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By Herbie Gomez
(Second of three parts)
CAGAYAN DE ORO — “Voices” trained
Philippine Benevolent Missionaries Association (PBMA) founder Ruben
Ecleo Sr. in reading and writing in Arabic, Hebrew, Sanskrit and
Aramaic so he could “interpret the ancient mysteries,” according
to cult members.
The father of wanted former San Jose mayor Ruben
Jr. was known to make predictions based on “Akashic Records” or,
in Hindu mysticism, “cosmic consciousness.” His continuing
messianic mystique plays a major role in on-going drama on Dinagat,
a small island off the northeastern point of the Mindanao mainland.
There, cult members willing to die for their master are thwarting
police efforts to arrest Ruben Jr., current leader of PBMA
and son of Surigao del Norte Rep. Glenda Ecleo, who is wanted for
the January murder of his wife, Alona, in Cebu last January.
Like Jesus
Cult leaders say the older Ecleo had possessed
the powers to be omnipresent like the “Master Jesus [Christ] who
had been in the Americas, Egypt, India and in his native Judea
simultaneously, aside from being in the monastery in the Essenean
School, near Mount Serbal, overlooking the Black Sea.” Mainstream
Christian sects have rejected such teaching.
The cultists claim Ecleo “could do almost
anything” by reciting the Mantra which, in Hinduism and Buddhism,
refers to a sacred word or syllable repeated in prayer and
meditation.
And like the biblical Jesus Christ, the PBMA
leader can also transfigure himself and can even resurrect the dead,
according to the cult.
“Master Ruben can materialize anywhere at
will,” claims the PBMA. It said Ecleo, on numerous occasions since
his childhood, had been present in various places at the same time.
“While performing his missionary work in Agusan, he was also
physically traveling somewhere in Davao, Bukidnon, Leyte and Samar,
using different names (and) perhaps different faces, some of whom
are old or young identities ...”
The cult said “all manifested personalities”
— with nicknames such as Ben, Obing, Fred, Freddie, Ruben, Tony
and Dr. Laway — had cured the sick like the “Lord Jesus who
first applied these powers in Judea ...”
PBMA leaders say Ecleo’s healing powers
directly come from “our Divine Father by virtue of the sacred or
divine prayers which are called in Occultism as Mantras.”
Dynasty
Ecleo Sr. built for himself and his family
a “kingdom” on impoverished Dinagat, a small, irregular and
typhoon-prone island mass off the northeastern tip of Mindanao.
Since it was chartered in 1965, the late cult
leader’s PBMA virtually turned the entire island into an “Ecleo
Country.” The cult also became a powerful political machinery that
it created, wittingly or unwittingly, a dynasty for the Ecleos.
Ecleo’s elder brother, Moises, became a
governor of Surigao del Norte. His wife, the former Glenda Oliveros
Buray of Gitagum, Misamis Oriental, is now a representative of
Surigao del Norte to the Lower House while his son Ruben Jr. was
one-time mayor of San Jose town. Another Ecleo son, Allan II, is
presently mayor of the same town where the PBMA solidified its base.
On San Jose now stand four multimillion-peso
PBMA landmarks — the “Divine Master’s Shrine,”
“Master’s Mansion,” “Comet House” and the cult’s
administration building.
The San Jose edifices are indications that the
PBMA has grown into a multimillion-peso, if not a billionaire
establishment.
Rich group
It is estimated that the PBMA has already raised
at least P35 million in entrance fees from its members since
1965. The figure is insignificant if one considered the estimated
P70-million annual revenue the PBMA generates by imposing annual
dues on its members in the country.
The PBMA charter obliges each new member to pay P10 as “entrance
fee.” Every year, each PBMA member is expected to pay a P20 annual
fee.
The PBMA boasts of having 3.5 million members in
the country alone. It claims it also has members in Jordan, Canada,
Australia, Palau, Hong Kong, Guam, Singapore, Malaysia, London,
Italy, Monaco, Germany, Hawaii, New York and Scotland, among others.
The group claims it is also organizing more PBMA chapters abroad.
Aside from its fixed entrance- and annual-fee
incomes, the PBMA charter also encourages members to voluntarily
give money “when the Board of Directors or the Supreme President
... may desire to plead to the general members for the good or the
betterment of the association.”
The association’s constitution and by-laws is
silent on the sale of PBMA rings but a Surigao City-based source
said all its members are expected to wear one for identification.
Each PBMA ring, according to the source, costs
somewhere “between P50 to P100, more or less.”
Little government
With all the money the PBMA rakes in, not to
mention the influence it wields over Dinagat, nearby towns and
neighboring Surigao City, it has virtually become a little
government in its own right with a well-greased “private army,”
ironically, on the impoverished Surigao del Norte island. “Many of
the PBMA members living in Dinagat are armed,” said a Surigao-based
source who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The source said the armed PBMA members have made
an oath to protect the “master,” referring to Ecleo’s son and
successor Ruben Jr. who is facing a lawsuit in connection with the
grisly murder of his wife, the former Alona Bacolod. Alona, who died
by strangulation, was found inside a garbage bag dumped in a
secluded area in Cebu last January.
Agents of the National Police’s Criminal Investigation and
Detection Group (CIDG) who were sent to Dinagat island last week
complained they failed to serve an arrest warrant against the
parricide suspect because residents have been protecting the PBMA
“master.”
The Cebu-based CIDG team also accused the entire
San Jose police force of coddling Ruben Jr. who is believed hiding
inside the Ecleo mansion in San Jose town.
“That’s the extent of the influence of the
Ecleos in Dinagat. They even control the police,” another source
said.
(To be continued)
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