Tomas Cabili Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honorable
Tomás Cabili
Office:Secretary of National Defense and Communications
Appointer:Sergio Osmeña
Term Start:February 27, 1945
Term End:July 11, 1945
Predecessor:Basilio Valdes
Successor:Alfredo Montelibano Sr.
Office2:Senator of the Philippines
Term Start2:May 25, 1946
Term End2:December 30, 1955
Office3:Senate Majority Leader
President3:Manuel Roxas
Elpidio Quirino
Term Start3:February 21, 1949
Term End3:January 25, 1954
Predecessor3:Vicente Francisco
Successor3:Cipriano Primicias Sr.
Office4:Member of the National Assembly from Lanao's Lone District
Term Start4:November 15, 1935
Term End4:December 30, 1941
Predecessor4:Post created
Successor4:Bato Ali
Birth Name:Tomás Lluisma Cabili
Birth Date:7 March 1903
Birth Place:Iligan, Misamis, Philippine Islands
Death Place:Balamban, Cebu, Philippines
Party:Liberal
Occupation:Lawyer, journalist, educator, assemblyman
Alma Mater:University of the Philippines Cebu (BA)
Philippine College of Law (LLB)
Serviceyears:1942-1945

Tomás Lluisma Cabili (March 7, 1903 – March 17, 1957) was a Filipino lawyer, journalist, educator, and assemblyman from Lanao. He was also known as "Sultan Dimasangkay-ko-Ranao" for Maranaos.

Early life

He was born in Iligan, Misamis on March 7, 1903, to Guillermo Cabili and Efifania H. Lluisma.[1]

He studied at Iligan Primary School (1911–1915) and Iligan Elementary School (1915–1918). He enrolled in four different schools to complete his secondary education from 1919 to 1923; the Zamboanga Provincial High School (1919–1920), Cebu High School (1920–1921), Silliman Institute (1921–1922), and Cebu Provincial High School (1922–1923).[2]

He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of the Philippines Cebu in 1925, then pursued a law course at the Visayan Institute, also in Cebu, from 1925 to 1927. He transferred to the Philippine College of Law, where he completed his Bachelor of Laws degree in 1929. After he graduated, he was made an instructor in the College of Law and Liberal Arts of the Visayan Institute from 1929 to 1930.[3]

During his early years of school, he was brilliant as a student, distinguishing himself as an orator when he won the Osmeña Medal in an oratorical contest. He also won the first prize Jocson Medal in an annual debate in the Philippine Law School.[4]

Journalism

He was a reporter of The Advertiser and later a member of the staff of Cebu's The Freeman from 1924 to 1926. He was a correspondent of the National News Service between 1930 and 1932, and again from 1933 up to his election to the First National Assembly, and as a Lanao correspondent for the DMIM Papers and The Graphic.[5]

After he passed the bar examinations, he practiced law in his home province.

Political career

In 1934, he was appointed Justice of the Peace of the 17th Municipal District of Lanao and Acting Justice of the Peace of Dansalan, Lanao. In the same year, he became a delegate to the Constitutional Convention. He was the only delegate that did not sign the 1935 Philippine Constitution, which was ratified on February 8, 1935.[6]

In the 1935 general elections, he was elected assemblyman for his district in the First National Assembly. He served on the committees on agriculture, codes, franchises, provincial and municipal government, the national language, public instruction, Mindanao and special provinces, appropriations, civil service, and public lands.[7]

In 1938, he was re-elected to the Second National Assembly. He was later designated to the chairmanship of the Committee on Privileges and a member of the committees on agriculture, appropriations, forest, Mindanao and Special provinces, and national companies.[8]

He was part of the guerrilla resistance movement during the Japanese occupation.

He had a short stint as Secretary of National Defense and Communications from February 27 to July 11, 1945, under Sergio Osmeña. He was later elected to the Senate in 1946 placing on Top 12. He was reelected in 1949 and served until 1955.

Death

He died along with President Ramon Magsaysay and 23 others on a plane crash on March 17, 1957, at Mount Manunggal in Balamban, Cebu.

Legacy

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Senator's Profile: Tomas Cabili . Senate of the Philippines . March 6, 2021.
  2. Web site: Senator's Profile: Tomas Cabili . Senate of the Philippines . March 6, 2021.
  3. Web site: Senator's Profile: Tomas Cabili . Senate of the Philippines . March 6, 2021.
  4. Web site: Tomas L. Cabili . Department of National Defense . March 6, 2021.
  5. Web site: Tomas L. Cabili . Department of National Defense . March 6, 2021.
  6. Web site: Senator's Profile: Tomas Cabili . Senate of the Philippines . March 6, 2021.
  7. Web site: Senator's Profile: Tomas Cabili . Senate of the Philippines . March 6, 2021.
  8. Web site: Senator's Profile: Tomas Cabili . Senate of the Philippines . March 6, 2021.
  9. Web site: Batas Pambansa Blg. 196 . The LawPhil Project . March 6, 2021.