PHNO-HL: PINOY SINGLES FIND LOVE ON VALENTINE'S / LOVE STORY: MEDALLION COMES HOME


 



PINOY SINGLES FIND LOVE ON VALENTINE'S / LOVE STORY: MEDALLION COMES HOME

MANILA, FEBRUARY 14, 2011 (BULLETIN) By JECELYN V. MACAHINDOG - Marc Nelson with two of his World Vision 'kids,' Patrick and Queenie Marc Nelson with two of his World Vision 'kids,' Patrick and Queenie -PHOTO.

For most people, St. Valentine's Day is that special day to express your love for someone.

But for those who belong to SMV or Samahan ng Malalamig ang Valentine's, you may get inspiration from the following "singles" in showbiz who took time to celebrate their Valentine's with their "special someone"---or even more than one.

Love is in bloom still even without significant others for Marc Nelson, Miriam Quiambao, Chris Tiu, and even the five-year-old daughter of Julius and Tintin Babao, Antonia. They have found a different kind of love in the children they are helping through World Vision.

In this Bulletin Entertainment exclusive, the following stars share unlikely Valentine tales.

Marc Nelson As eligible a bachelor as Marc is, no one would think that he has developed a bond with his "11 children."

"I remember dropping by a World Vision booth to sponsor a child. The staff showed me the picture folders of two children and asked me whether I wanted to sponsor a boy or a girl. I couldn't decide so I chose both!" Marc recalled. Since then, these two children have multiplied to 11 to date – proof of Marc's special kind of love for helping children.

Just in time for Valentine's, Marc had a chance to meet the very first two kids he signed up to sponsor five years ago – Queenie and Patrick, who both live in Aklan.

"I'm happy to get the opportunity to meet my first two sponsored children. It's been a dream come true to finally meet them. I've been reading about them and seeing their pictures. They're doing so well and have grown up. I'm so happy that they've been given this opportunity by World Vision to excel," said Marc, who shared they spent an afternoon getting to know each other and trying their hand in badminton.

Miriam Quiambao Miriam's love has stood the test of time. The beauty queen turned actress managed to move on after having divorced her husband, Italian businessman Claudio Rondinelli last year.

But more than any other love she's experienced, Miriam admits that being a part of a child's life has brought her satisfaction like no other. It was back in 2001 when Miriam first saw Princela, her sponsored child, on a World Vision picture folder and felt the connection right away.

"I'm amazed to see how she has grown. Natutuwa ako na makita kung paano siya tinutulungan ng nanay niya at ng World Vision. For every child that we help, we're already giving to God because we love Him," Miriam shared after she and Princela met again after a few years. They spent the day at a World Vision assisted community in Cavite where Princela lives, working on friendship bracelets, baking bread, and exchanging stories.

Chris Tiu Another bachelor, basketball star Chris Tiu, is known for his advocacies in sports and education. Apart from his success in sports, Chris's newfound love for the children he is helping is another achievement he is proud of.

"I really value education a lot and I know how important it is for a child to be in school in order to be successful in life someday. Naniniwala ako na lahat ng bata ay dapat makapag-aral," Chris shared. And this is what fuels his love for Janmer and Julia, his sponsored children from Malabon around June last year.

As people make plans for Valentines, Chris visited a World Vision assisted community in Baseco to spend time with 100 children over games and food.

Antonia Babao It's all about sisterly love for five-year-old Antonia and her sponsored child, eight-year-old Rhea, whom she met recently for a photo shoot.

Her parents, TV personalities Julius and Tintin Babao, have been helping send two children to school under World Vision for years now. But around last year, Tintin signed-up to sponsor another child under the name of her daughter Antonia.

Tintin believes that it's never too early to start teaching your kids the concept of being blessed and showing love for other people.

"She may not be able fully to understand [what sponsoring a child means] right now… she might not fully grasp that she's sending Rhea to school. But as she grows up and as Rhea finishes her schooling and they meet again someday, mas lalalim na yung affection nila for each other," Tintin explained.

(Share your love with a child in need. To know more about World Vision and their work, log on to www.worldvision.org.ph)

In Vietnam War love story, a medallion comes home (philstar.com) Updated February 14, 2011 04:00 AM

PARIS (AP) – It was a love token worn through the blood-drenched rice paddies and jungles of the Vietnam War.

For Henri Huet, the Virgin Mary medallion was his one constant link to Cecile, the woman he loved. The celebrated Associated Press photographer carried it in his pocket or hung it around his neck. It was engraved for her baptism and when he left for the war, she gave it to him.

On assignment, the military helicopter Huet was riding in got shot down over Laos. Huet was killed. The medallion the size of a penny disappeared into the thickness of a bamboo forest, where it slept for nearly three decades.

This past week, the gold medallion was again in the hands of Cecile, the culmination of an extraordinary journey that took it across epochs and continents — and whose mystery was unlocked by a long-lost trove of letters.

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Their story started in 1968 with an apple grabbed for lunch outside New York's Rockefeller Center. The 20-year-old Cecile Schrouben was about to bite into it when Huet approached her and told her it was no proper meal. He suggested oysters instead, a nod to the rocky coast of Brittany, where he grew up.

The lanky man with a roguish grin was irresistibly charming. They had lunch, "American-style" oysters scrubbed especially clean. Before long, the Agence France-Presse employee and the dashing AP shooter twice her age were a couple.

He was at AP headquarters, recovering from a leg injury suffered in Vietnam. She was an AFP archivist, receptionist and general gofer. They jetted off to Mexico, where Huet took her under his wing and taught her photography.

Duty called later in the year: Huet was sent back to cover the war.

