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Pangatnig Ay Kataga
Pangatnig Ay Kataga
Pedro S. Dandan; Second Prize: "Punong-kahoy" by Buenaventura S. Medina Jr. Third Prize: "Paguugat Buong kwento ng Dayuhan ni Buenaventura S. Medina Jr. Category: Education | Posted: 2
years, 6 month(s) ago; dayuhan by buenaventura s. medina Posted: 1 year, 10 month(s) ago Short
Story. First Prize: "The Sound of Sunday" by Kerima Polotan Tuvera; Second Third Prize: "Mga
Kaawa-awa" by Buenaventura S. Medina Jr. More winners by year It won first prize in the 1996
Palanca Awards. Novel Grand Prizes: "Bulaklak ng Maynila" by Domingo Landicho; and "Moog" by
Buenaventura S. Medina Jr. Nobelang komiks ni Mario S. Cabling ang Dugo sa Buenaventura S.
Medina, Jr. Pura L. Medrano Rodie Marte Metin it isnt a prototypical writers story. Ong
Rogelio R. Sikat (also known as Rogelio Scat) (1940-1997) is a Filipino fictionist, playwright,
translator and educator. He was born to Estanislao Sikat and Crisanta Rodriguez on June 26, 1940
in Alua, San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, Philippines. He is the sixth of eight children. Sicat graduated with a
B.Litt. in Journalism from the University of Santo Tomas and an M.A. in Filipino from the University of
the Philippines.
Sikat received numerous literary prizes but he was particularly remembered for "Impeng Negro", his
1962 Palanca awardwinning short fiction in Filipino (Tagalog). Many of his ground-breaking stories
first appeared in Liwayway, a long-running magazine with a particularly strong Tagalog literary
section. A posthumous appreciation of Sicat's achievements were highlighted by award-winning
writer Lilia Quindoza-Santiago in Living and Dying as a Writer." The article appeared in Pen & Ink III.
Sikat was University Professor and Dean of the College of Arts and Letters, University of the
Philippines in Diliman from 1991 to 1994. U.P. College of Mass Communication Professor Angelito
Tiongson worked on a feature film Isang Munting Lupa based on Sicat's Tata Selo, another
prizewinning story . Playwright and film/theater director Auraeus Solito, on the other hand, created a
short film narrative based on "Impeng Negro" in 1999. Sikat was posthumously awarded the Manila
Critics' Circle National Book Award for Translation in 1998.
His works
Impeng Negro
Moses, Moses
Babahagya ko nang sa noo ay nahagkan,
sa mata ko'y luha ang nangag-unahan,
isang siya'y iwan ko sa tabi ng hagdan!...
Sa gayong kalungkot na paghihiwalay,
nalulumbay ako't siya'y nalulumbay!
Nang sa tarangkahan ako'y makabagtas,
pasigaw ang sabing "Umuwi ka agad,"
ang sagot ko'y "Oo, hindi magluluwat...!"
Nakangiti ako, luha'y nalalaglag!
At ako'y nagtuloy, tinunton ang landas,
na kabyak ang puso't naiwan ang kabyak...
Lubog na ang Araw, kalat na ang dilim
at ang Buwan nama'y ibig nang magningning;
makaurasyon na noong aking datnin
ang pinagsadya kong malayong lupain;
k'wagong nasa kubo't mga ibong itim
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Edison Alpero Villena Maaari din po bang i-post ninyo yung kwentong "Ang Beterano"?
Like Reply October 6, 2013 at 5:44pm