Friday, December 6, 2013

SEA STORIES

Poems by Merlie Alunan

(The author is a Filipina poet and professor in Literature at the University of the Philippines - Tacloban and Silliman University in Dumaguete in the Philippines. She survived the super typhoon Yolanda in November and has since lived in Dumaguete. This poem is quite a foreboding of things to come in Central Philippines.)
I. OLD WOMEN IN OUR VILLAGE

Old women in my village say
the sea is always hungry, they say,
that’s why it comes without fail
to lick the edges of the barrier sand,
rolling through rafts of mangrove,smashing its salt-steeped flood
on guardian cliffs,cv breaking itself
against rock faces, landlocks, hills,
reaching through to fields, forests,
grazelands, villages by the water,
country lanes, towns, cities where
people walk about as in a dream,
deaf to the wind shushing
the sea’s sibilant sighing

somedaywecome
somedaywecome
someday....

[caption id="attachment_3069" align="alignleft" width="230"]ML Kuker's Magpaparos (shell gatherers). Proceeds of this painting go to the survivors of super typhoon Yolanda. ML Kuker's Magpaparos (shell gatherers). Proceeds of this painting go to the survivors of super typhoon Yolanda.[/caption]

Only the old women hear
the ceaseless warning, watching
grain drying in the sun,
or tending the boiling pot
or gutting a fish for the fire, fingers
bloody, clothes stained, scent of the ocean
rising from the mangled flesh into their lungs.
Nights, as they sit on their mats
rubbing their knees, waiting for ease
to come, and sleep, they hear the sea
endlessly muttering as in a dream

someday someday someday....

 

 

 

Nudging the old men beside them,
their mates—empty-eyed seafarers,
each a survivor of storms, high waves,
and the sea’s vast loneliness,
now half-lost in their old age
amid the household clutter—
old women in my village
nod to themselves and say,
one uncharted day, the sea
will open its mouth and drink in

a child playing on the sand,
a fisherman with his nets,
great ships laden with cargo,
and still unsated, they say,
suck up cities towns villages—
one huge swallow to slake its hunger.

As to when or how it would happen,
who knows, the women say, but this much
is true--no plea for kindness can stop it—
nodding their heads this way and that,
tuning their ears to the endless mumbling....

somedaywecomewecomewecome
somedaywecomewecomewecome
somedaysomedaysomeday

[caption id="attachment_3070" align="alignnone" width="300"]The Boat. ML Kuker The Boat. ML Kuker[/caption]

 

(Magpaparos is still on sale. Please mail the artist at monica_lunot@yahoo.com if interested. Proceeds go to Gota de Leche Manila for the survivors of the Yolanda supertyphoon. - Ed.)

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

EVENTS: Rising from Yolanda's Wrath

MAKILALA TV Tackles Challenges for Yolanda Aftermath
By Marivir R. Montebon
New York City

At the launch party of Makilala (To Know) TV in November, New York Consul General Mario de Leon Jr. was quick to say that  Philippine leaders should not politicize (the Yolanda) catastrophe, or it will be catastrophic. De Leon was the talk show's first special guest, who responded to the question on political leaders holding on and repacking relief goods to be able to put their names on these bags.

[caption id="attachment_3041" align="alignright" width="300"]Philippine Consul General for New York Mario de Leon Jr. was guest during the party launch of Makilala TV, created by 5 Filipino women aiming to bring forward Fil-Am events and culture through television. Philippine Consul General for New York Mario de Leon Jr. was guest during the party launch of Makilala TV, created by 5 Filipino women aiming to bring forward Fil-Am events and culture through television.[/caption]

Many Filipino-Americans in New York have expressed outrage through the social media on the delivery of relief goods which  have been politicized by certain government leaders.

"It takes time to print all these stickers with their names, and put them on the packages. And people are dying. They are so shameless," writes a Facebook denizen, which also gave a thumbs up to a viral poster which says "Proud to be Filipino, Ashamed of Philippine government."

Understandably, the discussion on Yolanda super typhoon disaster brought out emotions from the audience, which packed the Kalayaan Hall of the Philippine Consulate on 5th Avenue.

Community leaders also shared their fund-raising activities to be able to send money and goods to the survivors in  Eastern, Central, and Western Visayas.

The creators of Makilala TV are five Filipinas who wanted to bring forward Filipino Americans in the East Coast on mainstream television. Produced by Maricor Fernandez of the Queens Public TV, the monthly show at QPTV is anchored by Cristina DC Pastor, publisher of online magazine Fil-Am.net, Jen Furer, communications director for legal assistance office FALDEF, Maria Cruz Lee of the NYC Mayor's Office for Immigrant Affairs, and Rachelle Ocampo, vice president for the UniPRO, a not-for-profit organization on social and immigrant concerns.

