A Tough Act to Follow
A Eulogy for Br. Benedict by Eduardo R. Lucero
After
 the initial shock of alumni following Br. Ben's untimely demise while 
vacationing in Baguio last January 3, after the moving accolades and 
eulogies of friends and associates, after the many financial pledges to 
his favorite causes, after his will's step-by-step procedure on how to 
handle the details of his death, after his no-frills interment in La 
Salle Lipa, what?
Lito Tanjuatco, current DLSAA President; 
Jing Olivares, Vice-President and Treasurer; Bobby de Ocampo, Director; 
and I met last January 12 to ensure the normal functioning and 
business-as-usual operations of the DLSAA.  We had little trouble 
effecting personnel and procedural adjustments.  After all, the DLSAA 
was a corporation that was supposed to continue in spite of any officer 
and, certainly, the Association was no exception. 
Over the 
past weeks, I kept asking myself, as Elfren Cruz had asked me prior to 
his BusinessWorld column last January 6, what was Br. Ben's value to the
 DLSAA and the alumni?  To the DLSAA as a unit organized to service the 
after-school needs of alumni which are essentially organizing 70,000 
alumni worldwide, publishing the Alumnews, maintaining computers and 
databases, holding annual homecoming and sports/golf tournaments, 
supporting the University's sports, etc., probably not much. 
He was the one of the pioneers of DLSU's now renowned academic prowess 
in IT and computer technology and a driven McKintosh addict but showed 
little interest in the Association's alumni database development and 
updates.  He was once DLSU's Executive Officer in charge of class 
schedules and records of all students but had difficulty getting the 
long-planned DLSAA golf circuit off the ground.  He would agree to 
budget P.5 million to give to World Congresses but vehemently deny the 
$100 annual fee for the world association of Lasallian alumni, the 
UMAEL.  He participated in many University meetings and made his 
presence and opinions felt in campus, like an Elvis Presley of sorts, 
when he had no official authority to do so.  He had no business 
renovating the Chapel of the Most Blessed Sacrament, yet he raised the 
money and, in the process, appointed himself the 'Manager'.  Go figure. 
I am privileged to have worked with Br. Ben since 1990 when I 
was first 'appointed' to the Board and, therefore, consider myself a 
minor authority of the Br. Ben mystique.  What, then, was his secret?
First, unconditional love of the alumni and the University.  At 
the time of his death, Br. Ben was DLSU's Vice-President Emeritus for 
Development and Alumni Affairs and Executive Director of the DLSAA.  Not
 much by way of work.  In 2002, I asked him why, after his Mom's death, 
he did not spend more time in Chicago with Lee, his sister and only 
surviving member of his immediate family, he said:  "Danding, you do not
 realize that this is my decision and vow.  I belong here and not in 
Chicago."  He subscribed to all local papers except the Philippine Star 
(no obituaries).  "I want to see how my 'boys' are doing (BusinessWorld)
 and to find out who have died (Manila Daily Bulletin and Philippine 
Daily Inquirer)."  Always, from pianists to priests, he would first ask,
 is he a Lasallian? 
 
Second, longevity.  No one currently in 
DLSU with the possible exception of Br. Felix, can claim physical 
presence on campus for some 50 years.  I do not remember Br. Ben having 
been assigned to any Lasallian campus except Taft and probably owns this
 distinction among the Christian Brothers.  To be sure, fifty years or 
more than one generation, give a rich memory and a critical sense of 
history:  "First they want to rename Taft Avenue to Gregorio Aglipay 
Avenue, now, its Jose Diokno Avenue (expletives excluded)..."
Indeed, the best and most impressionable years of both student and 
teacher are spent in high school when bonding is at a peak.  Br. Ben met
 his 'core' alumni friends as high school teacher and principal -- 
Bomboy Araneta, Joey Cuisia, Tony Ortigas, Mon del Rosario, Chiqui 
Ramirez, etc. and the rest as DLSAA general factotum -- Alfred 
Xeres-Burgos, Marquitos Roces, Ramoncito Campos, to name a few.  Apart 
from those Br. Ben taught as an Engineering professor, he knew few 
alumni who went to DLSU for college but never failed to acknowledge 
their green pedigree --  a Lasallian successful lighting company 
executive in Chicago, an alumnus PAL reservations officer in San 
Francisco, a Class 65 golfer in Nueva Ecija.  He has met them everywhere
 and they have loved him. 
 
There is no other Christian 
Brother who has spent more time exclusively with alumni and their 
families both here and abroad than Br. Ben.  Second and even third 
generation Lasallians acknowledge him as their principal link to DLSAA 
and the University and Br. Ben has become the go-to person when La Salle
 comes to mind. 
 
Third, no other agenda.  The only material 
benefit that Br. Ben got from the DLSAA and only when its finances could
 afford was an office vehicle.  The Board in the mid-90s approved the 
purchase of a second-hand Nissan Sentra because "Shit, driving that car 
(a non-power steering Mercedes) gives me hernia."  DLSAA likewise gave 
him a measly allowance of P5,000 a month, principally for gas.  He spent
 his own funds or his friends would sponsor occasional tickets for his 
trips home or to  DLSAA World Congresses. 
Br. Ben's 
fund-raising power was legendary.  While he would occasionally learn new
 phrases like 'donor fatigue,' on which he would dwell and lecture on 
for periods of time, he was successful in getting alumni to donate 
chairs for DLSU.  He publicly acknowledged his admiration for Br. 
Andrew's academic vision and indefatigably assisted him in raising 
money, both for infrastructure and scholarships.  It comes as no 
surprise, therefore, that he specified in his 'will' that all donations 
in his name, post mortem, be given to scholarships for the College of 
Engineering.
I will miss Br. Ben.  My wife will miss him, 
too, because she will remember the almost unfailing nightly calls, 
specially after he bought a cellphone, even if just to tell me that he 
has to wake up in a few hours to watch the golf US Masters, to remind me
 to lend him my new Yo Yo Ma CD to burn in his new laptop, or to say 
that he got me DLSU chorale tickets.  More importantly, I will feel his 
absence when there will be no one to acknowledge our efforts in the 
Association and smile on what it takes to be a Lasallian today.
 
        


