THERE ARE LEADERS who give speeches, and then there are people like Nicanor “Nicky” Perlas — the kind of man who changes the soil beneath our feet, both literally and morally.
I write this not as a distant observer but as someone who walked beside him, listened to him, and had my heart cracked open by him. He taught me that real governance does not begin in air-conditioned boardrooms or in the marble corridors of power — it begins in the sweat-soaked backs of farmers, the stubborn hope of barangays, and the untold quiet struggles of communities.
In the truest sense, Nicky Perlas is a modern Rizal. Not because he wrote novels that scholars endlessly dissect, but because he lived with reason, conscience, and a relentless ethic of service — stitching together the moral fabric of a nation one act, one farmer, one policy at a time.
A Trilogy of Courage: Agronomist → Activist → Moral Architect
Perlas’s life feels like a trilogy written against all odds.
He walked away from the safe path of academia to take on the monstrous Bataan Nuclear Power Plant. He pushed the Philippines toward banning dangerous pesticides, championed organic and biodynamic farming, and drafted Philippine Agenda 21 (PA21) — a bold roadmap that insisted sustainable development must prioritize people, culture, and nature, even when elite globalization sneered otherwise.
These weren’t abstract victories. They were shields that protected farmers, villages, and future generations. They were scaffolding on which millions could stand without fear.
If you’ve ever eaten a vegetable without worrying what poison clung to its skin, that’s partly Nicanor Perlas. If your town has a PA21-inspired community initiative, that too carries his imprint. This is the work of a man who measures success not in applause but in whether a child can eat dinner without fear of toxins.
The Vision of Threefolding: Common Sense with a Pulse
But Nicanor Perlas wasn’t content with farming victories alone. He built frameworks for human dignity.
His idea of threefolding — bringing together government, business, and civil society in genuine partnership — may sound like policy jargon at first. But look closer: it is a manifesto for decency. A way to keep commerce honest, politics accountable, and culture alive.
His book Shaping Globalisation: Civil Society, Cultural Power and Threefolding has become a handbook for students, activists, and leaders who dare to imagine globalization as humane rather than brutal. For Gen Z, it may look like a theory on paper. But for a farmer, a barangay leader, or a community worker, it feels like common sense translated into action.
The Candidate Who Ran on Conscience
In 2010, Nicanor Perlas ran for president. He wasn’t after power — he was answering a moral emergency.
His campaign was improbable, almost quixotic. But it was also deeply principled. He ran not on slogans but on conviction that politics must reflect moral imagination. That leadership is not about dominance but about responsibility, service, and inner clarity.
The Inner Revolution
And this is perhaps the most radical lesson he taught: true revolution begins inside us.
At his Right Livelihood Award acceptance, he declared:
“Spiritual revolution must have happened first within us before we can create the new world we all long for.”
To some, those words might sound lofty. But to Perlas, they were practical truths. He taught farmers to see themselves as custodians, not mere producers. He taught students to pair outrage with discipline. He encouraged elders to pass on stories and seeds with equal reverence.
This is why his influence ripples across generations — from wrinkled hands bent over rice fields to Gen Z organizers buzzing with fire in campus grounds.
A Mentor Who Turned Seeds into Futures
As his writer and mentee, I remember afternoons when his words made the air feel heavy and holy. He never sugarcoated the difficulties of grassroots work. He named them. He dissected them. But then, like a farmer pocketing seeds, he turned those difficulties into something you could plant.
He reminded me that policies are not ink on paper. They are invitations — invitations to love our neighbors into a better future.
The Call That Still Rings
And now, I leave you with his words — words that feel both like a trumpet blast and a whispered prayer:
“NO! RATHER IT ABOUT AFFIRMING THE SENSE OF THE RESPONSIBILITY THAT IS NOW CLEARLY INCUMBENT WITH S.E.A. IN MAKING A DO-OR-DIE EFFORT TO CREATE A BETTER COUNTRY WHERE A SOLID INNER CONDITION IS THE SINE QUA NON FOR SUCH A RENEWAL OF THE COUNTRY.” — Nicanor Perlas
Read it again. Let it pierce you. Civic duty without inner discipline is a ship without ballast. What he is asking is simple but terrifying: will we take responsibility?
The Modern Rizal We Needed All Along
His work made older generations feel seen. It gave farmers dignity. It showed Gen Z that activism is not just marching or tweeting — it is in planting, cooking, educating, healing, caring.
If you ask me whether Nicanor Perlas is a hero, I hesitate. “Hero” feels too neat. He is more than that: a craftsman of courage, a stubborn optimist, a teacher of responsibility.
He proved that the most revolutionary act is to tend what is fragile — soil, seeds, people, conscience.
So read his books. Visit a PA21 project and solutionecosystems.net website. Talk to a farmer touched by his vision. And then, most importantly — plant something. Not for social media, but for the stubborn habit of caring.
That, in the end, is his secret: nations are not made by slogans or declarations but by daily acts that turn strangers into neighbors, and soil into sustenance.
If you cry reading this, good. That’s the water. Now let’s plant the seed.