Spotlight
Philippine News Agency at Letizia: A Life in Letters
Red Constantino, grandson of Letizia and Renato Constantino, guides visitors through the immersive exhibit "Letizia: A Life in Letters" at Linangan Gallery in Quezon[READ]
A poet visits
The much loved poet, Ramon C. Sunico, dropped by early Monday before the Easter break, later meeting other visitors to the exhibit. #aPastRevisited #LetiziaALifeInLetters #Letizia[READ]
Book designer’s son
Chad Ragodon dropped by the Letizia exhibit to show his hardbound copy of The Making of a Filipino, whose cover was designed by his dad,[READ]
Spotlight
Alas ng Bayan 2.0 Opens Tomorrow at PUP Sta. Mesa Campus
The Constantino Foundation, in partnership with the Polytechnic University of the Philippines (Official), PUP Department of History PUP Samahan ng mga Mag-aaral ng Kasaysayan , and the 350 Pilipinas proudly presents Alas ng Bayan 2.0: Revealing the Superpowered—an exhibit honoring the unbroken line of Filipina heroism from the 19th century to the present.
Opening tomorrow, November 26, 2025, at the 2nd Floor South Wing Bridge, Main Academic Building, PUP Mabini Campus, the exhibit runs until January 17, 2026, and is open to the public. Through dynamic visual storytelling, Alas ng Bayan 2.0 reintroduces five Filipina figures—Gregoria de Jesus, Apolonia Catra, Remedios[READ]
Pasts Revisited
Renato Constantino
Today we mark Renato Constantino’s 20th death anniversary with what he wrote in 1971. His words still ring true today. #RenatoConstantino #PastRevisited #ContinuingPast #ConstantinoFoundation #APastRevisited #TheContinuingPast
Stories
-
“Taos pusong pagpapasalamat ng angkang Orosa for your inclusion of our Beloved Maria Y. Orosa in this PUP mural. Renato Redentor Constantino, we are ever grateful for this honor and recognition. Our forebears knew each other. Mine spoke highly of the Constantinos!”
Evelyn Orosa del Rosario Garcia
Great grand niece of Maria Y. Orosa and author of National Book Award winner
Appetite for Freedom: The Recipes of Maria Y. Orosa, with Essays on Her Life and Work. -
"... A Past Revisited sparked a different kind of revolution, one that urged Filipinos to view history through our own eyes and experiences. Thank you very much to our dear friend, ABS-CBN’s Karmina Constantino, a resident of San Juan, for inviting me to be part of this historic occasion."
Mayor Francis Zamora
San Juan City Governor , On his speech at APR 50th anniversary edition launch at NHCP Museo El Deposito
2025 August 29 -
“We have been so wonderfully blessed in the past week by the presence of tremendously inspiring people, one of them, the one who likes to “shake trees”, is Sir Renato Redentor Constantino who moved the entire plenary to feel, think, and act… people couldn’t help but share and talk about the presentation. I told Sir Red that by the second day of the event, people realized there were ‘deeper commitments than professionalism.’”
Floraime Pantaleta
Executive Director, Ateneo Zamboanga-Mindanao Institute -
“Mabuhay ka RC. Patuloy namin ikaw inaalala at ipinagdadasal sa lakbay mo ngayon. We will continue our conversations with family, even while you have left us. You will forever live in our hearts and we celebrate your life fully!”
Loretta Ann Rosales
Former member, House of Representatives
and former chair of the Commission on Human Rights -
“Thank you very much, Constantino Foundation! It was a lovely afternoon spent learning about history, poetry, art, climate change, street names, the bicycles in revolution, kickass heroines, and much more! Renato Redentor Constantino’s talk and Renato Senior’s book A Past Revisited really got under my skin. Maraming salamat!”
Gege Cruz Sugue
Flips Flipping Books book club, 12 August 2024 -
“Yes, third time [sila/Inang Laya] pumunta at kumanta sa rally sa Dasmarinas town plaza, sa parish church sa our Lady of Perpetual Help sa Dasmariñas Bagong Bayan and sa martsa rali ng mga maralitang lunsod from Dasmariñas to Bacoor na hinarang sumama at di sya [Karina Constantino-David] umalis hanggang kinabukasan.”
Ian Yaun
March 19, 2024 -
“At a low point in my life, I received a note from Letizia Constantino, unsolicited advice that encouraged me to keep writing. I never got to thank her personally for that pat on the back; this column is belated gratitude.”
Ambeth R. Ocampo
Historian, An excerpt from his column in Philippine Daily Inquirer
"Letizia Roxas Constantino, historian", 2025 June 06 -
“A Past Revisited was both a revelation and a challenge. It made us see the familiar narratives of Philippine history in new and unsettling ways. It invited us to ask deeper questions—about power, about colonial legacies, about the struggles and aspirations of our people. And it also gave us a sense of responsibility: to carry history forward not just as memory, but as a guide for action and transformation.”
Dr. Chas M. Navarro
Commissioner, National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP)
On his remarks at the launch of the 50th Anniversary Special Edition of The Philippines: A Past Revisited
2025 Aug 29 -
"Thank you for having us ... We truly enjoyed ourselves. The exhibit was very inspiring, beautifully presented and so insightful. We were all so impressed. Hope we can use some of the material in our Women’s Museum. ❤️"
Mayor Joy Belmonte
Quezon City Governor, On her visit at Letizia: A Life in Letters Exhibit
2025 July 30 -
“One of the most towering texts of nationalist historiography — co-authored by Letizia Constantino, whose voice carried the struggle for true independence into classrooms and beyond.”
Michael “Xiao” Chua
Historian , On his column at The Manila Times
“Letizia Constantino: Nationalist historian, wife and mother” 2025 June 17 -
“Good read. At aliw. Ito ang kahapon na masarap balikan!”
Cherylle Lara Raguini
Subic civic leader, commenting on the foundation essay in ABS-CBN,
“Street names and the persistence of memory,” June 2024 -
“Frequented the area in the early ’80s because of Popular Bookstore (small door, beside the gate of Mapua High School), the only one that carried engineering books required for our course. It was still Martial Law… One buys … dangerous reading materials afraid of the Secret Marshals who were then infamous for salvaging (tokhang in the time of tatay digong) petty criminals and activists. Across Mapua High then was a parking lot of mini buses – now the Manila Grand Opera.”
Melvin Purzuelo
Iloilo environmentalist, commenting on the foundation’s history article in BusinessMirror,
“Cycling through the fabled history of an opera house, now a hotel,” June 2024.














