Tag Archives: Tambara

Theological Reaction

Several themes stand out in Fr. Demetrio’s paper in “Ecology and Creation According to the Bukidnon of Central Mindanao.”

The first theme is the harmony between nature and life, a harmony between all created beings, a harmony that is to be respected, a true community of life.

Before the primitive people became aware of the biological process of impregnation and birth, they saw the elements of the earth to have something to do with the child being put into the mother’s womb. Thus, there is a bond between humanity and nature. The child is sired by some element in the surrounding environment: the fruit, the water, or the whirlwind. People, plants, and animals work together for the increase or preservation of life.

Secondly, this harmony of all the elements is especially true in fostering and achieving peace. To achieve peace, there must be harmony. The elements of nature are essential elements in the peace process. The rattan or balagun ha lintukan played a special role. The rattan was split, and from its split skin, a knot, or kedao, was tied. The knot was sent to the different tribes: the Maranao, the Maguindanao, and the Manobo. When the four knots were tied, the peace ceremony took place. The place of the peace treaty takes on a special significance and sacredness. In the peace pact the environment participates in bringing about peace. Water, plants, animals were actively involved in the building up of peace and therefore also in the increase and preservation of human life.

If harmony is not present, there is no longer peace. The lack of well defined territorial boundaries brought about conflict. Thus, there was a need to resolve the difficulty and bring about harmony. This was achieved by clearly defined, well guarded borders. Thus, peace, or harmony among people, is linked with harmony and order in all of creation.

Part of this harmony is the special role given to women and their respect within the community. Notice the special place given to Bai Kamayugan and Bai Mayebag.

The legend gathered in 1972 in Tikalaan, Bukidnon, relates the peace pact of gone through by the leader of five tribes dwelling in Central Mindanao. What is significant in this legend is the mutual loyalty of five tribe leaders: one Christian, two Muslim and two animists. The peace pact included harmony with many elements: the Qur’an, the Bible, the durian, the white chicken and the green balagun, with all the elements being mixed together in a hole dug in the earth.

The harmony with nature of those involved in the pace pact allowd them to go beyond their tribal and religious differences. They have a union at a deeper level. Today, a durian tree stands in Tikalaan which all people of Central Mindanao look upon as a tree of friendship. The use of the balagun, the blood of the white chicken, and the durian antedate both Islam and Christianity. The earth itself, in the wide, pervasive support of all forms of existence, is participant to the peace pact.

I find similarities between this peace pact and Abram’s Covenant experience in the Old Testament. While there is no encounter with Yahweh in the Bukidnon legend, there is an encounter among the five leaders of the people with the earth being an essential part of the peace pact in God’s covenant with Abram (Genesis 10:1-19), there is also a harmony with nature, a sacrifice of animals, and a sense of importance given to the elements of the earth.

Third, the poetry of the Bukidnon reflects their harmony with nature, and their sharing of deep emotions with nature. SALA AI reminds me very much of Psalm 103:13-16.

Our life is hard. We are like pilgrims in the wide world. Like the plant, we have our times willed by Diwata. When we have fulfilled our time, the plant of life withers away in the soil of Kana-an (Paradise) where it was planted.

Men would cling to life.  But we cannot refuse the order of God who wills everything.”

Psalm 103:13-16

As a father pities his children, so the Lord pities those who fear him. For the knows how we are formed, he remembers that we are dust.

The day of man are like grass; he blooms like a flower in the field:

But the wind passes, and he is gone, never to be seen again.

In conclusion, the harmony between nature and life, especially in fostering peace and even the sharing of deep emotion with nature, reveals the Bukidnon’s focus on immanence not transcendence. However, the peace pact presents a special challenge. Since the unity of the five participants in the peace pact rested upon a deep level of boundedness with the earth, a question arises for the Christian. What is the meaning of the Incarnation? May a Christian allow his deepest union with others to lie in a harmony with nature or in a harmony with faith in a mysterious God who has revealed Himself fully through Jesus Christ? Does the Incarnation challenge the source of boundedness for all people? Is all of reality transformed, by the Incarnation, natural reality as well as human reality? May Christians find a deep level of union, not only explicitly in faith in Jesus Christ but also implicitly by sharing a union with peoples of different religions and cultures, bonded by their harmony with nature, a nature transformed by the Incarnation?

The Social Sciences in Crisis

An old and familiar issue that has confronted the social sciences is the question of utility and practical contribution to the state of  Philippine education in general, and in particular to other academic disciplines, such  as agriculture. The month of November 1983 was a particularly challenging one. For the first time in many years, the social sciences was called to account for their role and contribution to the field of general education. Social scientists were asked to pause from teaching and other occupational activities so as to be able to assess their work, re-think directions, and the effectiveness of their academic pursuits.

The Social Scientists at U.P. Los Baños (UPLB) produces a commission report early in September which underscored the state of the social sciences at UPLB. The report depicted the U.P. social science faculty as “second class” citizens in the academic community. It made inquiries into the status, needs, and problems of the social sciences in such areas as academic programs, faculty competence, research activities and output, and extended the investigations to the larger issues that concern the social sciences.

The report noted among other things, that inspite of the academic competence of its staff, social science researches are conducted as a “free-wheeling venture” with no theoretical focus, research directions, or a research theme. The state of affairs presently obtaining in social science at UPLB is hardly conducive to a systematic development of an empirically based knowledge.

Philippine Social Science Education and Research for Agriculture Conference

The above report was one of the papers discussed in the conference on Social Science Education and Research For Agriculture held at UPLB last November 11-12, 1983. The conference was attended by representatives of college and university administration, international assistance agencies, officials from government agencies in agriculture and other ministries. The talks explored a possible prognosis for Philippine social science in the immediate future.

The paper of Edgardo Quisumbing, Director of the Agricultural Research Office of  the Ministry of Agriculture appeared to agree the UPLB critique of social science researches, in particular those related to agriculture. Dr. Quisumbing pointed out that with the exception of Agricultural Economics, other fields in the social sciences have contributed very little towards helping the Ministry of Agriculture design more efficient and effective agricultural programs. Among his observations was that the problem seems to be that the output of social scientists in general have failed to focus on the social environment of farmers. Philippine social scientists have yet to develop a theoretical system about the nature and dynamics of the agricultural environment.

Fr. Antonio Ledesma, S.J., representing the university sector, presented a paper on the status of social science education and research at Xavier University in which he identified certain constraints be setting social science researches in his area: delineating trade-offs between teaching and research, limited research resources and lack of linkages with other research centers.

The presentations of the foreign or assistance agencies dwelt on the role of the particular agency in supporting social science research and education. The U.S. Agency For International Development (AID) stressed its support for the training of social scientists in agricultural disciplines. Although the assistance is not directly made to colleges and universities, a new program will soon provide additional support to the social sciences.

The Rainfed Resources Development Program is designed to introduce certain changes in the old scheme of assistance. It will provide grants to agricultural institutions, colleges and universities, and research organizations. Training, both on the M.A. as well as Ph.D. levels, will most likely be an important component of the program.

