rejectedprincesses: Kumander Liwayway (1919-2014): The commander who wore lipstick to war“I am fight
rejectedprincesses: Kumander Liwayway (1919-2014): The commander who wore lipstick to war“I am fighting for the right to be myself.”This week brings a very different kind of royalty to Rejected Princesses – for Remedios Gomez-Paraiso, aka Kumander Liwayway, aka “The Joan of Arc of the Philippines,” was a beauty queen. At least, until she became a military commander.Alongside her repeated beauty queen accolades, Gomez-Paraiso could have easily been voted “least likely to start murdering foreign invaders.” She was your average high school student: the daughter of a provincial mayor, a hard-working teenager who made dresses and liked perfume.However, when the Japanese invaded, her life story changed from John Hughes movie to Tarantino flick. Her father tried organizing a resistance, and so they tortured and executed him, publicly displaying his corpse in the town square.She swore revenge.Soon afterwards, she left town to join a school for communist guerillas (jokingly referred to as Stalin University), taking the name Kumander Liwayway (“Commander Dawn”). Although she started service as a nurse, within months she was commanding an entire squadron. While mostly she was tasked with provisioning food and supplies (which often they did by stealing from Japanese troops), they saw no shortage of combat.She was a terror on the battlefield. At the Battle of Kamansi, the rebel forces were so outnumbered that the ranking officer ordered a retreat. Liwayway refused to go, keeping her 100+ troops in place – and turned the tide. By the time reinforcements arrived, Liwayway’s squadron had nearly won the battle by themselves.Moreover, she looked fabulous doing it! Before each battle, she would don lipstick, get her hair did, and manicure her nails. While one might see this as a, well, curious set of priorities, it served two purposes. On the one hand, her appearance inspired the troops, letting them know that she was calm and fearless. On the other hand, in her words, “I am fighting for the right to be myself.”This was no mean feat. This conflict saw women integrated into Philippines military units for the first time, and it was not an easy transition. Although according to a high-ranking official’s estimate, upwards of 10% of the troops were women, many of the military leaders wrote them off as mere “forest wives.” These women could not get a break – while the very army they worked for was ambivalent about providing for them, the mainstream press vacillated wildly between labeling them unfit mothers and prostitutes, and celebrating their peculiar “Amazonian” status.Liwayway herself took no such shit. When a comrade disrespected her with sexual innuendos, she challenged him to a duel. She was all business, inspiring the supreme leader of the guerillas to remark, “She did not talk of dresses, dancing, or perfumes; she talked of the work to be done, our organizational tasks, of the obstacles to be overcome.”She was captured twice, both times due to betrayals by double agents. The first time, she was caught on the way to be treated for a bout of malaria so bad that she could not walk. Charged with rebellion, sedition, and insurrection, she proved herself a media darling by talking smack to the president’s face, and was released shortly thereafter. The second time was more dire: her husband was killed, and she was thrown into solitary confinement. Although soon thereafter she was acquitted, she, being a newly-single mother, didn’t rejoin the warfare.Which isn’t to say she stopped fighting. From then on to the end of her life, she advocated hard for her comrades. As one of the few women on the Huks Veteran Organization, she personally helped people fill out paperwork and lobby for pensions for over twenty years. Despite not having graduated high school.She died in 2014, at age 95.ART NOTESSo, first off: this entry is the first to break a big rule of mine, as Liwayway was alive in the past fifty years. No way around it other than to say I goofed. When I chose her for an entry, I thought she had died in the 40s. It was not until I got deeper into the research that I found out she died in 2014. It is my deep and heartfelt hope that this entry represents her well, and that it is not disrespectful to any of her living family.On to the art notes:She’s sitting on a box of captured Japanese ammunition, and the woman in the back left is fiddling with a Japanese communication system.The woman carrying a box in the background is modeled after Simeona Punzalan, aka Kumander Guerrero, a 6-foot-tall woman who also fought in the Huk Rebellion.There were an endless number of other amazing Filipinas from the Huk rebellion whom I could not cover. A small sampling includes:Celia Mariano, highly-educated woman who evaded Japanese repeatedly, and led women’s rights movements within the communist party for years afterwards.Elang Santa Ana, who went on to become the first woman elected to municipal office in the history of Talavera Province.Teofista Calerio, who operated as central intelligence in hostile Manila, despite being pregnant.A foreign reporter described the Huk Amazons as women who “faced bullets, instead of mirrors, explosive powders, instead of face powders,” and said “these women should be feared.”CITATIONS AND FOOTNOTESBoth are available, in copious fashion, on the main website entry,SHOUT-OUTSMost people did not see the hint this go-around, and on top of that, I inadvertently broke one of my own rules in the entry. Still, one of you got it: Ladyzfactor! Well done, you.NEXT WEEK ON REJECTED PRINCESSESWhen flying cannibal ghosts proved unstoppable, their captives cried out, “is there no man to save us from these monsters?”There wasn’t.But there was a woman.(submit guesses here, and if you’re right, I’ll list you under ‘shout-outs’ next week!) -- source link