Now April 1st is best recalled as April Fools Day in many parts of the world. It goes by different names. Sometimes the victim is called "Fourth month dunce". In France, they are referred to as "April fish"; in Scotland they are called "April gowk". The so-called "Feast of Fools" extends way back to the Roman times and it may be by mere coincidence or may be related, but the fact remains that the Hindus have a similar celebration on March 31st called "Huli Festival". In Tagalog, huli means "to catch" and that is the purpose of the Hindu Huli festival to catch a fool.
Unlike some American practices like Valentines Day and Halloween, April Fools has not been absorbed by Filipinos. This is probably because we have our own version of a Fools Day when we commemorate "The Feast of the Holy Innocents" as part of our Twelve Days of Christmas celebration. It is observed exactly like April Fools Day. We have always believed that Holy Innocents Day should be dedicated to our street children for they are the Holy Innocents of our times. In Christs time, the Holy Innocents were the slain infants that King Herod had when he heard of the birth of Christ. So the Holy Innocents were not only the first Christian martyrs, they also died in place of Christ. Their feast is our Fools Day since the Spanish times.
The only way that April Fools can become a meaningful celebration in the Philippines is if we make it either the official national election day or the day when the annual session of both houses of Congress starts. We would like to end this column by quoting a classic poem on April Fool:
"When Uncle Robert got his mail
That First-of-April morning
(Now, absent-minded people all,
Just read and take a warning),
"Among the business bills and slips,
And cards of invitation,
And friendly notes, he found, at last,
One queer communication.
"It took but little time to read
A moment but to con it:
The two words April Fool! were all
That could be found upon it.
"Then Uncle Robert laughed and said:
Ive heard of funny blunders
In superscription and address,
Ang many puzzling wonders,
And seen epistles left unsigned.
This goes them all one better:
For heres a man who signed his name
And forgot to write the letter! Abby F.C. Bates"