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Imelda Marcos’ famous shoe collection damaged by molds and termites | The famous shoe collection of Imelda Marcos, the former Philippine first lady, has been damaged by termites, storms and neglect, Manila’s National Museum officials have revealed. Not only these but hundreds of pieces of late strongman Ferdinand Marcos’ clothing, including
the formal native see-through Barong shirts he wore during his two-decade rule, have also begun to gather mold and fray after being stored for years without protection
at the presidential palace and later at the Museum, the officials told a foreign news agency. The Marcoses fled the Philippines at the climax of the army-backed
“people power” revolt, which became a harbinger of change in authoritarian regimes
worldwide. Ferdinand Marcos died in exile in Hawaii in 1989 and his widow and
children returned home years later. They left behind staggering amounts of personal
belongings, clothes and art objects at the palace, including at least 1,220 pairs
of Imelda Marcos’ shoes. More than 150 carton boxes of clothes, dress accessories
and shoes of the Marcoses were transferred to the National Museum for safekeeping
two years ago after termites, humidity and mold threatened the apparel at the
riverside palace. But there they deteriorated further as the fragile boxes were
abandoned in a padlocked museum hall that had no facilities to protect such relics
and that was inundated by tropical storm rains last month due to a gushing leak
in the ceiling, museum officials said. Museum members of staff, who were not aware
the boxes contained precious mementoes from the Marcoses, came to know about the
damage when they opened the hall on the fourth floor of the building after noticing
water pouring out from under the door. They were shocked to see Marcos’ shoes
and gowns when they opened the wet boxes, officials said. Workers moved the boxes
to a dry room and some were later brought to a museum laboratory, where a small
team of curators scrambled to assess the extent of the damage, a process that
may take months given the huge volume of the apparel. Termites and mold have damaged
some items beyond repair, according to museum curator Orlando Abinion, who is
heading the effort. “We’re doing a conservation rescue. There was termite infestation
and mold in past years, and these were aggravated by last month’s storm,” the
Telegraph quoted Abinion as telling the news agency. “It’s unfortunate because
Imelda may have worn some of these clothes in major official events and as such
have an important place in our history,” he said. Imelda Marcos’s massive shoe
collection, including top US and European brands, astounded the world and became
a symbol of excess in the Southeast Asian nation, where many still walked barefoot
out of abject poverty. The former first lady claimed many of the shoes were gifts
from Filipino shoemakers in suburban Marikina city, the country’s shoemaking capital,
for endorsing their products. Marikina officials borrowed 800 pairs of her shoes
in 2001 for a shoe museum, which has become a tourist spot. Massive flooding,
however, damaged dozens of pairs of Marcos’ shoes in Marikina in 2009. About 765
pairs, including famous brands like Gucci, Charles Jourdan, Christian Dior, Ferragamo,
Chanel and Prada, survived the Marikina floods.
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