Sociology, Removal Exam
In the summer of 1990, I left school for a vacation and leaving behind my unfinished requirements on my subject in Freshman Sociology. During those days, it would take ten hours of travel from Marawi City to Tagum. I was fortunate to get an aircon bus with a Betamax video player on board. It was an extra convenience offered by the bus company to their passengers while enduring eight grueling hours of travel along the coastal roads of Northern Mindanao then. Inside the bus, we were treated with a historical movie entitled Mississippi Burning. Starred by Gene Hackman, the movie depicts the hard life of the newly-emancipated black people under the brutal of dealings of White Supremacists group, the Ku Klux Klan. Set in the old Southern states, the movie was a sort of social awareness for me at that time. The woeful living conditions of former African slaves at the hands of their former plantation masters, the white folks who were unwilling to heed the ...