Travelogue
PIRES REVIEW 2022
by Benild Pires
Dear Beta Sigma brothers:
Laila joins me in
wishing you all a merry Christmas and a prosperous 2023! We are looking forward
to a year of travelling again, hopefully to Peru in July/August and to Chicago
in October as my two sons, Karl, 52, and Jason, 49, plan to run in the Chicago
Marathon in October and we would like to be there to cheer them on. I was hoping
that our first visit to Chicago would coincide with the frat ball there, but I
now understand that it will be in late October. Laila and I enjoyed the frat
ball in Toronto this year and the camaraderie of our brothers and Sigma Betan
sisters.
Now in my sunset years, I feel tremendously blessed to have
witnessed the most extraordinary era ever of human history, from 1944, when I
was born, to this day: from our population explosion; medical discoveries and
cures; space exploration; greatest athletes of all times in nearly every sport;
greatest performers of all times in music, song, dance, theatre, Broadway, and
movies; the unbelievable advancement in technologies of all kinds, particularly
in media . . . I can go on and on . . . and, of course, my biggest delight was
the founding of the University of the Philippines Beta Sigma Fraternity in 1946.
Thank you brods for adding so much richness to my life since I became a member
in 1964 in Diliman.
Attached is the 30th edition of our Pires Review,
that we would like to share with you. Let us know how you and your loved ones
are doing. You can
email me at benpires@shaw.ca. or message me on my Facebook
page. Would love to hear from you. Be safe.
Fraternally,
Brod Benild “Ben” Pires, ’64 Diliman
*Click: 2022 Pires Review
*Web note: to read Benild's previous "Reviews", click: 2016 Pires Review, 2017 Pires Review, 2018 Pires Review, 2021 Pires Review.
*****************************************
About the author, Brod Benild Pires: [provided by Ben]
Brod Benild "Ben" Pires was one of
the early U.P. foreign students to join the Beta Sigma fraternity.
He came from India with his parents
and two younger sisters to U.P. Diliman in '62 [his dad was assigned to the new
UNESCO regional teacher education centre at Diliman] and two years later, while
serving his second term as International Club of U.P. president, he joined the
fraternity in '64.
He was the fraternity's Master of the
Rolls for '65-'66 and The Betan editor for the first semester of '66-'67.
He was U.P. Journalism Club president and
The Campus Journal editor in '66-'67.
In '66, he was elected as a
university councilor of the U.P. Student Council under the Katipunan-Makabansa
banner. He chaired the Wenceslao Q.
Vinzons Week celebrations in September '66 and was also one of three co-chairs
of the council's Loyalty Arbor Day Committee, chaired by Brod Levy J. Del
Rosario.
In December '66, he defied a ban by
President Ferdinand Marcos to travel to China and led the first U.P. student
delegation during China's Cultural Revolution.
The next year, he received the Vinzons Leadership Award [honourable
mention] from Philippines' House Speaker Jose B. Laurel during the Vinzons Week
celebration.
Brod Ben also served as managing
editor and columnist of The Philippine
Collegian, under Brod Jaime Yambao's editorship, from March to September
'67.
He graduated in '68 with a B.A. in
Journalism and Mass Communications and then joined ABS-CBN News as a reporter
covering the Department of Foreign Affairs.
In April '69, he married Laila de
Lara, a Filipina and a U.P. graduate.
Brods Vic Ramos and Jimmy Santos were veil and cord sponsors respectively
at the church ceremony.
From July to September '69 he was
director/ writer for Project: Encounter
of Media Resources Inc., headed by Bong Lapira, and covered the presidential
campaigns of Senator Jose Osmena Jr. in and President Ferdinand Marcos
travelling with them to Zamboanga and Jolo respectively.
In October '69, Brod Ben and Laila
immigrated to Canada.
In Canada, Brod Ben worked as a
journalist in Port Alberni and covered the British Columbia Legislature in
Victoria, the provincial capital, before joining the provincial government in
communications and public affairs in '73.
He served in various ministries until he retired in '02
after 29 years as a government employee, including two years as Director,
Communications, for the XV Commonwealth Games in Victoria in '94.
In Victoria, Brod Ben served as head
or a director in many community associations and the Capital Region Hospital and
was appointed by cabinet to the Multicultural Advisory Council and the
Provincial Capital Commiaaon.
He was named
Honourary Citizen of the City of Victoria
in November 2000, received the University of Victoria Community Leadership
Award in December '03, the Canada Day
Award 2000 from Inter-Cultural Association of Greater Victoria and a
Lifetime Membership, and the Meritorious Service Award from the
Provincial Capital Commission in June '03.
He also received the Award of
Excellence for community service from the Beta Sigma Fraternity, University
of the Philippines, July '06. He is
the only Betan residing in Victoria on Vancouver Island but has served as an
advisor to the fraternity's Vancouver chapter in the mainland.
Brod Ben and his wife, Laila, have
been active over the years in the pinoy community in Victoria and were the
Bayanihan Cultural and Housing Society's founding members.
The society acquired a building and opened the Bayanihan Community Centre
in Victoria in '01, paid off its mortgage in five years and now Brod Ben is
charged with looking at options for expanding the centre to include affordable
housing units at the site.
In December '07, he received the
Appreciation Award for “many years of dedicated service” to the Victoria
Filipino-Canadian Association and the Bayanihan Cultural and Housing Society.
Since '10, he has been involved in
training individuals to be community leaders under a program of Leadership
Victoria, a non-profit organization.
He also co-chairs today the Immigration Advisory Table, of the Local Immigration
Partnership that helps news immigrants and refugees settle in Victoria.
Brod Ben and Laila have three
children: Karl is a partner in the
Tokyo office of the multinational law firm White & Case and is married to Saho,
of Japanese ancestry, and they have a daughter, Misha, 12;
Jason is sports director/anchor of CTV News in Vancouver; and, Serena is
a family physician in Vancouver and married to Amit Ahuja, of Indian ancestry
and a radiologist, and they have two children, Kaiya, 7, and Reyan, 5.
Brod Ben
and Laila love travelling, particularly with their family.
You can follow Brod Ben on Facebook
and Instagram. His e-mail address is
benpires@shaw.ca