IMG_20131115_185900_315While the launch party was being closed by the hosts, New York City's Empire State Building lit itself with the colors of the Philippine flag: yellow, blue, and red, in solidarity with the Filipinos who were dealing with the catastrophe brought about by the biggest super typhoon to hit the world this year.

[caption id="attachment_3048" align="alignleft" width="300"]The Empire State Building in yellow, blue, and red. The Empire State Building in yellow, blue, and red.[/caption]

Jen Furer said that was "serendipity."

Check out Makilala TV, with these women of substance and fun, at the QPTV.

 

 

 

 

 

 

BANYUHAY Art Exhibit for Yolanda Survivors

Mona Lunot Kuker dropped down her hair upon my request for a  photograph with her rendition of Gabriela Silang, the nationally known Filipina warrior, at the Mountain Province Espresso Bar in Montrose, Brooklyn. During her first and solo art exhibit, Mona figuratively dropped down her hair, of course.

[caption id="attachment_3043" align="alignleft" width="300"]The artist and her rendition of Gabriela Silang The artist and her rendition of Gabriela Silang[/caption]

As an artist, she metamorphosed in a self-taught manner. "I had my father in mind while I painted these. He was a painter  and I observed keenly how he did his work. In my spare time, I attended to my craft," she told me.

From being a domestic worker, Mona blooms into being a painter in coping with her own personal aches and melancholy as an immigrant. Hence the title of her art show, "Banyuhay" or metamorphose.

The November 30, 2013 event, commemorating the 150th birthday of national hero Andres Bonifacio of the secret society  Katipunan, was brought together by Ugnayan, a youth organization in New York and New Jersey. Ugnayan was also celebrating its 9th year during the art show.

[caption id="attachment_3046" align="alignleft" width="168"]Babaylan Babaylan[/caption]

It was a huge success, more than half of Mona's creations were sold, as guests enjoyed the sumptuous Filipino buffet (for me, the Mountain Province organic coffee with biko enriched with caramelized coconut syrup on top was to die for).

[caption id="attachment_3055" align="alignleft" width="300"]With AF3IRM NY chairperson Olivia Trinlas and OSM! digital editor Leani Auxilio With AF3IRM NY chairperson Olivia Trinlas and OSM! digital editor Leani Auxilio[/caption]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part of the proceeds were sent to the survivors of Yolanda super typhoon in Leyte and Cebu through the Gota de Leche Manila and Tigra Inc.

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Saturday, November 30, 2013

Of Yolanda, the Prior Catastrophes, and My Sweet Typhoon Liam

By Joan Ariete


New York City


 In the evening of November 9, the day after Yolanda, the strongest storm recorded in history battered the Philippines, my three-year-old son Liam was excitedly assembling a house, a Lego tower of yellow, red and orange, and assuring himself, “very good.” He would ecstatically say “wow!” every time his tiny fingers managed to secure another block. 


I was, on the other side of the room, distraught - sitting in front of my computer and letting the horrific images of the super typhoon assault me.  The entire Tacloban City flattened by water; the soaked and muddied leftovers of an apocalyptic episode, clothes and knickknacks laid bare, rusty tin roofs pulled out from under-constructed concrete houses, a doll, its blonde hair now a lonely mermaid’s mane.


malapascuarising3 The dead sprawled amongst these mundane objects of what used to be a bustling everyday life in Tacloban where the eye of the storm was. I caught a glimpse of a child’s hand, very much like my own son’s, and I almost blacked out. I wept louder than I did when my grandfather passed away two months before. 


 My son turned to me and asked, “Mommy, are you okay?” - one of the few things he has learned on etiquette from his babysitter. Outside, the autumn breeze hummed and kissed the yellowing leaves, making way for a kaleidoscopic show of colors in New York. Inside our small apartment in Queens, I longed to be with my own people who were by now suffering the most unspeakable of horrors.  




[caption id="attachment_3028" align="alignright" width="300"]The writer with Liam and John. The writer with Liam and John.[/caption]

 I have seen these horrific images when I was child. They seem to be realized versions of my childhood nightmares. I come from Pampanga, one of the provinces that suffered most when in June 1991, Mt. Pinatubo, a volcano that had been dormant for 600 years, woke up, excitedly spewing smoke, lava, ash and pebbles.


The ash and pebbles fell like rainfall and transformed my hometown, Lubao, into a winter wonderland of gray snow.   Then came the mud mixed in water, boiling to a temperature of what Hell must feel like. PAGASA called it lahar. It never reached our town, but Bacolor, which was a mere 30-minute drive away, bore its brunt, galloping and relentless. It buried the town alive, erasing it off the map. I vaguely recall a radio news report on how those who survived had to place their dead inside used rice sacks and tie them up to sturdy tree branches so as not to be swept away by the surge. 


