the voice of the woman journalist broadcasting the Human Rights Watch report that 24/32 of the EJK cases were perpetrated by the police, the counter-witness against nanlaban, and the possibility of charging Duterte and his cohorts with crimes against humanity. A later development beyond the documentary film is Duterte’s withdrawal of the Philippines from its membership in the International Criminal Court (ICC) on 17 March 2019. The continuing process of the ICC investigation and possible trial of the cases while the country was still a member of the ICC is one of the hopes of the surviving families to receive justice for their loved ones (Duterte 2018; The Office of the Prosecutor International Criminal Court 2020; See Rakhmawati 2023).
- In one scene, the use of the popular musical version of the Lord’s Prayer (Mt 6:9−13) in the vernacular is heard, sung by the lamenting family members at the wake of Mr. De Juan, an EJK victim.
- Other notable sounds are the words of the representative at the Panunuluyan street theater knocking at Duterte’s heart to heed their call to stop the killings.
- Notable sounds include the chant during the Kalbaryo demonstration march and street theater: “Stop the killings! Justice for all!”, “Manalangin! Manindigan!” (Pray! Make a Stand!) and “Ang tao, ang bayan, kasama ng simbahan, ngayon ay lumalaban.” (The people, the nation, along with the church, are now fighting back, are marching with the church, are not fighting back!).
- The haunting melody of the Pasyon in the background of the staging of the street theater and the demonstration of the people during the Kalbaryo event is a stark reminder of the passion of Jesus and how his passion also represents the hardships faced by the people. The use of the pasyon song and melody, especially during Lent, is an essential component and reminder of the Filipinos’ revolt against the excesses of Spain and its colonial leaders (See Ileto 1997, p. 254; Chongson 2011; Bautista 2019, pp. 31–45; Ibita 2024, pp. 83–99). The message is recontextualized in the context of the “Drug War” and EJKs.
2.9. Documentary Film Reception and Beyond
“If people are poor, do not kill them...” Sinasabi nyo po ba na pinapatay ni President Duterte ang mga mahihirap? Mali po kayo Sir. “The problem is not drugs”?!?! Talaga po, di nyo nakikita na problema ang drugs sa bayan? Mag research pa po kayo....h’wag po sana kayong magbulagbulagan. Mahirap man ang buhay sa atin, at mahirap man ang marami sa atin, masaya pa din po ang mahirap na buhay. Pero dahil po sa drugs madaming buhay....buhay ng mahihirap, ang sirang sira na.(“If people are poor, do not kill them...” Are you saying that President Duterte is killing the poor? You are mistaken, Sir. “The problem is not drugs”?!?! Really, can you not see that drugs (drug addiction) are a problem in the country? Continue your research… do not pretend to be blind. Even if life is difficult in our country, and most people are poor, life is still a joy even if it is difficult. But because of drugs, many lives… the lives of the poor, are destroyed.)
3. Back to the Gospel Jesus and Beyond: Biblical Theologizing with Huwag Kang Papatay
3.1. Extrajudicial Killing Wake and Mt 6:9−13
3.2. Panunuluyan Street Theatre with Rap and the Conflation of Luke 2 and Matthew 2
- Katok tokhang katotohanan (4x) (Knock, knock, it’s the Truth)
- Tuloy po kayo sa aming tahanan (Welcome to our home)
- Na puro katahimikan, walang kaguluhan (Here all is quiet, no chaos)
- Dito sa amin walang umaalma (No one protests)
- Lahat sumusunod, lahat may disiplina (Everyone follows, disciplined)
- Kaliwa’t kanan na mga patayan (There are killings left and right)
- Ngunit di kilala ang may kasalanan (But no one knows who’s behind them)
- Katok tokhang katotohanan (4x) (Knock, knock, it’s the Truth)
3.3. Kalbaryo Street Theater and Passion Narrative
4. Materials and Methods
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Ibita, M.M.S. Filming Biblical Interpretations from the Ground: Anti-Empire Matthean Interpretations in Huwag Kang Papatay (2017) and the Philippine “Drug War”. Religions 2024, 15, 212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020212
Ibita MMS. Filming Biblical Interpretations from the Ground: Anti-Empire Matthean Interpretations in Huwag Kang Papatay (2017) and the Philippine “Drug War”. Religions. 2024; 15(2):212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020212
Chicago/Turabian StyleIbita, Ma. Marilou S. 2024. "Filming Biblical Interpretations from the Ground: Anti-Empire Matthean Interpretations in Huwag Kang Papatay (2017) and the Philippine “Drug War”" Religions 15, no. 2: 212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020212
APA StyleIbita, M. M. S. (2024). Filming Biblical Interpretations from the Ground: Anti-Empire Matthean Interpretations in Huwag Kang Papatay (2017) and the Philippine “Drug War”. Religions, 15(2), 212. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020212