Showing posts with label member news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label member news. Show all posts

27 November 2009

Remembering “Ojay”

On October 28 this year, Oscar J. Arellano would have been 94 years old. He was 57 when he died in 1974 of a heart attack in Spain on his way back to Manila after his visit to Laos. Founder and prime mover of Operation Brotherhood to Vietnam in 1954 and its transfer to Laos after three years, his visit to Vientiane (which someone described as visitations) would mark not only the last of his numerous appearances as OB President. In a year’s time, OB Laos would also end its mission.
(click the image to enlarge)

Addressing a gathering of OB Vientiane personnel on July 19, 1974, Oscar
recounted his courtesy call on King Savang Vatthana.

“Last night, I was watching the sunset in Luang Prabang and I was thinking of what His Majesty the King told me in our interview earlier in the morning. We met again, after all these years, and I guess we are both older now and not as young as we once were. I could not help but think that both of us were walking towards the sunset. This is the ultimate goal of all of us – to walk towards the sunset.”

Oscar and the King first met when OB arrived in the kingdom in 1957. During that entire period Laos, a small mountainous country of three million people, did not relish one day of peace. A war between outside powerful nations, of which it did not want a part, spilled into its borders, engulfed it and stunted its growth. A civil war within its own borders was tearing its people apart. Oscar was pained that this man reigned over “a divided house” in all the time that OB served there under his royal patronage.

“During these 18 years, you have served people irrespective of race, color, creed and political convictions and for this there must be pride in all of you,” he told the Filipinos. “We served those whom we call enemies as well as those whom we call friends.” He reminded them that for every one that was chosen to volunteer, “20 were screened. You were chosen because it was felt you had it in you to be able to give and share what you know with the Lao. There was in you the burning curiosity to learn, to share and to impart.”

The King so deeply appreciated their service, he bestowed over time royal awards to 26 Filipino volunteers, including Oscar, a tribute perhaps no single foreign nationality has ever achieved in such numbers. The awards were not earned cheaply. During almost two decades in Laos, ten OB volunteers died there.

“I have personally observed your work in different areas. Operation Brotherhood is the type of assistance which we welcome and of which we would like to have more because it is the kind of help that does not cause our country to lose honor,” the King had stated. “We wish that we could have more of this kind of help.”

An architect with a generous girth and twinkly eyes, Oscar was referred to by his office employees as Ojay (short for his initials OJA). These same employees were many times hapless, captive listeners to his voluble tendency to expound on boundless ideas for OB’s socio-economic projects. These presentations (in an era without Power Point) were accompanied by his intricate, criss-crossing diagrams on paper. But it was this gift for persuasion (and his leadership roles with the Philippine Jaycees and their influential members) that helped launch OB Vietnam, OB Laos and OB Philippines.

In another one of his visitations in 1964, he delivered one of his memorable orations. Excerpt: “Not very many people understand OB because they think it is a medical effort. They think it is an agricultural effort. They think it is a social effort. What they do not realize is that OB is a training for leadership. What they do not seem to realize is that someday, from the ranks of all of you and the Lao who are as much a part of OB, leadership will arise. OB is an experience by which each and everyone of us will realize how important everyone of us is, how all of us are useless unless we share what we know, and learn from others what there is so much to learn.”

(Text by Pete Fuentecilla)



06 July 2009

Oscar Frias; hydrologist, field engineer

Mekong Circle International lost another member. OSCAR FRIAS, who was diagnosed with a Cerebro Vascular Accident (CVA) last February 27, 1991, died on March 26, 2009 due to kidney failure complications. As a CVA patient, he was confined at the Trillium Health Hospital in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada for 15 years. In compliance with his final wish and through his insistence, he spent the last 4 years of his life in his hometown of Basista, Pangasinan, Philippines. He was laid to rest on April 5, 2009 in Basista, next to his father's grave. He was 66 years old. Oscar was a graduate of the University of the East, Department of Engineering.

Oscar is survived by his wife, Connie dela Pena Frias and three children (Janet, Robert and Oscar, Jr.). Although affiliated with USAID (Connie was the Administrative Associate in the General Service Office), both have strong OBI connections. Lydia Palma sung at their wedding on December 30, 1967 with Father Matt Menger as the officiating priest, and Pol Custodio serving as the altar assistant. Connie is a second cousin of Jojo Pablo.

Oscar worked as an Hydrologist in the Pamong Project of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in Vientiane, Laos for a year, before serving as Field Engineer in the Agriculture Division of USAID/Laos. When Laos fell to the communist, both went to Iran - Oscar in December 1975 and Connie, who took the last Air France flight out of Vientiane in April 1976. In Iran, they were hired by Fluor Corporation; Oscar as the Field Engineer and Connie, the Executive Assistant to the Manager of the Ahwaz Office of Flour Iran, Ltd. After 4 years, they moved to Abu Dhabi, UAE. Once again, Oscar served as the Field Engineer and Connie was at the front office of Fluor Continental, Ltd.

Connie joined the United Nations in New York in 1984, while Oscar stayed in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia with Fluor Arabia, Ltd. In 1986, Oscar joined Connie in the U.S. and worked in the Engineering Department of a hospital in Paramus, New Jersey. Two years later, Oscar moved to Canada as an immigrant and had their 3 children later joined them. Connie continued working for the United Nations in New York and commuted every so often to be with the family in Ontario, Canada and vice-versa. The commute from New York to Canada became more often after Oscar suffered a stroke. She brave the New York thruway for a one-way 10 hours trip in her van every other weekend to be with Oscar and her children, making sure that his medical needs and documentation were properly attended to. While confined in the hospital with CVA, a memorable event happened to Oscar which he would proudly relate to his relatives and friends in the Philippines over and over again. On May 16, 1993, a Judge of the City of Mississauga, Ontario personally visited him at the Trillium Health Hospital and after a session of Canadian History, conferred on Oscar his Canadian citizenship.

When Oscar returned to the Philippines, his medical expenses went up and Connie came out of her retirement to work for the United Nations again. She accepted UN mission assignments in dangerous countries for more pay for the sustenance of her husband. She is presently on assignment in Kosovo. If you want to get in touch with her, she can be reached at frias9596@rogers.com.

(Obituary by Dr. Raul de Jesus)

21 June 2009

Member news

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General news

-Consul Raul Dado of Philippine Embassy, Vientiane, moving on

In memoriam
-Oscar Frias, hydrologist, field engineer
-Bert de los Reyes, our "kuya" in Australia
-Vitoy Naranjo, Pioneering OB leader
-Maximo Soliven, former publisher, Philippine Star
-Rodolfo Sanchez, Philippine Consul in Laos in 1960s
-Isagani Bautista, pioneering architect
-Rose Marie del Rio Ocampo, former Operation Brotherhood social worker
-Amor Valiente-Cook, former Operation Brotherhood nurse
-Celso Orense, founding member of Filipino Laos groups
-Mario Galman, former Philippine ambassador
-Sergio Lapitan, former Operation Brotherhood photographer
-Salvador "Sas" Sayong, former Operation Brotherhood accountant
-Bonifacio Gillego, former Operation Brotherhood executive director

Features
-Journey back to Laos
-Former OB agriculturist assists immigrant farmers in Hawaii
-Where have all our nurses gone?
-Search for doctor

Other news
-Collection of Peace-keeping Inspired Poetry, book by Connie Frias