I cannot trace the time government officials or neighborhood gossips started warning us about the water. After the eruption, the topography of the land had been transformed into a welcoming hall for any arriving deluge. As a kid, I would always imagine water barging into our home, filling every corner like an aquarium. It would come in the dead of night ferrying logs weighing tons and bashing our front door, as if knocking in jest.  


I would plan our escape, my little brother, my baby sister and I, and rewind it in my head, but would get stuck, realizing we were fenced by intricate metal bars for windows. I would obsess about our house’s ‘inescapable’ architecture- a one-story bungalow built in 1985. The metal bars coiled and bent to assume the shape of a flower or an intricate triangle, stayed glued to the beams. How are we going to escape all this water?  In my imaginings, I would refer to Peter Pan’s escape routes through more sensible English windows.


The flash floods in Ormoc City took place in the same year, five months after the volcano woke up. Until today, I can’t shake off the television image of the bloated body of a man with both his arms raised as if in anticipation of a half-embrace. The sun was kissing his face, which by then had turned into a lamentable blue.


Monday morning at work, I wept once more as concerned coworkers asked me if my family was okay. I started a frantic fundraiser and raised $710, which I split in half and sent to two friends from college who had already launched their own individual relief efforts-- one group went to Dulag, a town outside of Tacloban, which also suffered greatly. I was moved by my coworkers’ generosity; most of them had children to send to school, monthly mortgage, and still donated a good fraction of their paychecks. My bosses were more than gracious as well. When one of my friends received the money, he started crying. It was the least we could do. It was nothing compared to what they, who were physically there, were dealing with. Albeit in a tragedy of this magnitude, cash is always the most potent resource.


 The week that followed was a state of distraction and grief. In mourning and angered by any sign of indifference, I reprimanded my partner for not finishing his leftovers, when so many of my people back home were starving. I debated with my parents, who thought that Anderson Cooper’s reporting was a bit offensive and the government’s slow response understandable considering the country is an archipelago and all its resources Third-World. 


 On Facebook, I told an aunt she was insensitive for telling me that a lot of people who claimed to have not had anything to eat for five days were lying, as they could still line up for relief goods in the heat. They were probably going for seconds, she said. In this half-crazed state, I thought I could easily alienate anyone.


 On November 23, two weeks after the storm, my son and I trekked to Chelsea in Manhattan, where Filipino-American literary writers and journalists organized a fundraiser reading named “Kaya Natin!” (We can do this!), featuring legends in contemporary Filipino literature held at the Asian American Writers Workshop office.


 Via video, Gina Apostol, author of the novel Gun Dealer’s Daughter and a native of Tacloban, read some Waray poems by another Taclobanon, Voltaire Araza. As she translated each line she put emphasis on the verbs, explaining that Araza’s language is fueled by these “ordinary, quotidian verbs.” In the poems, the verbs flow with a solemn eagerness about them, elegant and mighty in their sadness. There’s something enthralling about the Waray language, the way the last syllable of a word is repeated to magnify its meaning. As is the case in any other Filipino language, this type of repetition amplifies the words, bolsters their caliber.


 Lambunao, which literally means ‘water,’ laments on water’s insidious nature:


 Water is a bad guest, especially when it enters the house.


It’s a pest because it occupies everything, touching everything,


Making everything wet: the floor, the chairs…the mat, the blanket…


and the picture of the two of us, my wife and I.


It’s been overstaying for three or four days now.


It keeps living in our house.


I’m not complaining. I’m just annoyed, because these clothes I’ve been drying keep shedding tears.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TR1vhWQcw8




[caption id="attachment_3029" align="alignleft" width="225"]Jessica Hagedorn Jessica Hagedorn[/caption]

 Jessica Hagedorn, author of acclaimed novels Dogeaters and The Gangster of Love, read Gina Apostol’s Op-Ed piece in The New York Times. She shared three moving paragraphs that describe the author’s nostalgic memories about how Taclobanons would usually deal with the typhoons that regularly pass through their city. The grief and anger that followed after the Yolanda leveled her city could be sensed as the article progresses.