Similarly, the Philippine Council for Agriculture, Resources Research, and Development (PCARRD) has been mainly involved in supporting the training for university based social scientists working on agricultural issues. PCARRD undertakes a manpower development program for upgrading the research capability of the national research network. About 50% of its fellowships was awarded to colleges and universities. PCARRD manpower development program encompasses a network that includes member colleges and universities. It admitted however, that grants for the social sciences constituted only a very small portion of its budget.

The First National Social Science Congress

The seminar at UPLB paved the way for an important milestone in the history of social science disciplines in the Philippines. The First National Social Science Congress was auspiciously held in the newly constructed Philippine Social Science Center building in Diliman. The date on which it was held pertained to a period of crises that highlighted the role that social science should play given the socioeconomic and political problems that presently plague the country.

The Keynote Speech of Edgardo J. Angara, President of the U.P. did not see the social science as performing its role effectively. Angara chided the social sciences for having been caught flat-footed in the present crisis.

   … the frantic guessing that is now going on shows that the crisis caught the social sciences flat-footed… The economists were apparently not monitoring economic trends because what we see now are the results of long-term trends. Equally oblivious.. were the political scientists. The social scientists are either gawking at events or are only now beginning to see how irrelevant their old lines of inquiry have become.

Angara challenged social scientists not only to add to the objective knowledge of reality but to confront the moral suggestion of programmatic action. The social scientists must henceforth use their expertise to perform their obligations as citizens.

One of  the answers to the above challenge came from economics. A paper on “Contemporary Science, Policies, and Programs” prepared by Alejandro M. Herrin evaluated the output of social science researches. Among the significant findings of the study was the fact that during the past ten years, social science research has been preoccupied with the evaluation of government programs and the assessment of the relationships between public policy instruments and policy objectives, at the expense of discipline-centered researches, not to mention theoretical studies. One of the more serious objection to contracted research is that it can undermine research quality since the resulting work is reviewed only by the end-user or the particular funding agency involved. Researches as scholarly pursuits need to be reviewed by academic peers, a practice that has ensured the high quality of scholarly work. A more serious problem is the restriction of research topics only to those identified by funding agencies.

On the other hand, the same paper noted the niggardly support that the social sciences are getting as compared to other disciplines like the natural sciences. Consequently, the study suggested that the government take the view that the mandate of the social sciences is much broader than simply responding to government-sponsored research programs. Social scientists must be free to examine social problems, formulate issues, and suggest a research strategy for a deeper understanding of these issues.

In the workshops that followed, the participants subjected these problems to further discussion, thus heightening their urgency. At the end, the workshops produced resolutions and recommendations some of which are the following:

1. Philippine social sciences should involve themselves in the resolution and alleviation of social issues and assume the role of social critic in addition to its primary concern of generating and transmitting knowledge.
2. Social Science disciplines should be indigenized and participatory research encouraged to develop a true “peoples’ science” based on popular perceptions and rooted in the collective indigenous experience.
3. The Social Sciences should have a code of ethics.
4. Research concerns for the next few years should be identified.

The 9th Congress of the IAHA

A truly multi-disciplinary gathering of social scientists was the 9th Congress of the International Association of Historians of Asia (IAHA) held in Diliman last November 21-25, 1983. Those attending included not only Asian practitioners of the craft of history but also social scientists from the USSR, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and other western nations. The range of topics offered a wide prism of interest such as Historiography, Asian Archeology and Prehistory, local History, as well as topics of current concern like Population Issues.

The Congress proper lasted for three days during which more than a hundred papers were read, reviewed, and criticized by peers from various disciplines. As in most congresses of this scale, papers were presented simultaneously in six different conferences or workshop rooms, so that the participants and observers were allowed only a fragment of the total presentations and discussions. On the average, a participant could only attend six sessions including the one in which he must present his own paper. This account therefore can only render comments on the few presentations that the author personally attended.

A paper on the “Intelligentsia’s Role in the Post-Colonial Societies of Asia” by Vlademir Li of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Academy of Science of the USSR presented a comprehensive interdisciplinary study of the post-war role of the intelligentsia in Africa and Asia. While maintaining the primacy of the role of the working class in the revolutionary struggle, the study pointed out the intelligentsias of Asia and Africa are increasingly performing a significant part in it.

The post-war intelligentsia is defined as that mass of medium and lower groups that have emerged “at the crossroads of the colonized autochthonous (non-European) and the colonizing European elements.” The history of the intelligentsia is seen as having undergone two stages: the period of the anti-colonial struggle, and the period after winning independence. At the initial stage, the intelligentsia acted as a political representative of a broad coalition of social classes interested in the liquidation of the colonial domination. In the second stage, its political role changed, and it began to speak for individual classes and interest groups.

The most important function attributed to the intelligentsia is the spread of revolutionary consciousness among the masses. Another basic function is to provide ideological backing for the national liberation movement. Among its main spheres of action is the cultural sphere where the intelligentsia of Asian and African countries address themselves to the tasks of cultural transformation. The intelligentsia is asked to merge with the progressive social forces for the choice of an advanced ideology.

A paper on “The Historical Perspectives of a Malay Urban Village” by Mohammed Aris Hj. Otham advocated the maintenance of traditional institutions as a way of preserving one’s identity in a heterogeneous urban community. Traditional institutions help recreate rural life in the cities and the preservation of rural values such as the spirit of communalism is held to be a good balance to the impersonalism of modern societies. The study however, poses a question as to what extent such a balance between tradition and modernization can be maintained.

Wilfred Wagner’s “Some Preliminary Remarks on the Social History of Mentawai (West Sumatra/ Indonesia)” is a study on the impact of modernization on a historical society. Wagner’s preliminary observations reveals that among the institutions of Mentawai that have given way to change is the traditional animistic religion. Likewise, the mode of production as well as crops produced have changed, along with the indigenous distributions and exchange systems. The question that remains to be asked is whether modernization has resulted in a better quality of life for the people of Mentawai.

The Training of the Katiwala (Volunteer Health Worker)

Introduction

In the Philippines, 70% of practicing physicians are found in urban centers where 30% of population live. Only 30% elect to put up their practice in the rural areas, where 70% of the population reside. This maldistribution of health professionals, the escalating cost of health services and medicines, and the emphasis on high technology and show case physical plants have led to a situation where majority of Filipinos do not have access to medical care,
Church-oriented and church-initiated health projects responded to the need of making medical services accessible and available to the  undeserved and underprivileged in order for them to attain a better quality of life. Many of the ideas which were later to become principles of Primary Health Care were pioneered by these projects. The Katiwala Program in Davao City began as one such project.
The Katiwala program originated in a free medical clinic established in 1967, by unit of the Christian Family Movement, (a lay Roman Catholic Organization) to render health services to the residents of squatters ares in the vicinity of the Redemptorist Church in Bajada district, Davao City. The clinic was supported by regular donations from commercial establishments and private citizens. It was manned by volunteer health personnel.
After two years of a dole-out approach, the clinic staff came to the realization that there was no demonstrable change in the health of the clientele served and that the free-clinic was detrimental to human dignity, making mendicants of the people served. The clinic was closed, and a series of meetings were held among the clinic staff, the families served, and a professional social worker. These meetings resulted in the reorganization of the free clinic into a medical cooperative. The members agreed to pay minimal dues and to buy the medicines prescribed at wholesale or subsidized prices. They assumed some duties

*Katiwala – kauna-unahang Katiwala sa Kalusugan A Volunteer Health Worker trained by the Development of People’s Foundation and the Institute of Primary Health Care, Davao City. The original paper was read at the “Workshop on Community Health and the Urban Poor,” on July 7-12, 1985 in Oxford, England.

