Wazzup Pilipinas!?
On the sun-drenched afternoon of March 9, 2026, the air at the press conference for John Sherwin Felix didn't smell of the rich, ancestral spices he spent years documenting. Instead, it carried the heavy, metallic scent of a legal battle—one that pits a lone advocate against the bureaucratic machinery of the Philippine government.
Felix, the visionary founder of Lokalpedia, stood before the cameras not to showcase a rare heirloom grain or a disappearing fermentation technique, but to defend his right to speak the truth. At the heart of this storm is a libel case filed against him—a move his supporters call a "chilling" attempt to silence a man who dared to point out that the government’s own recipe book got the ingredients of Filipino identity wrong.
A Passion Project Under Fire
Felix isn't your average critic. Through Lokalpedia, he has trekked to the most remote corners of the archipelago, immersing himself in indigenous communities to platform food heritage that history books often forget. What began as a passion project became a vital archive of Philippine soul.
However, when the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) published ‘Kayumanggi: A Kaleidoscope of Filipino Flavors and Food Traditions’, Felix noticed something indigestible: glaring inaccuracies. He spoke up, arguing that a book funded by the public and intended to represent the nation’s culinary map must, at the very least, be accurate.
The response? Not a correction, but a lawsuit.
"The authors and publisher should be open to criticism," Felix stated firmly. "It is of public interest to correct inaccuracies in a book that supposedly showcases the heritage of our indigenous peoples."
Silencing the Scullery: A Threat to Expression
Atty. Arman Hernando, Felix’s legal counsel, didn't mince words, labeling the libel case "baseless." According to Hernando, this isn't just about a recipe book; it is a tactical strike against academic discourse and freedom of expression.
The Stake: If a researcher can be sued for correcting a taxpayer-funded book, who will dare to document the truth?
The Victim: Beyond Felix, the victims are the community members and researchers who labor to record the fading traditions of the Philippines.
Adding a layer of gravity to the proceedings, Laorence Castillo, co-founder of Gulay Na, noted that the errors in the book represent more than just typos—they represent a fundamental "lack of respect and sensitivity" toward the Filipino identity.
The Recipe for Resistance
Today, Felix and his team officially filed a counter-affidavit. Their hope is simple yet profound: dismissal.
But the implications of this case linger like a burnt roux. It raises a haunting question for the Filipino public: When the state packages our culture into a glossy book, who owns the narrative? And what happens when the people who actually live that culture say the book is wrong?
As the press conference concluded, Felix’s message was clear. He will not be intimidated into silence. The documentation of Filipino food heritage is not just about ingredients—it is a battle for the country's memory, and for John Sherwin Felix, that is a dish worth fighting for.

Ross is known as the Pambansang Blogger ng Pilipinas - An Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Professional by profession and a Social Media Evangelist by heart.
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