“Always, after the rains on Juan Luna Street, there was the great communal cleansing, children, housemaids and busybodies sharing stories; the familiar howl of Bruce Lee, our cowardly dog; the usual flooding of our walkway that doubled as a pigpen, housing a single hygienic pig owned by our neighbor Mano Bading, whose love for his pig we tolerated because we would eat it at fiesta; the examination of debris — clotheslines, buckets, cardboard election posters falling off a corner store, where we got our i.o.u.’s when typhoons hit, racking up our debts in Spam, Hunt’s pork and beans and rice. But this year’s post-typhoon cleansing has become an unimaginable orgy of grief. Friends who have escaped speak of strangled, directionless horror: No one is in charge. We don’t know how to account for our damage, or where to go to repair our fate.” http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/15/opinion/surrender-oblivion-survival.html

Ninotchka Rosca, author of award-winning novels, State of War and Twice Blessed, cautioned against calling Filipinos resilient in a commentary for Yahoo! Philippines. Headlined “Calling Filipinos resilient is an insult,” the piece drew a lot of attention from readers. According to Rosca, Yahoo! was delighted because the commentary pushed people to type in comments in complete sentences. 


 An excerpt:


 No, we are not resilient. We break, when the world is just too much, and in the process of breaking, are transformed into something difficult to understand.  Or we take full measure of misfortune, wrestle with it and emerge transformed into something equally terrifying.


 It is what is…and what isn’t


This is in sync with our indigenous worldview, expressed by our riddles, the talinhaga, on which every Filipino child used to be raised:  an understanding of reality, including ourselves, as metamorphic (or, capable of transformation).http://news.yahoo.com/commentary--calling-filipinos-resilient-is-an-insult-011053161.html

[caption id="attachment_3030" align="alignright" width="225"]Ninotchka Rosca Ninotchka Rosca[/caption]

I discovered a little piece of home in these readings. The writers’ words brought me back to that time of uncertainty, the memory of a frightened eight-year-old who couldn’t stop thinking about her homeland’s impending doom.


 It wasn’t a shameful anomaly anymore, to have all these memories-- visions of water taking back what we hold dear. It is, sadly, every Filipino’s reality. “What a horror it would be to lose the poets,” Apostol said when she didn’t hear from her literary friends in Tacloban for the first four days since the storm struck. Yes, what a horror it would be to lose the crafters of words that speak of truth and beauty.


 Rosca’s commentary has been empowering. I hold on to the word ‘metamorphic,’ during these trying times. On that fateful night in June 1991, my brother and I jumped up and down in our living room to evade the tremors; in the dark I asked my father if we could escape to Manila and stay with our cousins the following day. He didn’t answer; he was figuring out how to get clean water for my newborn sister. By this time, the potable water pipes had been shut off. After that night, life had never been the same. 


 Internationally known as Haiyan, locally called Yolanda, the typhoon left a magnitude of destruction that is beyond understanding. At press time, there are over 5000 accounted-for deaths. While local and financial aids continue to pour in, numerous barangays and islets in the Visayas are still in need of relief and attention. Scientists say that the escalating strength and sophistication of current typhoons can only be directly caused by climate change.


The 1991 flash floods of Ormoc were attributed to illegal logging. Over 4000 died and 3000 more missing; none of the missing was ever found and they are all presumed dead.


Naderev ‘Yev’ Sano, head of the Philippine delegation to the UN Climate Convention in Warsaw delivered a speech in tears: “We can take drastic action now to ensure that we prevent a future where super typhoons become a way of life. Because we refuse, as a nation, to accept a future where super typhoons like Haiyan become a way of life.”


He challenged those who are still denying climate change, those coming from wealthier nations to “get off their ivory towers,” and see for themselves the extent of the natural calamities that have befallen the more vulnerable countries.


The question now is how will the Philippines deal with climate change? I summon our capacity to metamorphose: hold the powerful and corrupt accountable-- government officials, huge corporations that plunder our natural resources. Unfortunately, the United States is among those countries that have the highest greenhouse gas emissions. It doesn’t have a firm stance on how to deal with the warming planet as of yet. It hasn’t committed itself.  




[caption id="attachment_2601" align="alignright" width="300"]artimist The US has still to commit itself to curb global warming.[/caption]

 More than ever, I vow to recycle more, not waste water, and refrain from consuming too much-- some may accuse me of having too much of that self-righteous complex, but this culture of consumption and waste is just too much for the planet. I refuse to shop. Was never a shopper, anyway. 


 When hell came down and tested my people’s humanity, they rose above the rubble with a level of humanity that left a CNN reporter in awe. We still reel from the pain. We still mourn our dead.  And we will never forget.


 At the writers’ fundraiser, Liam passed out in my arms when the poets started. A man sitting beside asked me if he could take a picture of us. The message, which he typed on his IPhone for me to read to avoid disturbing the reading, was very touching: Taking your son to these events is a very moving gesture. Can I take a picture of you two?


 It wasn’t as much as consciously taking him to such activities as not having enough to pay for a babysitter. But maybe it was a must to take him. After all, through his blood runs the DNA of a race that has, time and time again, redefined the meaning of strength. (Photos at the Asian American Writers Workshop by Kristina Kalaw Joyas)


 


(Joan works full time – as a young mom and a bouncing-back writer in NYC.)