1 Ibon: Facts and Figures Vol.3, 1980 Issue No. 56.

in the management of the clinic, assisting in clinic work, helping the health personnel, and maintaining discipline among the patients. They had a voice in policy-making and the day operations.
General meetings of member families were held every three months or when the need arose. Eventually, area leaders were chosen by the families to0 represent them at the meetings and serve  as liaison between the members and the clinic staff. The need for income augmentation which surfaced at one of these meetings was answered by the establishment of the sewing workshop. Volunteers initially trained member housewives in sewing and later, the Development of People’s Foundation (DPF) employed them in quilting and bag-making.
In 1972, after lengthy consultations between the community members, the staff, and the donors of the DPF, a non-stock, non-profit foundation was formed. Its main purpose was to manage the medical cooperative and the sewing workshop. At that time, the medical cooperative consisted of 500 families from 31 depressed communities near the clinic. However, the volunteer health staff was  static and could not cope with the number of patients who came for consultation on clinic days, held two afternoons a week. At a general meeting, the members and the staff decided to hold the first volunteer health workers  training in order to decongest the clinic and to render better service. Because the health workers would be living in the same communities, the health workers would be living in the same communities, the health workers would bring the services closer to the people who most needed them – people who did not have enough money for jeepney fare, or who had no one to leave at home to care to their children and their possessions. The volunteer health workers who called themselves Kaunaunahang katiwala ng Kalusugan (Primary Trustee of Health) later shortened to katiwala, were to render simple curative services to people in their homes. The first group of Katiwala were trained by  DPF in 1972.
In 1978, the DPF and the Institute of Primary Health Care (IPHC) agreed that the former would continue to serve the urban ares, while the IPHC would train Katiwala for the urban areas not served by DPF and for the rural underserved ares in Region XI. Request from urban Katiwala for assistance in mobilizing the community and the meeting other perceived needs like income generation and credit resulted in a modification of area coverage so that from 1981 IPHC and DPF were working together in the same urban areas. DPF Katiwala based in the barangay facilitated the entry of IPHC workers and served as a linkage to the residents.

Selection and Recruitment

      The first group of Katiwala were the leaders elected by the members of the cooperative. For the second training course, the Katiwala was asked to choose someone she could work with harmoniously from among her members. Each area would then served by two Katiwala ensuring that services would be available in the community at all times. This process of selection did not work out. When problems intervened, one or the other Katiwala stopped rendering service. The Katiwala selected in this manner was often  not credible and did not have the trust of the members.
Requests for expansion of the Katiwala Program to other depressed communities resulted in more training courses. By 1975, DPF had employed a full-time project coordinator who also served as training officer, and a community organizer who conducted home visits, family interviews, small  group meetings, and assemblies for orientation into the project. He was assisted by volunteers from the community in conducting a baseline survey to identify their health problems and to make a list of possible Katiwala activities. Selection of the Katiwala trainee was done at a general assembly. Willingness to be trained  and to serve, functional literacy, and the confidence of the members were the only criteria for selection.
Similarly, the IPHC employed assemblies after a three-month community preparation as the strategy for the selection of the trainee. The staff soon perceived that strong, articulate leaders and docile population could result in the manipulation of the assembly to favor a relative of a friend. It was also realized that community assemblies did not give residents enough time to understand the program nor the criteria for selection of trainees. The project Officers (PO’s) who were the Katiwala trainors felt that three months were not enough for a thorough program orientation – they had to make allowances for the family’s schedule and availability . Community preparation for orientation and selection of the trainee was extended to six months.

       Before the training, the prospective Katiwala with the help of some residents, conducted a survey of her community to gather socio-economic, health, nutrition and environmental sanitation information. The trainee was involved in the survey to bring the health problems of her community to her awareness and to test her willingness to do volunteer work.

Criteria for Selection

The trainee should be:

1) a resident of the community to be served. This requirement ensures that the Volunteer Health Worker (VHW) will be available when the need arises. Ideally, two Katiwala are trained in each barangay.
2) willing  to be trained and to serve. Family responsibilities may pressure the candidate to refuse training and service even though selected by the residents, so a prior agreement is made. Usually a married woman is selected. The consent of the spouse is sought.
3) credible and acceptable to the community. The candidate selected may have served the community in other capacities and in the process, earned the respect and sonfidence of the villagers. This is expressed by being chosen as candidate for training. When the community in general did not participate in the selection and they allowed some pressure groups to put up their candidate, the choice did not necessarily reflect the confidence of the village and sometimes, this resulted in an ineffective Katiwala.
4) functionally literate. Many of hte residents of the urban poor communicaties have not completed even elementary education, and if a minimum educational requirement is enforced, numerous capable, and well motivated candidates could be exluded. When the villagers select a barely literrate trainee, often an herbalist or a traditional birth attendant with long years of service, the staff makes provisions for tutorial training and for assistance in future record keeping. Usually, a child or neighbor is enlisted to help in keeping records. We have found a number of trainees with less education who are more highly motivated and more dedicated to their duties than some with a higher educational attainment.
5) physically fit.
6) one who has the time to serve the community  – does not have full-time employment which would render her incapable of performing her task.
Preferably, the trainee should be a above 20 years of age and married; not too young to be without stability and experience and not too old to have difficulty understanding and absorbing the lessons being taught. Young unmarried VHW’s have proven to be more likely to change residence, to be on the lookout for job opportunities, or to go back to school and therefore cease to function as VHW.
Although no preference as to sex is expressed, the candidates have been mostly women. This may be due to the fact that men are usually away from home; the women are more concerned with health problems or have an inclination to extend a helping hand to others.
The first Katiwala Training lasted 6 months. Classes were held every Saturday afternoon. Subsequent courses were one-day-a-week sessions for three months. This was later changed to daily sessions for one month with practicum on clinic days.
The first 3 courses of Katiwala training used the one-afternoon-a-week for six months format. Availability of staff and the distance between the communication made it necessary to test the possibility of a live-in training with a break for practicum and which, at the same time enabled the participants to go home for a visit. Presently, the regular course schedule is two weeks live, two weeks practicum in their villages, and another two weeks live. Apprehensions on the part of the staff regarding reluctance of trainees to attend a live-in training were unfounded. If intensive follow-up is expected, IPHC may conduct three weeks live-in training to adjust to resources and/or constraints of the agency requesting the training.
Urban katiwala are trained at the Davao Medical School Foundation (DMSF) building, while rural Katiwala are trained as close as possible to their villages – at a multipurpose center, a public school, or a barangay hall. This way, the trainees are in an environment that is similar to the conditions in which they will be working. IPHC staff go to different provinces where VHW training is requested. The venue for such training is chosen by the requesting agency.

