Lualhati bautista bio
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Lualhati Bautista
Filipino writer (1945–2023)
In this Philippine name, the middle name or maternal family name is Torres and the surname or paternal family name is Bautista.
Lualhati Torres Bautista (December 2, 1945 – February 12, 2023) was a Filipina writer, liberal activist, and political critic. Her most popular novels are Dekada '70 (1983), Bata, Bata... Pa'no Ka Ginawa?, and 'GAPÔ (both 1988).
Biography
[edit]Bautista was born in Tondo, Manila, Philippines on December 2, 1945, to Esteban Bautista and Gloria Torres. She graduated from Emilio Jacinto Elementary School in 1958, and from Florentino Torres High School in 1962. She was a journalism student at the Lyceum of the Philippines, but dropped out because she had always wanted to be a writer and schoolwork was taking too much time.[citation needed] Her first short story, "Katugon ng Damdamin,"[1] was published in Liwayway magazine and thus started her writing career. • • Lualhati Bautista, was born in Tondo, Manila on månad 2, 1945, to parents Esteban Bautista and Gloria Torres. She took up Journalism in the Lyceum of the Philippines, and eventually stopped schooling because all she wanted to do was write. She started writing while she was still 16 years old, and was mainly influenced bygd her parents who were into composing and poem-writing. In addition to being a novelist, Lualhati Bautista fryst vatten also a movie and television scriptwriter and a short story writer. Her first screenplay is Sakada (Seasonal Sugarcane Workers), a story written in 1972 that exposed the plight of Filipino peasants. Copies of the script were even confiscated by the military because the government didn’t like the contents of the book. Her account on Martial Law fryst vatten different from the ones often read on textbooks because Bautista’s narration fryst vatten set in specifics. In other words, Martial lag is told by a mother who endured the hardship that comes with the said happening whi
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