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Reinterpreting I Love Tacloban

By Merlie Alunan

Tacloban, the center of the Philippines, where everyone is just passing through, it may be. But there are many of us who understand better what love of a place means, after the storm surge and the wind had levelled the city and left it in ruins. We find the place in our hearts again, and perhaps we now realize more what it means to say, I love Tacloban.

ilovetacgmanews
Tacloban City -- Jet Urmeneta, peripatetic and irrepressible native of Tacloban, picked up a young man once, we don't know exactly in what circumstances. It might have been in an airport, at the NAIA perhaps, a case of have-money-to-travel-but-don't know-where-to-go, especially in this strange country, the Philippines. The young man was a Belgian, but he spoke English with a pleasant accent, so Jet told him, "Come with me to Tacloban."

Where's that, the young man says.

"That's the center of the Philippines," said the disarming and irrepressible native.

So the young man went with her without questioning what might become of him in this touted "center of the Philippines." Those were happier times, the young man landed among Jet's family and friends, the Urmenetas and the Delgados of Apitong Country, people who understood fun and good company, food and conviviality, and proved to himself , long before it ever became a touristic byword, that it was indeed More Fun in the Philippines, especially if you're in the "center," as Jet boasted. Thus he proved to himself earlier, long before it became a touristic byword, that it was indeed "more fun in the Philippines," especially if you're in its "center" as Jet had boasted.

Geographically, Jet might be right. The Maharlika Highway passes through Tacloban, the midpoint on the way south to Mindanao, Surigao, Butuan, Davao, and north, Manila and the the rest of Luzon.

[caption id="attachment_3016" align="alignleft" width="300"]The San Juanico Bridge The San Juanico Bridge[/caption]

 

One can make many things of this geographic factor. To government authorities, it means that Tacloban has to deal everyday with loads of people in transit, going from here to there and back. It also means an extraordinary influx of informal settlers coming from various parts of the region, finding places for themselves in the warrens of the city slums. They build shelters very quickly, using what materials come to hand. They find jobs with the many business establishments in the city or do small buy-and-sell businesses of their own, or work as domestics, laundrywomen, waiters, construction workers, cargo handlers. A number of them become drivers of jeepneys, motorized tricycles, and pedicabs.

Most of them are escapees from the poverty that beleaguers the rural places of their origin, only to find their lot not much improved, even worsened by poverty in the urban jungle. Most of them are low-skilled or have no skills at all, which explains why they cannot find regular jobs, or why the jobs they get into are usually poorly paid. This is a fluid population, people coming in and leaving as they please, but there are always more coming in, squeezing themselves everywhere they can.

Businessmen, as usual, are the first to see the opportunities offered by the Pan Philippine Highway. Tacloban City is primarily a trading center for all of Region VIII, and also a regional center. All the national offices have their sub-agencies in Tacloban City. The ease of transport made possible by the Pan Philippine Highway exacerbates the city's consumerist propensities. It is now easier to bring in goods. Most of what Tacloban eat come from the outside--meat, vegetables, fruits, even fish--they come from food producing provinces such as Davao, Cagayan de Oro, General Santos, Cebu, Bicol and further north. Business control the supply chain, hence it is vital to the well-being of Tacloban. In Tacloban as well as anywhere else in the country, the bulk of these are in the hands of the Chinese community. This is a very stable community, albeit somewhat set apart and focused largely on its own concerns.

The one biggest employer in Tacloban City is the government, City Hall, the Province, and the various agencies of the National Government.

[caption id="attachment_3023" align="alignleft" width="300"]The city hall, nestled in serene seas. (Photo by Gerry Ruiz) The city hall, nestled in serene seas. (Photo by Gerry Ruiz)[/caption]

Tacloban has no industries of any significant size, unless one looks at the schools as such. Tacloban is a university town, dominated by two big SUCs, the Leyte Normal University and the Eastern Visayas State University and several private schools, offering mainly elementary and high school education. There is a very small unit of the University of the Philippines. The city's professionals find employment in government, in schools, in the hospitals that service the city, three government, and four private. The city hosts thousands of students from the entire region most of the year, another fluid population who stay only for the length of time required for the completion of their academic courses. Most of them leave soon after, for Manila or Cebu, in search of jobs.