Training Methodology

The training was unique in that it did not have a fixed course content. The topics discussed  were decided  by the trainees themselves based on their observations and experiences in the community. Training was dialogic, an approach that was greatly influenced by Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppress-ed. As the training progressed, two representatives from the class met once a week with two of the training staff to evaluate the previous session and to plan for the next.
In 1975 DPF was assisted by Asia Foundation. The training officer received a study grant at the University of Hawaii. On his return, he oriented the training to the tasks the Katiwala performed in the community and the clinic so that, without losing its dialogic aspects, the training assumed its competency-based, task-oriented features.
The  community survey done by the Katiwala trainee is collated and analyzed and an assessment  of training needs is done by the IPHC staff. The training content is focused on community needs vis-a-vis the tasks the Katiwala is expected to perform. Tasks are analyzed, while knowledge, attitudes, and skills needed are categorized before proceeding to the finalization of the course  content. Training is conducted in the vernacular. Visual aids and teaching materials are prepared to suit local conditions. Trainees are put at ease in the course by structured learning episodes like, “getting to know you” sessions and “ice  breakers”. The pace is adjusted to the group. Participatory teaching methods are used. The staff makes a conscious effort to get to know each trainee, draws out the shy ones; responds to their needs, listens to their problems. The PO’s look after the trainees from their target areas in every possible way to make the learning process easy. Skills are taught, gradually proceeding to more complex ones like blood pressure-taking and filling up of growth charts. Questions are encouraged, so that feedback is quickly obtained.
Entry skills are determined by simple pre-training evaluation tasks. Methodology used depends on the topic — when suitable demonstration and return demonstration are employed, as in the preparation of ORS, herbal medicines, or giving of sponge bath. Small group discussion, brain storming, and role-playing are used whenever applicable. Flow charts have been tested for continuing education.  The Katiwala found this method easy to follow, interesting and clear. Lectures are the least used method of teaching; they are kept short and followed by discussion.  The trainees’ own knowledge is explored in a non-threatening evocative manner. No one is allowed to dominate a session. Repeated testing is done in order to find out if the trainees are keeping up. Testing is done using the same participatory methodology.  A daily recapitulation of the previous day’s topics is made — this served as a review and provides an occasion for clarification or correction. Reflection sessions are held as part of the course. Action areas for the trainees are clearly specified. These action areas are embodied in the katiwala Action Plan (KAP) which serves as her manual of instruction on her return to the village.

Training Staff

     The training staff was made up of volunteer physicians and nurses. A process of selection from among the volunteer training staff weeded out those who clung to the didactic method and used too many technical terms. A training officer who had previous teaching  experience and was trained in competency-based paramedic training later joined the staff.
The DPH and IPHC shared the services of the training staff in 1978-1979. As the project officers acquired facilitating skills, they become more confident in their ability to conduct training using participatory teaching methods; more and more of the training was conducted by the Project Officer and the technical staff of the IPHC. Reliance on visiting resource diminished, and uniformity in training methodology was assured. Practice teaching and critiquing were resorted to in preparation for the actual training. Health professionals are presently a a small minority.

Training Materials

A loose leaf Visayan primer incorporating many topics from Where there is no Doctor by  David Werner was prepared by the staff for the Katiwala. An IPHC katiwala primer was first printed in 1979. It is now on its fourth edition. It also draws heavily from Warner’s book. handouts prepared by the staff are given. Visual aids which the staff developed, are used. They help in comprehension and in rousing interest. Initially, the graduation kit given to the Katiwala contained first aid medicines and supplies and a weighing scale. Today, the graduation kit includes visual aids, teaching materials, and/or minimal amount of first aid supplies. This change was brought about by the emphasis on herbal medicine since 1980.

The course consisted of:
1)     classroom instruction on the essentials of PHC,
2)     practicum at the DDF clinic, and
3)     recapitulation and evaluation.

 

The course is a mixture of theory and practice. Every opportunity for practice is given, under close supervision, until particular skills are learned satisfactorily. The opportunity to practice in a clinic setting is given when they return to courses cover are:
–     community organization,
–    voluntarism,
–    analysis of community health situation,
–    human relations and communications
–    prevention and treatment of common injuries,
–    prevention and treatment of communicable diseases,
–    nutritional deficiencies and promotion of better nutrition,
–    maternal and child health including family planning,
–    environmental sanitation, personal hygiene, parasitism,
–    herbal medicine,
–    teaching skills, preparation of visual aids and
–    for rural areas, vegetable gardening is included.
Practical skills are polished in the community and in the health station under the supervision of a health personnel. Although the core curriculum remain the same, whenever indicated changes are made, topics are added or deleted based on specific needs. Stree is on the process by which the trainee is encouraged to participate and contribute her own insights and experience. The same teaching techniques are employed by the katiwala when conducting family health classes. After every topic, post-evaluation is done to assess the trainee’s comprehension and skills.

 

Continuing Education

     Monthly meetings are held among the Katiwala so they could share their experiences, problems encountered, and their solutions. New inputs based on their needs are given by the staff. The first group of Katiwala emphasized curative care.  Gradually, preventive and promotion activities were included in their tasks.  As the Katiwala became more skillful, continuing education meetings were held every three months.
When the training design is made, the less urgent topics and skills are scheduled for the monthly continuing education sessions, which are whole day meetings among the Katiwala facilitated by a IPHC staff. The Katiwala report on their performance, the problems they encountered in carrying out their tasks, and whether or not they solved the problem. Eventually, the scheduling, planning, and the conduct of the continuing education (Katiwala Development Plan – KDP) is done by the Katiwala with the IPHC staff playing a minor supportive role.

The Katiwala At Work

     The katiwala is responsible for 30-50 families in her barangay. Some Katiwala can attend to more than 50 families.  Others, because of family responsibilities and the need to provide for her  family, can not attend to more than 30 families. Experience has shown that the katiwala devotes 1-2 hours, 2-3 times a week to her volunteer work.
Credibility and acceptance of the Katiwala is enhanced by the simple curative skills she has squired. Her campaigns for international sanitation and immunization have earned the cooperation of the community because the Katiwala explains the relationship between parasitism and filthy surroundings, between the incidence of diseases like measles and whooping cough and the failure to have the 0-6 years old children immunized. Through the years the Katiwala, although primarily a health worker, is gradually drawn into activities like income-generating activities.
The sick either go to her house or call her visit them, When necessary, she accompanies the sick to the health center or hospital. Sometimes she is requested to remain with the sick person throughout the latter’s stay in the hospital. Her presence is reassuring, and she can explain the needs of the patient to the health personnel.
In the village, one of her main activities is the Family Health Class. She gathers one member per family, usually the mother, (it could be  an older child or occasionally the father) so that she may echo the health lessons she learned during the training. The project officer by her presence, boosts the morale of the Katiwala especially at the beginning. Sometimes, two Katiwala may join forces to conduct these classes. Graduation is a festive occasion, to which local officials, members of the family and community, and IPHC-DPF staff are invited. When other agencies conduct health classes, she may be called on as organizer or resource person. Occasionally, she is requested to conduct family health classes in other communities.
The Katiwala is often requested to look after the needs of the mothers and children.  She advises the pregnant or lactating mother regarding low cost nutritious foods.  She refers the pregnant woman to the health center for prenatal care including tetanus toxeid injection. She motivates the mother to breastfeed her baby. She may assist the traditional birth attendant during the delivery, and uses the knowledge she acquired regarding personal hygiene and proper care of the umbilical cord. She visits the mother and baby after delivery. She teaches the mother when to start supplementary feeding, what foods to give, and how much to feed the baby. She accompanies the mother and the baby to the center for check-up, immunization, and family planning. She occasionally requests the midwife to come to her village to give immunization in her area.

