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Sunday, May 12, 2024

Jeepneys

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The jeepney, that born-in-the-Philippines baroque art on wheels, celebrated its 70th birthday last year. The celebration was quiet; there was no  simultaneous  blowing of horns  recalling  the year  the US Army surplus  was made into the unofficial national ride.

It began  as  the  AC jeep,  for auto calesa, when jeeps used by GIs to liberate Manila  in late 1944 was repurposed into people carriers.

Instead of uneconomically shipping them back home,  US Army jeeps were left here,  one of the  first reconstruction materials that a country pounded by war would use in rising from the ashes.  

In a case of Detroit engineering meeting Pinoy diskarte,   its body was lengthened,  two parallel  benches were  bolted on its floor,  a roof  placed over its head. The roof was of iron sheet  so it could  lug  cargo from bushels of vegetables to screaming pigs. Soon it became the king of the road. 

To liven up the  algae-green color of its body,  Pinoy craftsmen soon bathed it with a riot of  colors, transforming its panels into murals  of  scenes of local life, or whatever  subject caught the fancy of the one wielding the paint brush.

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Under the hands of these  portraitists, jeeps became mobile canvases—tourist brochures showing a smoke-spewing Mayon, for example;  or a Bible illustrated with  scenes lifted from the Good Book; and textbook Amorsolo-like renditions  of bucolic farm life.

Its interior got  a makeover, too. Ceilings aped  the  Sistine Chapel, and like Filipino homes, windows soon sported curtains.

And where once GIs with Carbines  sat, the hood became a  tableau of kitschy art. The favorite of course were tin metal galloping horses, antedating Mustang’s logo by two decades. This became its signature look that if  there were a beauty contest among jeepneys, the number of horses on the hood, and not under it,  would  boost the chance   for winning.

To complete the fiesta look,  buntings  were festooned from the edge of the roof to the tip of the hood. 

Soon enough, jeeps were wearing visors, not  as a sunscreen,  but to provide the surface with which to  write the name of the jeep on. Yes, jeepneys got names, usually after  the COO (child of the owner). They may have come from the same cookie-cutter but customization made each jeep different and to complete  the process  of acquiring  its own identity, jeeps were baptized with names, and people actually remember them. So  you hear barrio folks then say that they’re  waiting  for “Pete” to bring them home, or  “Betty” will pick up the sacks of rice later.

And also this: before bumper stickers became vogue, messages were inscribed on rear mudguards. Even this, expected to be covered with dirt, was not spared in the bumper-to-bumper accessorizing.

Because jeepneys were extensions of the home,  they soon offered  in flight entertainment. First came AM  radios,  with the driver, now the kutsero  reincarnated,  giving his take on the blistering  radio commentary of the  day. Later  came booming stereos with cassettes.

Even until today some jeeps, and UVs,  show  movies on small TV screens so their passengers  won’t miss their favorite telenovela.  If a passenger wants to shift to another channel, the driver can always brush him off  with the reminder that  “budget airlines don’t offer  movies on board.”

But  it seems that colorful jeeps, sans for a few pockets in the country I was told, is a disappearing species on the road.

Gone are the  PUJs with gaudy, over-the-top livery,  that cornucopia of folk art, the likes tourists 20 years ago like to photograph with their Instacamera, the one immortalized in the Hotdog song.

In this age of the Instagram, rarely do you see a tourist take a selfie in front of a jeepney anymore. The image of a jeep screaming with rococo art is found only on  yellowed pages of old coffee table books.

It seems they’ve made their last trip years ago. Even the toy jeeps sold in souvenir shops are  not an honest rendition on those  running on the roads.

Jeepneys today come in one color: 50 shades of grey,  ranging  from unpainted GI sheet silver to various hues of grey, the latter courtesy of accumulated sooth. Many PUJs are  quilts showing a history of  metalwork, one section gets dinged or rusted, a replacement patch is welded,  never to be painted.

The horses on the hood have long gone to other pastures. The only colors that stain sidings were rubbed off by other vehicles it came in contact with.

Well, this is not a requiem for the once  de facto national  vehicle.  This is more of a longwinded preamble to a challenge to the next leaders of the country on  what they plan to do with jeeps.

They remain a workhorse on rural areas and, let’s face it, even a dirty-engine  jeep which ferries 200  passengers a day inflict far lesser harm on the ozone layer than 200 brand-new  SUVs which carry one passenger each.

Should their drivers  be assisted to change their Jurassic engines into new ones? Or totally ditch what they’ve got for e-vehicles? Must there be a moratorium on franchises issued or a freeze  in new routes?

Must there be a national standard for the  new jeep? Must specs be made uniform in the same way that US war planners in 1940 listed the traits they were looking for a General Purpose  (GP) vehicle?

Is it time, for example, to  benchmark  “a people carrier that can ferry 20, with a fuel efficient body and engine?”

Whatever, but  this is just one of the many mass transport headaches awaiting the next tenant of Malacañang.

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