[caption id="attachment_3019" align="alignleft" width="300"]A legacy of the American education, the UP Tacloban is leveled to the ground, except for the Oblation. A legacy of the American education, the UP Tacloban is leveled to the ground, except for the Oblation.[/caption]

In the aftermath of Yolanda, there was a massive diaspora of Taclobanons to different parts of the country. We are among those driven to seek shelter outside the city. Within ten days after the deadly storm, however, we also saw the frantic efforts of many Taclobanons to go home, understandably to find out what happened to family and friends caught in the calamity. Suddenly we hear laments about losing the city, losing home. After Yolanda gutted the city and reduced it to piles of rubble and debris, we listen to people mourning for the city they had lost.

Philippines TyphoonDulce Cuna, painter and performance artist, one of Tacloban's most well-known personalities and devoted denizen, has written in Facebook:

" 2013 has brought me the most PAIN in my Life, the PAIN of Loss. I lost dear friends and relatives, and I am losing MEMORIES... I know I am blessed because GOD kept my family intact, but I bleed for my relatives and friends who went with the storm. I also mourn for Tacloban and the place it once had been, the Joy it had given me as I lived there. It is my Birthplace, my Habitat, my Roots, my Identity. In Church, yesterday, I felt so alienated, everything strange. The opulent Church of St. Peter here in Commonwealth was packed with people for it was the feast of Christ the King. I felt so little, so humbled, like a kitten stepped on in a stampede, like a five-year old crying in a pew. I miss my Santo NiƱo Church, but God is there and everywhere. After Mass, deciding to buy vegetables to augment our sustenance of canned goods, I thought of Rotunda San Jose where many Taclobanons could buy fresh-caught fish, Andok's where I could buy a fast lunch, my suki fruit vendor and the pedicab driver who was among the lined-up corpse in the rotunda on the day I joined the exodus. I remembered the malls, the cafes where I used to hang out, downtown Tacloban Chinatown where my Chinoy friends would give me discounts for goods I bought at their stores, the University of the Philippines Tacloban College where I have so passionately taught for many years..."

The artist could readily talk about place and his connectedness to it. Perhaps, Dulce Cuna articulates for most of us what home means. These are thoughts we seldom have in better times. Now that the city has been turned into rubble and we are forced to flee for our lives, we begin thinking about what it means to us.

[caption id="attachment_3018" align="alignleft" width="300"]Imelda Marcos's house of opulence is in Tacloban. The Sto. Nino Shrine, when it wasn't yet decaying, showcases the former First Lady's expansive, royal bedroom where it has kept the most amazing everlasting mirror. Imelda Marcos's house of opulence is in Tacloban. The Sto. Nino Shrine, when it wasn't yet decaying, showcases the former First Lady's expansive, royal bedroom where it has kept the most amazing everlasting mirror.[/caption]

In better times, City Hall garnished the city with signs: "I love Tacloban." City Hall proudly announced the HUC status of Tacloban and proceeded to impress upon one and all the pride and power of these new circumstances. Most of us cared little for the wranglings that took place in the name of the HUC. For most of us, Tacloban was just an address, we could be moving out pretty soon. It is the place where we work, where we have our business, where we make money.

It takes an artist to remember these: This is where the bones of my father and mother lie, as Daryll Delgado has said. It is where generations of my family have always lived. Where I had planted a garden and a tree. It is where I had fallen in love, where I had my first heartache, where I got drunk and fed the chickens for the first time in the town plaza. Where I feel safest, where I feel fully myself. I may go anywhere in the world, but this is where I want my bones to lie, beside the bones of all my ancestors, and if that is not going to happen, my soul will cross the valleys and oceans of the world to find its shores.

Tacloban, the center of the Philippines, where everyone is just passing through, it may be. But there are many of us who understand better what love of a place means, after the storm surge and the wind had levelled the city and left it in ruins. We find the place in our hearts again, and perhaps we now realize more what it means to say, I love Tacloban. HUC or not, its grounds have harbored our feet and we have breathed its sacred air. Away from it, we would not know who we are. (Photos by GMA, Fox, USA.com)

(Merlie Alunan is a denizen of Tacloban who survived the wrath of supertyphoon Yolanda, along with her children and grandchildren. She is a retired professor in English Literature at the University of the Philippines and in Silliman University. She is a poet at heart. With a new lease on life, she and her family are temporarily staying in Dumaguete City in the island province of Negros Oriental.)

Sunday, November 24, 2013

GRANNY GORGEOUS

In the wake of Yolanda, A Prayer

By Sylvia Hubilla
Round Rock, Texas


When everything is lost,
you find...
God is The Only One
you need.

When everyone you love
is gone, you fear...
God is here, there,
everywhere.

He is the arm, stretching
out to hold you.
From all across the globe, reaching
out to comfort you.
He is all colors of the rainbow, rushing
to your side.