Growth Monitoring and Nutrition Surveillance

The Katiwala cooperates with other workers in attending to the nutritional problems of her villagers.  The government nutrition survey conducted in 1978 revealed extensive malnutrition among the 0-6 years population.     In 1983, agencies engaged in feeding programs, conducted weighing activities in some depressed areas in Davao City.
The Katiwala supplements this weighing activity by involving the mothers in growth monitoring through the use of home-base-growth charts. She explains the significance of the growth curves and what events should be recorded. She encourages the mother and compliments her when the curve shows an upward trend.  She gives nutritional advice when the curve levels off. She refers the child with a downward curve to the health center for food, assistance, and treatment.   The use of the home-based growth chart is a very recent innovation. Even though the Katiwala has long been familiar with its use, the chart is clinic-or center-based.
Insistence of each agency involved in nutrition surveillance on the use of their own charts or tables has led to some confusion in the field. Growth monitoring is supplemented by cooking demonstrations of nutritious supplemental foods using locally available inexpensive materials. The Katiwala helps the ex-tension workers who have been very active in conducting sessions on food processing and cooking. Weighing sessions are utilized by the Katiwala to explain to each mother the importance of breastfeeding, immunization, child spacing, and proper weaning foods.   The campaign against malnutrition in urban areas is handicapped by the fact that most of the food has to be bought at higher prices than in rural areas.
Because of overcrowding, the makeshift nature of the houses, and the constant threat of demolition or relocation of the urban squatter areas, sanitation re-mains a serious problem. The Katiwala through the Family Health Classes motivates her neighbors to dispose of their garbage properly, to keep the ditches clean and construct sanitary toilets.  The Ministry of Health is presently donating toilet bowls to those families who are willing to give a counterpart in the form of labor and materials for installing the bowls and building outhouses.  In Lanang, the Katiwala was able to obtain a donation of more than 150 toilet bowls from the Ministry of Health for her community . A few Katiwala have succeeded in getting all the families under their care to install sanitary toilets. This is possible when the community give their wholehearted  support and even help each other in putting up the toilets.
Water has long been a problem especially its availability and potability. Many houses have galvanized iron rain collectors attached to roofs for collecting rain water.  The urban poor buy from delivery trucks which sell water by container or from homes that have rain collectors. Water for wash comes from shallow wells.   The Davao City Water District (DCWD) is now serving many of the depressed urban areas, but financial constraints prevent a  more widespread distribution of safe water. One Katiwala obtained the installation of a deep well in her barangay because her area is far from the main road, and connecting to the main pipes of the Davao City Water District is too costly for the villagers.   In other barangays, the Katiwala invited the manager of the water works to a dialogue with villagers resulting in the extension of the water system to their villages.  Some villagers have had water installed and sell this water to their neighbors.  One of them, a member of a community credit group organized with the help of IPHC, is now able to gross about P3000.00/month.
A few Katiwala were specially trained as sputum micropists in a TB case finding project.     An  acupressure  course was conducted for the Katiwala. Although everyone was invited and many attended, only a few showed the per-severance and interest to complete the course. Those who became skillful now have their own clientele and are occasionally called on as trainers for other groups — nurses, church workers, and others.
The Katiwala has been called on to train volunteer health workers of other organizations like the Rotary Club and Zonta International.  In communities where medical students are assigned for their community medicine course, the Katiwala assists in making them accepted and trusted by the residents. She helps orient them to the customs, the culture and health practices as well as the prevalent health problems.
Some Katiwala have been employed as part-time health aides in the clinics of factories near Agdao. In communities with Health Scouts, 8-15 year old children have been trained to look after the physical, mental, and spiritual needs of their  preschool  siblings (Child-to-Child  Program).  The  Katiwala  serves as adviser, helps their trainers (Child Trainers) during the classes, helps the Health Scouts to mobilize the community, and assists them in their health activities.
Some Katiwala are exceptionally dedicated and hard working. Not all of them however, have the time nor the inclination to engage in all the activities mentioned.   As they gain the confidence of the community and become more sure of their capability, they tend to gravitate to activities they are comfortable with – attending deliveries, giving herbal treatment for common diseases or giving  acupressure  treatment, and the rest of the tasks become a secondary priority.
Those with leadership potential have been developed. They usually are in the thick of many community activities like credit groups, income generation, church organizations, and local government.  In Puting Lupa, the Katiwala and the community residents were able to obtain a promise from the City Government to put up street lights along the path that goes through the purok.
In 1984, the Archdiocese of Davao assisted by UNICEF started a campaign for Growth Monitoring (using home based growth chart) Oral rehydration, Breastfeeding and Immunization (GOBI). The program was ultimately projected to reach every home in the diocese.  The training team was made up of MOH, IPHC, and Diocesan Staff.  Katiwala help in the chapel meetings for information dissemination and for actual training. A quick survey using a format re-commended by WHO, UNICEF to measure impact is presently being tested by IPHC field staff.

