Teachers paint mural with own blood, hair

    409
    0
    SHARE

    Schools Superintendent Teresa Daluz-Mababa paints a portion of a mural-in-themaking with her own blood as Nueva  Ecija’s blood and hair painter Elito Circa looks on. Photo by Elmo Roque

    SAN JOSE CITY — Wanting to show that in teaching, more than practicing a profession, they wholeheartedly share   their life for the transformation of the human person to become better persons, some 1,000 public school teachers in here shared their blood and hair in a mural painting which  will be completed a few weeks from now.  

    When completed, it will be posted on the wall at the lobby  of their new division office building set to be inaugurated  in March. Each of the 998 teachers,both from the elementary and secondary levels, shed about three ml of their     blood and with the use of a small brush painted it in specific spots in  the mural.

    A few stand of their hair were then  cut and incorporated in the painting. Both blood and hair serve  as base in the depiction on the canvass of the theme of the mural which is “transformation of the child through education until he or she raises  a family of his own”.

    They  started painting the mural last January 28 and is expected to be finished in time for the inauguration of the  newbuilding on March 17. Aside from 998 teachers, officials of  the San Jose City local school board and officers of  the federated parents-teachers association also joined in incorporating their blood and strands of hair in the mural.   

    Even City Mayor Marivic Belena sent droplets of her blood to be included in the mural.  About 50 teachers were seen  he other day, with their blood in a vial, awaiting their turn to paint their blood and incorporate their strands  of  hair in the small quadrants in the mural assigned for them. 

    “We thought of it as a fitting art work that will adorn our  new building,” school super intendent Teresa Daluz-Mababa said. “With our DNA in it, it is an immortalization of the   teachers’ lives in the transformation of our pupils through education,” she added.

    The mural is titled  “1,000 plus lives,”  which purports to show it is about the teachers and supporters of education. Central to the mural theme is the  education of the person, first with the aid of his or her parents, and then of the teachers from kindergarten to tertiary  education.

    Mababa said she  approved of the idea of painting a mural with their blood and hair in it when she commissioned homegrown artist Elito Circa for an appropriate work of art for their new building. Circa, who is known as the province’s“blood and hair painter” suggested incorporating their blood and hair in the conceptualized theme of the mural.

    Circa, when asked, said that the shedding  of blood for what one is doing is a very high  expression of love. It can  at once connote great sacrifice, he said. In the 6-foot-by-8- foot canvass, two-inch quadrants were assigned to the individual teachers of the schools division.

    By schedule,  each of the teachers pastes their blood on it and incorporate some strands of his or her hair  on it with the use of oil paint. Each of the teachers,who had their annual medical checkup, asked the attending  nurse to place an extra blood in their respective  vials to be used for thepainting.

    “I felt that it was our  lives is encapsuled in this mural,” Mababa said as  she painted the quadrant assigned to her. “It’s actually my DNA that I put in there to express my dedication to teaching” she added.

    Secondary school teacher Cecila Daypo said she was “happy  in participating in this unique  and meaningful activity of their school’s division”. 

    Circa will complete the painting as soon as all the teachers in the division and others concerned  shall have pasted their blood and hair  on the quadrants in the canvass. The  quadrants numbered a little over a thousand.  

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here