He is the One, bloodied,
drenched to the bone, shivering.
He is the one, lost and alone
with fearful eyes, searching.
He is The One, holding your hands, saying,
Thank You,

for “I was thirsty, and you gave me to drink.
I was hungry, and you gave me to eat.”

Matthew 25:35

malapascuarising

The Entrepreneurs of Asia in New York

By Marivir R. Montebon


In New York, the number of women-owned startups rose to 58% between 1997 and 2010, compared to 50% national figures. The empire state ranks among the Top 10 states for women entrepreneurs. Asian women entrepreneurs, in particular, have shown vigor in the field of business. 


OSM! features three of these highly motivated business women. Hui-Man "Chow" Mok of upper west side's Zen Medica, Eileen  Formanes of Bibingka-esk in Bayside, and Manhattan's Imogene Raypon, make-up artist for healthy beauty - the Green Option for Glam.


HUI-MAN "CHOW" MOK - Believer of Holistic Health at Zen Medica


Chow is a young entrepreneur, in her early 30s, and relentless in setting up her Zen Medica which offers a wide array of natural health and beauty supplements. Business has been brisk since she opened her shop on 72nd Street on the upper west side of Manhattan. 


 




[caption id="attachment_2995" align="alignleft" width="300"]People will increasingly opt for healthy products - Chow of Zen Medica People will increasingly opt for healthy products - Chow of Zen Medica[/caption]

"Getting into holistic health is a new consciousness. The traditional chemical-based pharmaceuticals is not providing a  long-term solution to health. I understand people will eventually shift to more healthy options," she said optimistically.


Chow's parents come from Hongkong and have since settled in the US when she was a young child. She finished Nutrition and Dietetics and  had since worked along the line of her academic course. Two year ago, she decided to set up her own business and there was no stopping her since then, whether it was high competition or rigorous business regulations.


Towards the end of summer, Zen Medica spearheaded a holistic health fair at the Jewish Community Center on Amsterdam to promote organic health supplements to the community. That was a huge success, accounting for more walk-ins into the shop and online shopping. Zen Medica also conducts health seminars regularly.


Chow may be always tired at the end of the day, but she always ends it with a smile, looking at her daily achievements.


EILEEN FORMANES - Baking Bibingka for the World to Sample


At an international day celebration of the company she formerly works for, Eileen was prodded by her friends who tasted  her bibingka (a uniquely Filipino milk and rice cake) to begin selling the incredibly tasty pastry. The demand inspired her to open business in March this year, with the brand name Bibingka-esk. 




[caption id="attachment_2996" align="alignleft" width="168"]IMG_20131115_190208_216 Bibingka-esk was born by surprise.[/caption]

  


Eileen's original bibingka now comes in different flavors: S'mores, Peanut Butter with Chocolate Chip, Chocolate  Strawberry, Cinnamon Sugar, Strawberry Swirl, Blueberry, Apple Pie, and Banana.


One can sample on the Bibingka-esk at the LIC Holiday Market on Long Island City for the entire month of December.


 


IMOGENE RAYPON - Healthy Glam for You


Imogene is a make-up artist by profession who uses healthy make-up products to ensure the lasting, healthful beauty of her  clients. 




[caption id="attachment_2997" align="alignright" width="160"]Imogene: Giving glam a healthy sense Imogene: Giving glam a healthy sense[/caption]

She finished her make-up course at the Chistine Valmy International School and has worked in various high end retail  outlets in the city, particularly Saks 5th Avenue, Bergdorf Goodman, Bloomingdale's and Henri Bendel. 


Now as an independent consultant, Imogene has chartered her own business by choosing products that are truly healthy and helpful to clients.


On December 7, she will hold a make-up seminar titled "The Green Option to Glam and Fab" at the Payag Cellar through the Pinoy Pride sa America from 10am to noon. A $45 fee includes kit, make up products, and breakfast.


imogenefront


 

Monday, November 18, 2013

Gota de Leche: A Drop of Milk is Life

By Marivir R. Montebon

It took my grandmother's generation 30 years to see a suffrage law passed, but after the first election of women, the Japanese came.  We had to pick up the pieces and begin again.  Taking the lesson from triathletes, you go the whole length, and then again, until you are done. - Anna Leah Sarabia

Since 1906,  a drop of milk has made a difference in the lives of women and children in the Philippines, albeit silently.  Gota de Leche Manila was a project of the Asociacion Feminista Filipina, and became the banner program when the La Proteccion de la Infancia was incorporated in 1907.  Gota de leche was the name everyone remembers, and has seen the unfolding of one crisis after another in the Philippines, taking an active part in the survival and triumph of Filipino women and children through the ages.

[caption id="attachment_2973" align="alignleft" width="292"]Gota de Leche Foundation in Manila Gota de Leche Foundation in Manila[/caption]

Here we look back to the leadership of Natividad Almeda Lopez, who joined La Proteccion at age 15, and served as its president even as she was the first Filipino woman judge and justice.