    Support Systems

The members of the medical cooperative, the medical and volunteer staff, and DPF with its financial resources serve as a back-up to the Katiwala.  The Katiwala expressed a need for community support especially for her activities in the community like campaigns for environmental sanitation, motivation for immunization, and attendance at family health classes.  The community organizer visits homes and holds meetings to encourage community participation in the various Katiwala activities.
The DPF encouraged the Katiwala to accept non-monetary and monetary
incentives.  Botica sa Barangay (Village Drug Store)  was established, and the Katiwala was given a percentage of the profit made on sales. The opportunity to go to other towns (and countries like Indonesia) was another strong incentive. DPF gave minimal monetary incentives to the Katiwala for water-sealed toilets installed and for recruitment of vasectomy and tubectomy acceptors until the funds earmarked for the purpose were consumed. The DPF Katiwala were invited to the annual Katiwala Convention organized by the IPHC Katiwala. They continue to serve at the DPF clinic and mobilize their communities for outreach services.
While the katiwala needs the cooperation of the community in her campaigns for garbage disposal and sanitary toilets, immunization, family planning or gathering people to attend the family health classes, the villagers have to perceive themselves not as recipients of dole outs but as active participants.
At the very Katiwala needs the cooperation of the community in her campaigns for garbage disposal and sanitary toilets, immunization, family planning, or gathering people to attend the family health classes, the villagers have to perceive themselves not as recipients of dole out but as active participants,
At the very start, the temporary and catalyst role of IPHC was already emphasized – it made clear that the institution would only continue to stay in the area until such a time that the community is ready to assume its responsibilities in managing its health problems. Aside from home visits, small group meetings and assemblies, IPHC has tested other strategies for generating community participation and involvement.
Feedback from Katiwala already trained indicated that community support was sporadic and short-lived. A deeper and sustained involvement was needed. One strategy used in 1981-1982 was the Community Leaders Training. Local Officials, Church Leaders, Members of Womens’ and Youth Groups and other interested residents were invited by the PO to attend a series of meetings. The schedule was suited to the participants’ wishes. The topics discussed included Katiwala program orientation, role clarification, health station analysis, leadership training, problem-solving, and communication skills.
The community leader’s training was meant to form a core group that assist in information dissemination, selection of the Katiwala and help her in the performance of her activities in the barangay. These core groups were able ti help in the selection of the trainee and were active in assisting the  Katiwala right after her graduation. They helped present the katiwala Action Plan to the community.
The strategy used presently for stimulating community involvement is the Team-Building Workshop. Meetings are held at provincial, municipal, and barangay levels. Representatives from all government agencies, barangay officials and identified barangay leaders including the Katiwala attend the district and municipal workshop for program orientation, presentation of services of each agency, and presentation of problems by the barangay residents. An action plan utilizing the resources of the agencies represented is drawn up. Scheduling of activities culminates the workshop.
Barangay meetings follow the municipal meetings. These are attended by barangay officials, all formal and non-formal leaders and representatives of agencies who have made a commitment at the municipal level. Vision setting, problem identification, planning and evaluation of barangay projects are worked on the group. Follow-up meetings are scheduled. The Katiwala is one of the leaders who attends the municipal and barangay  level team building sessions. As such, she brings the health problems of her barangay to the attention of the other leaders and obtains the support of the rest.
The initiative for Team-Building comes from IPHC, but follow-up, planning, implementation, and evaluation comes from the barangay. IPHC is only invited to succeeding meetings in order to give guidance in conducting the meetings.
In the urban slum area of Agdao, the Katiwala have been functioning for almost ten years.  Participation of the community consisted in the initial acceptance of the program, selection of the Katiwala, attendance during meetings or classes called by the Katiwala, and other Katiwala activities.  However, this involvement was not sustained.  For these communities, the IPHC devised a strategy of mobilizing the community and developing its capability to work towards its total development  Focused Family Dialogues (FFD) were held by the PO. There were meetings between the Project Officer and individual families to discuss their aspirations in life, the obstacles in attaining these aspirations, and possible solutions to overcome them.  After these dialogues, the whole community was gathered to validate the individual aspirations, obstacles, and solutions to discuss these and to create an awareness of the common problems of the community.  Each family was asked who they could work with harmoniously in order to form small working groups or clusters.
The clusters furthered their plans and activities further and devised schemes for implementation and monitoring. The cluster has a narrower focus: the obstacles identified are often economic and the solutions are activities to generate capital/income or to obtain small loans to finance small businesses. The IPHC realizes that health problems cannot be dissociated from the other realities of daily life that once the community learns how to cope with its economic difficulties it can attend to its other needs. For this reason, IPHC has helped the communities in economic activities.   At present, the clusters are doing well. Many have engaged in micro business like selling firewood, repacking commodities for sale, sewing, and setting up small stores. There are plans for the clusters to meet regularly in order to ascertain if they have been able to overcome the obstacles that they earlier perceived as hindrances in attaining their aspirations in life. The clusters are active, not only in their income generating activities but in assisting the Katiwala perform her tasks.
In general, there is rapport between the Ministry of Health personnel and the Katiwala.   The midwife or nurse in the health center provides technical supervision of the Katiwala, just as the community support group supervises her community activities.   When necessary, the Katiwala brings villagers to the health center for referral.  The midwife or nurse in turn enlists the help of the Katiwala for informing the villagers regarding schedules for immunization or weighing of 0.6 years old children.
A unique support group of the Katiwala is the Health Scouts.  These are school children from 8-15 years of age who have been trained to help their preschool siblings in their physical, mental and spiritual development. Trainers are called Child Trainers — volunteer workers who have received special training from IPHC.  The Health Scouts are taught how to use the growth chart.  They are also taught personal hygiene, environmental sanitation, and character education.  The Katiwala is their adviser and together they plan their activities. The Health Scouts help the Katiwala in information dissemination, mobilizing the community, and in various other ways.
The Katiwala is a volunteer; does not demand payment for services rendered, but she is free to accept tokens of gratitude given in cash or in kind. It is customary for the family to give fruits, other food stuff or money, the amount ranging from P0.50-P50.00 – what the family can afford, for service rendered. Yet many more can only say “thank you.” The community realizes that the Katiwala is in the same financial bind as the families she serves. The residents have tried several strategies for raising funds for the Katiwala and her activities through benefit dances, raffles, bingo social, etc.
All the strategies mentioned constitute a mobilization of the community resources but have been on an ad-hoc basis. Making the incentive of the Katiwala dependent on the sale of medicines from the village drug store creates an association between curative care and compensation of the Katiwala, which may result in de-emphasizing her preventive and promotive activities. This is discouraging herbal gardens.
Income generating activities financed through small community credit groups are presently being tried. Preference is given to communities served by Katiwala; she herself is eligible to join the group. Various non-monetary incentives have also served to motivate her to continue her volunteer work. The opportunity to attend continuing education meetings and annual convention at which outstanding Katiwala are given awards of recognition, the possibility of being sent as participant to seminars on Primary Health Care in other towns or provinces, the respect and recognition she perceives from her community are all the factors that help to motivate her. A newsletter in the vernacular, Linog, and a weekly radio program serve as a link between the Katiwala and the IPHC. lanog contains articles about and by the Katiwala.
Intersectoral cooperation was limited to the use of the MOH building for the first Katiwala training. MOH personnel donated  heir services as resource persons during the training of Katiwala and provided vaccines for immunization activities in the communities served.
Support for the Katiwala Program was expressed by the local government in a resolution (September 1, 1979) passed by the Regional Development Council adopting the Katiwala approach as a component of the region’s development strategy.  The Inter-Agency Advisory Council’s main function is the planning for PHC  activities for all  levels. The council is supplemented by Inter-Agency Committees at provincial, municipal, and barangay levels. They serve as resource  persons during the training and participate in the preparation of the Katiwala Action  Plan. The  MOH  — the lead agency in health activities calls on the Katiwala to help in different campaigns like immunization, nutrition, and the like. IPHC staff and Katiwala are called on as resource persons for the MOH training of BHW (Barangay Health Workers).   MOH in turn provides resource speakers to IPHC on request.

Case Studies

    The effectiveness of the Katiwala depends to a large degree on her commitment and dedication to volunteer work. The following case studies are personal experiences of Katiwala whose successful work have been possible only through persistence and unrelenting effort.  Each case or personal experience shows as well the different kinds of problems peculiar to each locality or community.

