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Carlos Peña Rómulo (
14 January 1899,
Camiling, Tarlac,
Philippines --
15 December 1985,
Manila, Philippines) was a
Filipino diplomat, politician, soldier, journalist and author. He was a reporter at 16, a newspaper editor by the age of 20, and a publisher at 32. He is the co-founder of the
Boy Scouts of the Philippines.
Rómulo served eight
Philippine presidents, from
Manuel L. Quezon to
Ferdinand Marcos, as the
Secretary of Foreign Affairs of the Philippines and as the country's representative to the
United States and to the
United Nations. He also served as the
Resident Commissioner to the
U.S. House of Representatives during the
Commonwealth era. In addition, he served also as the
Secretary of Education in
President Diosdado P. Macapagal's and
President Ferdinand E. Marcos's
Cabinet through 1962 to
1968.
In his career in the United Nations, Rómulo was a strong advocate of human rights, freedom and decolonization. During the selection of the UN's official seal, he looked over the seal-to-be and asked, "Where is the Philippines?"
US Senator Warren Austin, head of the selection committee, explained, "
It's too small to include. If we put the Philippines, it would be no more than a dot." "I want that dot!" insisted
Romulo.
Today, a tiny dot between the
Pacific Ocean and the
South China Sea can be found on the UN seal. In 1948 in
Paris, France, at the third
UN General Assembly, he strongly disagreed with a proposal made by the
Soviet delegation headed by
Andrei Vishinsky, who challenged his credentials by insulting him with this quote: "You are just a little man from a little country."
In return, Romulo replied, "It is the duty of the little Davids of this world to fling the pebbles of truth in the eyes of the blustering
Goliaths and force them to behave!", leaving Vishinsky with nothing left to do but sit down.
He served as the President of the
Fourth Session of
United Nations General Assembly from 1949--1950, and chairman of the
United Nations Security Council. He had served with
General Douglas MacArthur in the
Pacific, was
Ambassador to the United States, and became the first non-American to win the
Pulitzer Prize in
Correspondence in
1942.
The Pulitzer Prize website says
Carlos P. Romulo of
Philippine Herald was awarded "For his observations and forecasts of
Far Eastern developments during a tour of the trouble centers from
Hong Kong to
Batavia." He was a candidate for the position of
United Nations Secretary-General in
1953, but did not win.
Instead, he returned to the Philippines and was a candidate for the nomination as the presidential candidate for the
Liberal Party, but lost at the party convention to the incumbent
Elpidio Quirino, who ran unsuccessfully for re-election against
Ramon Magsaysay.
Quirino had agreed to a secret ballot at the convention, but after the convention opened, the president demanded an open roll-call voting, leaving the delegates no choice but supporting Quirino, the candidate of the party machine. Feeling betrayed, Romulo left the Liberal Party and became national campaign manager of
Magsaysay, the candidate of the opposing
Nacionalista Party who won the election.
He served as
Resident Commissioner of the Philippines to the
United States Congress from
1944 to 1946. He was the signatory for the Philippines to the
United Nations Charter when it was founded in 1946. He was the Philippines'
Secretary (
Minister from
1973 to
1984) of
Foreign Affairs under President Elpidio Quirino from
1950 to
1952, under President
Diosdado Macapagal from
1963 to 1964 and under President Ferdinand Marcos from 1968 to 1984. In
April 1955 he led the Philippines' delegation to the
Asian-African Conference at
Bandung.
Rómulo, in all, wrote and published 18 books, which included
The United (novel),
I Walked with Heroes (autobiography), I Saw the
Fall of the Philippines,
Mother America and I See the Philippines
Rise (war-time memoirs).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_P._Romulo
- published: 20 Nov 2011
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