To make up for lost time, the Philippines now has two Mothers Day celebrations, one on the second Sunday of May and another one on the first Monday of December. The more popular one is the Mothers Day that we are commemorating tomorrow. It is the traditional Mothers Day celebration that started in the United States in May, 1908. The honor of starting a Mothers Day celebration belongs to Miss Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia who, on the first anniversary of her mothers death conceived the idea of having a memorial service, not just for her mother, but all mothers everywhere. The idea caught on and by May 10, 1913, the US Senate and House of Representatives passed a bill proclaiming the second Sunday of May a national holiday "dedicated to the memory of the best mother in the world, your mother."
Strange as it may seem the Mothers Day celebrated on the second Sunday of May was not celebrated in the Philippines throughout the American regime. Instead, we had our own independent Mothers Day celebration that started in 1927 when the Ilocos Norte Womens Club petitioined for a national Mothers Day. For some unknown reason, the then-acting American Governor-General Charles Yeater designated, not the second Sunday of May, but the first Monday of December as Mothers Day. The celebration was centered, not in individual homes, but in schools where the schoolchildren held programs honoring their mothers. In 1980, Dictator Marcos made the first Sunday of December a prelude to the Mothers Day celebration by declaring it as Fathers Day.
In June 8, 1988, then-President Corazon Aquino changed the date of Fathers Day to every 3rd Sunday of June. Then, during President Estradas short rule, he signed Proclamation No. 58 on December 11, 1998 that combined Fathers and Mothers Day into one celebration. His reason was that both are necessary for the birth of any person. The date for the joint celebration is the first Monday of December. So now, we have two Mothers Days, one Fathers Day and a joint Fathers and Mothers Day. The date is not important. What's important is how we commemorate the occasion.
It is said that Napoleon once asked, "What is wanting in order that the youth of France be well-educated?"
"Good mothers," someone answered.
Napoleon was so impressed with the wisdom of the reply that he responded by saying, "There is a system in one word!"