I. Experiences of a Katiwala in Puting Lupa

I am LUCITA CAITUM, a Katiwala in sitio Puting Lupa, District of Agdao, Davao City.  I am married and I have six children. Before I became a Katiwala, I was a dressmaker.  My husband is a carpenter. Before, I was very ignorant about the problems in the area.  I was only concerned with my family.  I was shy. I could not even face or stand in front of other people to talk. Puting Lupa is 873 meters from Agdao Barangay Hall and 973 meters from Agdao Health Center. Tuba gathering is the main occupation in this area.  Puting Lupa used to be about five hectares.  It had six houses and sixteen families with a population of 200.   At that time, we called it a sitio.  Before, the houses were scattered and not well-formed.   Formerly, this area was muddy during the rainy season.  In 1976, the sanitation was very poor.  We only had two Antipolo type toilets. Most  people  left their wastes in their backyards. Some children are malnourished, and every year, death comes to 20 or more children and adults.
1976, a Project Officer of a private agency called the Development of  People’s Foundation (DPF) came to our sitio.  He talked to our chapel president and offered help. The chapel president called a community meeting, and in that meeting problems were discussed.  The first problem discussed was the lack of medical care.  The Project Officer said that the DPF can help us. All we had to do was to send a representative to the foundation for training. The representative to be sent:
1.     must be recommended by the community;
2.     must be at least 30 years old;
3.     willing to serve the community without any compensation.
It happened that the wife of the chapel president was recommended but she needed a companion or teammate, so I volunteered.  The Training Officer re-fused to accept me because I was underaged. He said I was too young to handle the responsibilities in the area since the training is more on medical care, and it is very risky for the community. However, I was very interested in the training, so I talked to the late Dr. Jesus dela Paz, who was the founder of the Katiwala Project.   I promised him that I could handle the responsibilities of a Katiwala. So, the father of the Katiwala agreed, and I was one of the 37 selected to be trained for the third group.
When the training was over, I went back to my community ready to handle responsibilities.  I thought being a Katiwala was easy.  I thought it was just giving health care. I did not know there ware many problems. The first problem that I met was environmental sanitation which included construction of water-sealed toilets and blind drainage. The construction of the water-sealed toilets bothered me so much because the people in the community wanted to get nails and lumber for free. I taught them to use low cost materials.
I found out also that there were many who died from diarrhea in the area due to the unsafe drinking water. People got drinking water from the open well and did not boil it. So, I asked for help from the MSSD because I was told they could give loans for artesian wells, if we agree that the manpower is our responsibility. By the end of 1978, we were able to use our artesian well. We learned how to ORS, and the number who died from dehydration went down from eight persons in 1978 to four in 1979 then one in 1980. There have been no deaths from diarrhea since 1981.
The mothers in the area were ignorant about immunization. They refused to bring their children for immunization. They did not believe that immunization could help. They knew it caused fever or sickness. I told them that when the children have fever, it is a result of the vaccine taking effect. Then some mothers became worried when their children did not get fever. So, I held a Family Health Class to tell them more about immunization. The Family Health Class covered nutrition, how to handle emergencies, herbal garden, growth chart, and attending to mild cases of sickness. It turned out that I re-echoed what I learned in my training. The family health class members helped me a lot.
Family Planning was my biggest problem. The implementation of the Family Planning is quite hard when a method fails. The implementation of the family planning acceptor who got pregnant chased me with a bolo. There were many problems, but later on they noticed that the couples who accepted Family Planning completely, seldom had financial problems. Now they come to me and ask about Family Planning methods.
In 1979, when the medical situation in my area became better, my main problem was malnutrition.   I had noticed that while we were teaching nutrition, there were many malnourished children. The mothers said it was because the in-come of the family was not enough to give them a balanced diet. With the help of my Family Health Class members we looked for loans. It was known that the MSSD would give loans.  We applied, but after two years, and several seminars, the loan was still being processed. We were quite discouraged.
In 1982, Florenda Sango, a Project Officer from the Davao Medical School Foundation (a sister  organization of DPF) visited our community.  Flor and I conducted household interviews and held Focus Family Dialogues. We asked the families about their aspirations, problems, and what they wanted to do about these problems.   We also asked them if there were community members they wanted to work with to solve their problems.  The results of these dialogues showed that their main problem was lack of income for food and education of their family.   This was the start of the Community Credit Group among the family health class members.
In 1982, the Davao Medical School Foundation (DMSF) also tested the Child-to-Child Program in my area. Luz Canave, the DMSF Training Officer taught children how to care for their younger brothers or sisters. After they graduated, two of them trained other children so that they could help develop the health of their younger brothers or sisters.  The project covers physical, mental, and spiritual aspects of growth.  At present, the health scouts are also engaged in income generating projects so they can help their younger brothers or sisters. The project covers physical, mental, and spiritual aspects of growth. At present, the health scouts are also engage in income generating projects so they can help their parents pay for their schooling.
I also tried to put up a day care center which was made into nursery class in a nearby purok.   It is self-sustaining. Mothers paid the salaries of the teacher.

Conclusion

When I started working as a Katiwala, I thought I could easily do the job. I thought it was simple to use the skills I learned.  Later on, I learned I had to prove to my community that I could really do a good job inspite of all the problems I had.  Then, many trusted me so much that they became dependent. Today, Puting Lupa has organizations which help in developing the community. I still provide health services but in these organizations, I am only an adviser. They are able to implement their own plans with very little help from me.

II. The Katiwala As A Change Agent in Barangay Ipis

Barangay Ipis is part of the municipality of San Vicente, Davao del Norte. The terrain is hilly. Most of the people are engaged in farming. The major crops are cacao, coffee and corn. The population is approximately 1,400. There is no health center, but one midwife who is not residing in the place serves the area. She lives in the neighboring barangay with a distance of four kilometers. There is one herbolario (faith healer) and two hilots (midwives).  People usually go to herbolarios, for minor illnesses because the midwife can not provide medicine for them and she is often not around when needed.
There is one elementary school with five full time teachers. There is one  pit-type uncovered toilet on the premises.  There is a half-finished Barrio Hall, a
multi-purpose barrio hall that the Katiwala sometimes uses for holding Family Health Classes.  It has one jetmatic pump which the people do not use because water is not potable.  They use spring water for drinking and washing. Only a few use rain water for drinking.  People who use spring water for drinking have
to hike two kilometers from their residence and carry the water in plastic containers.
The Katiwala found it difficult to present the action plan to barangay officials and also to the community members due to previous experiences with CCP-NPA infiltrations in the barangay. Any group or organization that wished to introduce development programs in the barangay are suspected of subversive activities. Besides, the community also had previous experience with other government agencies whose services did not meet their expectations.
With the presence of the P.O during the barangay assembly, the Katiwala presented their action plans and explained the objectives of the program, the role of the implementing agency, and the role of Katiwala. During the assembly, there were mothers and barrio councilmen who, although, previously were very negative toward the program, later on expressed their willingness to attend the FHC which the Katiwala conducted.
On the first day of class, the Katiwala drew expectations from the participants. Attendance declined during the course of the Family Health Class. Some of the mothers transferred residence; others were busy in the farm, and others were not interested because they found out that they could not get any material things out of the class and from the Katiwala. With the use of essential visual aids, actual demonstrations of herbal medicines preparation, acupressure, and others, the Katiwala were able to sustain the interest of the rest of the participants, and eighteen graduated.
The presence of the Katiwala at Barangay Ipis, caused some conflict and competition  with  the  Barangay Health Worker (BHW).   The BHW felt the
Katiwala was a threat to her recognition as a health trustee in the barangay and the BHW started spreading negative feedback through the barangay against the Katiwala like:
1.     The Katiwala is making excessive profits by selling booklets and supplies at a higher price than that of the implementing agency.
2.     The Katiwala thinks that they are more know ledgeable than the BHW because they  have undergone four weeks intensive training under a private health agency.
The BHW even channeled these feedbacks to the municipal health officers. The Katiwala consulted the P.O. regarding the problem. They came up with a solution: that of holding a Team-Building Workshop on the municipal level inviting  the  MOH  personnel, the barangay captain, and the BHW’s of the barangay.   The BHW, and Katiwala together with the Municipal Health Personnels and the barangay captain were able to set up plans of health activities in their respective barangays.  BHW and Katiwala have specific assignments on the formulated  action plans. Presently, there is close coordination between the Katiwala and BHW and the health activities are more attainable and realistic.