He wanted her to join him in Asia — but not in war-ravaged Vietnam. Parting, she gave him the medallion — a baptismal gift from her godmother, in keeping with Roman Catholic tradition.

They wrote each other letters, hundreds of them. The correspondence lasted nearly three years. She wrote her last letter the day he died — when she woke up in the middle of the night, sensing a "need" to write.

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It was Feb. 10, 1971. Huet, 43, had boarded a South Vietnamese military helicopter in the town of Khe Sanh, near the border with Laos, with a mission to inspect efforts by US-backed forces to sever Viet Cong supply lines.

With him were three other legendary news photographers: Larry Burrows of Life magazine, Kent Potter of United Press International and Keisaburo Shimamoto of Newsweek.

In a flash of anti-aircraft fire, the chopper was gunned down. All four photographers were killed, along with seven Vietnamese troops, one of them a military photographer.

Along with the men, the camera equipment, and the military hardware, a tiny disc of gold also tumbled down from the skies above Laos. On one side was a relief of the Virgin Mary; on the other was etched, "Cecile, nee le 16-6-1947" — French for "born on June 16, 1947."

___

For 27 years, the keepsake lay on an overgrown Laotian hillside.

The wreckage from the downed helicopter was inaccessible to US military investigators until 1992, when Washington restored diplomatic ties to the communist governments of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

A US search team found the crash site four years later. In 1998, a US Army forensic team traveled to the site. Former AP Saigon Bureau Chief Richard Pyle and AP photographer Horst Faas, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his Vietnam coverage, were on hand for the start of the search.

The team, staffed with Laotian locals, found camera parts, broken watches, bits of wreckage — and the tiny cameo.

Pyle suspected it belonged to Huet because of the French. But he'd never heard the photographer speak about a Cecile, and a search of AP archive photos didn't turn up Huet wearing the medallion.

With no proof of ownership, the medallion stayed in US Army storage. Until a woman came forward with a mysterious packet of letters.

___

In 2004, Helene Gedouin, who works in publishing in France, came across "Requiem," a book by Faas about photographers like Huet who were killed in action in Vietnam and Indochina.

The book inspired her to delve deeper into the life of Huet, who was a relative of hers through marriage — one of his brothers had married her aunt. She met Faas, and two years later they co-authored a book on Huet.

In the fall of 2006, upon return from a photojournalism conference in the south of France, Gedouin found an email in her inbox.

"Hello, I have nothing to do with Henri Huet," the message read, "but it turns out — by the greatest happenstance — that I have in my possession a correspondence from Henri Huet that he wrote to a woman. They are love letters, and there are about 400 of them. I'd like to meet you."

The letters were addressed to a Cecile Schrouben. In one of them, he mentioned a small town in Belgium where she was born. Gedouin went through the local phone directory, called all the Schrouben households she could find — and in the fourth call, found Cecile's brother.

"I said, 'could you call your sister and tell her that we have something in our possession that she had lost?'" Gedouin recalled.

"The next day, she called me."

___

The letters were all the proof the US military needed to release the medallion.

Pyle got in touch with American authorities after learning about the letters from Gedouin.

"When I called the (US Army) laboratory director in Hawaii and told him this, he was ecstatic," Pyle recalled. "He said: 'That's it, that's the final proof. That's what we needed.'"

Larry Burrows' son Russell, as a relative of a crash victim and one who has had repeated contacts with the US military about recovering items lost, was sent the medallion in a Federal Express parcel last fall.

Cecile told AP she had stored the letters in a box in a Paris apartment where she once lived. In a chaotic move, she left them behind.

A young man who had helped the new owner move in noticed them. Intrigued by the epistolary romance, he gave them to his mother for safekeeping.

Why the woman came forward after holding on to the letters for 15 years remains a mystery. Gedouin declined an AP request that she provide a way to contact the woman.

___

Huet was born in Dalat, Vietnam, in 1927, the second son of four children to a high-society Vietnamese mother and a French civil engineer for France's colonial government in Indochina.

Pyle has described Huet as one of "the three finest people that I ever met in my life;" Cecile calls him one of the two "best" people she has known. "Lost over Laos" — a book by Pyle and Faas about the photographers in the crash — cites a US officer calling Huet the bravest man he'd ever seen.

Colleagues and acquaintances describe Huet as modest, discreet, full of integrity and compassion — and a charmer of women.

He spent his early years in the care of his mother's family. His father then had the children sent to his family home in France. A turbulent youth, he eventually settled down and studied painting. He took up photography while in the French navy.

In the 1950s, he married a Russian-Vietnamese woman, and had two children with her. But the marriage didn't last.

"He was a mystery man," said Pyle. "The only reason we didn't know anything was that he never told anyone anything."

___

In a small ceremony this past Tuesday, Russell Burrows gently handed a Ziploc bag containing the medallion to Cecile at the opening of an exhibit on Huet's work at the Maison Europeenne de la Photographie in Paris. The show is co-curated by The Associated Press.

"Such a small thing for such a big story," Cecile said. "It's made a long journey." Over a black sweater, she wore a three-pointed silver pendant that was designed by jeweler Georg Jensen — the first gift Huet gave her.

Cecile declined to show the letters Huet had written her, saying the correspondence was private. She said that Huet, who was an intensely discreet person, didn't intend for them to be made public and she wanted to protect his memory and intimacy.

Cecile left New York for France in the mid-1970s. She worked at now-defunct TWA airlines and then Air France, and married in 1978 — becoming Cecile Blumental. She and her husband have two daughters. Now 63, she has five grandchildren.

She says her five-year-old granddaughter will get the medallion one day.

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Chief News Editor: Sol Jose Vanzi
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