The women leaders of Gota de Leche have actively participated in the suffrage movement in the Philippines, aside from responding to concerns of life and death in the midst of war, starvation, and disease.

In these trying times of the Philippines, Gota de Leche has continued to take up the responsibility to help mothers and children in the Yolanda devastated areas in Central Philippines.

[caption id="attachment_2981" align="alignright" width="110"]0 Sarabia[/caption]

Anna Leah Sarabia, following the footsteps of her mother Lourdes Almeda Lopez and grandmother Justice Natividad Lopez, takes such responsibility personally and squeezed her time for this OSM! interview. Excerpts:

1. Which areas are you sending relief to?

We have sent to places that were not being prioritized by the big agencies in the first days:  Northern Iloilo and Capiz (Panay), Biliran and Coron.  The Canadians recently arrived in Panay, and the people of Palawan have rallied for Coron and nearby parts.  Biliran has very few volunteers still.  But we continue sending to Panay and Biliran as we gather materials and donations.

[caption id="attachment_2974" align="alignleft" width="300"]boholquake A woman flees from the rubble of the earthquake in Bohol. (Inquirer photo)[/caption]

 

2. What is the core program of the institution? Why?

After the Philippines lost the Philippine-American War at the turn of the 20th century, one of the biggest problems was famine in many parts of the country.  Carabaos and cows were decimated by war and disease, and people were not able to plant -- making healthy brown rice scarce.  Americans then imported polished white rice, and made the population vulnerable to beri-beri then raging.  Mothers stricken with the disease who gave birth and nursed their babies passed it on -- until the infant mortality rate reached 80%.

The feministas were the only organized group at that time, and some doctors appealed to them to save the population -- and the women quickly organized gota de leche, including the first dairy in the country, and the first milk collection, distribution and feeding program.

The core program has not changed since 1906: providing nutrition support to malnourished children (with milk and supplements), and food support to breastfeeding mothers.  Malnutrion among children remains a problem to this day, 100+ years later.

[caption id="attachment_2986" align="aligncenter" width="300"]gota children 1957 Gota children in 1957[/caption]

3.  On a personal note, what inspires you to do this kind of work?

In the beginning, I could not understand the dedication of my grandmother, Natividad Almeda Lopez, who joined La Proteccion at age 15, and served as president even as she was the first woman judge and justice in our country, and of my mother for the institution. She worked for the restoration of the Gota building which later earned a UNESCO heritage award.

[caption id="attachment_2985" align="alignleft" width="202"]0-3 Justice Natividad Almeda Lopez with the children of Gota. 1945. (Photos courtesy of Anna Leah Sarabia)[/caption]

It was only in the mid-1990s, when I began seeing references connecting Gota de Leche to the suffrage movement and to women's early campaign for education and empowerment that I understood what it meant to them, and to other early women advocates.

Besides attending to indigent malnourished children and to poor breastfeeding moms, we have established links with the schools around Ubelt to strengthen a sense of community service in the students.  The problem of safe spaces for women in evacuation sites of typhoon Yolanda has given us the opportunity to open our simple facilities and services to them.   I hope that the government will make use of this offer of ours to typhoon victims.

4. Our country is undergoing tremendous, untold challenges this very moment. This moment now will define us and determine our future. environmentally, economically, politically, holistically. What is your call/ought to be done that we will emerge victorious as a people, as women?

I wonder if it is facetious (or even futile) of me now to imagine that things might have been different and better if the culture of untrammeled capitalism and machismo had not dominated our society in the last 60 years.  It is a mentality that has promoted material greed,  plunder of earth's resources and of women's bodies.

This has proven to be not only unsustainable.  It is also socially unjust, and must be changed.  But how does one change such a system? Important  laws that protect women and girls take years, even decades, to pass and then to be implemented.  The men who promise reform and revolution end up reinstating male dominance.  The media in our country is owned either by big business, the church or government, and the people in power take so long to recognize the need for change.

But we have to find ways, we have to influence and enlighten people using creative means. Maybe mother nature is not as patient.  Who knows what really created the force which devastated so much in our country?  Who knows what changes it will bring?  The important thing is that we should never give up.

[caption id="attachment_2983" align="alignleft" width="111"]0-2 We have to influence people using creative means.[/caption]

It took my grandmother's generation 30 years to see a suffrage law passed, but after the first election of women, the Japanese came.  We had to pick up the pieces and begin again.  Taking the lesson from triathletes, you go the whole length, and then again, until you are done.  It's the lesson for advocates of the Reproductive Health Law, and for gender and social justice activists.