Monthly Weighing of 0-6 Children

Surveillance on the nutritional status of 0-6 years old children is a part of Katiwala activity in the barangay.  Weighing of children was done monthly. Mothers of the weighed children expected feeding supply from the Katiwala which is not a component of the services and activities. The Katiwala tapped other  government agencies for feeding supplements. They also conducted cooking demonstrations and lectures giving emphasis on the nutritional values of locally available raw materials for feeding supply. The Katiwala put up the kitchen gardens in their own backyards so that some of the mothers asked seeds for their own kitchen gardens.

    Conclusion

      Presently, the Katiwala are invited to conduct family health classes in two neighboring barangays by the barangay officials. All  expenses  incurred by Katiwala are shouldered by these communities. Some extension workers of government agencies also give lectures in these family health classes. The Katiwala are now getting more recognition from neighboring barangays as well as the municipal health personnel for their capability of delivering basic health services.

III. Raising The Consciousness of Rural Folk In Barangay Sapa

    On entering the municipality of New Bataan, the Project Officer (P.O .) paid a courtesy call on the officials at the municipal barangay levels. With the help of other PO’s, a pretest was held in order to check if this process is applicable to both the agency and the community. He then explained to the people both u the objectives of the program, the criteria in selecting areas and the methodology utilized in identifying whom to send for the crops, livestock, micro-business, team-building and child-to-child training. Interviewers were hired to do the actual survey using guide questionnaires. Only the heads of the family were to be interviewed. This survey served as a tool in gathering baseline data. key persons were identified through sociometry.
Two months after the crops and extension training for North Davao farmers, the P.O. went back to this area in Barangay Sapa to follow up the farmers’ class. he was eager to talk to the two farmer classes and visit the barangay captain who agreed to the action plan presented, and even suggested that the overall purok chairman be conducted and enlist his help in communicating with the purok leaders to schedule a meeting. During the meeting, only six out of 16 purok leaders attended. Orientation of the on-going activity was given by the two farmer leaders. It was agreed that every purok leader should bring two or more farmers to attend the Farmer’s Class once a week every Friday. On the first day of the Farmer’s Class, the P.O. could not go due to a heavy rain. The next day nobody showed up. This happened several times. He went to some people he had met before – leaders, ordinary farmers, teachers officials on the barangay and discussed the problem with them. A few people  who had been positive regarding the program convinced others until informal meetings could be conducted. The purpose of farmer’s class and who it would benefit most was explained.
The efforts to raise the consciousness in the community eventually paid off. The farmer’s class began with a good attendance of interested participants  who were active and enthusiastic. The P.O now looks forward to the demonstration farm which the farmer trainees agreed to undertake as their next project.

IV. A Community Need Is Answered in Barangay Sto. Nino

Barangay Sto. Nino is situated five kilometers from the Poblacion of Babak. The terrain is mostly sloping. Due to a rough, poorly maintained road, public utility vehicles hardly ever enter the barangay. It has a total household number of 160 with an average household size of seven members. Of the 1,120 population, 98% are engaged in farming.
A survey in the Barangay showed that the lack of potable drinking water was one of the main problems of the community. Upon identifying the problem, the community worker (P.O.) referred the matter to the IPHC. Thinking that the Ministry of Health could help, she also consulted the Regional Water Sanitation Engineer.  In response, the MOH officer scheduled a meeting with the two Peace Corps water specialists.
Two weeks later, the Peace Corps Volunteers together with the P.O. visited the area.   The first visit was an ocular survey.  A week later, the Peace  Volunteers and P.O. went directly to the water site (wells) to get sample. Some people in the community were there washing clothes and fetching water. From among the people around, one was asked by the Peace Corps Volunteers to fetch water. The Peace Corps Volunteers explained to them why it was necessary to have a sample. The results were obtained after two weeks. The Community, especially those who were around when the sample was taken, kept on asking the Barangay Captain and the P.O. about the result. The result from the laboratory showed that the water was contaminated.
It was recalled that the barangay requested for a jet-matic or a pitcher pump from the Mayor a year ago. The barangay captain and councilmen followed up this previous request which was finally granted. The Mayor’s office provided the Cement while the people provided the labor. They needed to be deepened. Meanwhile, the wives cooked lunch. The actual work took two days.

The installation was done with the help of personnel from the MPWH and the advice of the two Peace Corps Volunteers. The cementing and other finishing touches were done by the community. Since the end of February, Barrio Sto.Nino has had safe drinking water from the new set-up jet-matic pump.

V. Hog-Raising Project in Barangay Wines

Barangay Wines of Baguio District is an agricultural area. Farming is the main source of income, and average yearly income is P1,300.00. To provide for other needs, the people raise animals in their backyard. Barangay Wines is a depressed community.   The Davao Medical School Foundation Institute of Institute of Primary Health Care (DMSF—IPHC) with the assistance of the UNICEF assisted in the development of the community’s capability to manage their own development.
January 1982, a Project Officer and Documentor of DMSF conducted a Focused Family Dialogue with 25 family respondents.  The agenda covered family aspirations, barriers to the aspirations, the steps taken to reach the aspirations or minimize the barriers, and the persons they wanted to work with regarding these aspirations.
As a result of these FFD’s, the IPHC team found out that the community aspirations were:
1.     to send their children to school;
2.     to have three square meals a day, and
3.     to improve their houses.
Low income and high prices were identified as the main barriers to these aspirations.  The FDP’s were followed by a Focused Community Dialogue where the result of the FFD were fed back to them. As a result, cluster or small groupings were formed on the basis of their choice (i.e., who they want to work with).  The IPHC team worked with these clusters to help them build their capability to take responsibility in initiating community development projects. Planning and prioritization of projects were done by these clusters. They also helped in the identification of possible resources which could respond to their aspirations. After the cluster members were identified, a series of meetings were conducted to plan for effective community development projects.  Cluster members identified their needs in relation to aspirations raised and prioritized these according to their urgency and the availability of resources. Prioritized projects were thoroughly discussed by the group until everybody agreed to have it as a community project. In planning, they also considered the market or outlets of their finished projects/products. Identification of resources were made possible in coordination with the P.O. and identified leaders.
The project recipients identified the United Way of Greater Davao Inc. as the agency to be approached for the Hog Dispersal Project. The P.O. made the initial contact with the agency for project assistance. As a result, cluster members were informed about the procedures in availing of their services. The clusters formed a BRIC organization which was a major requirement of United Way.
Upon completion of the requirements set by the agency,
1.    The Barangay Rural Improvement Corps Organization, Wines Chapter was recognized by the United Way.
2.    A one-day seminar on Hog-raising was conducted by the United Way personnel. The assurance of assistance through piglet dispersal was approved provided other project requirements were accomplished (e.g. cemented pigpen, and purchase of required feed as counterpart).
3.    The community asked MLG to provide gravel for pigpens.
4.    The completed counterparts such as pigpens and feeds using the gravel given by MLG.
5. The community reported to United Way the completion of requirements.

Problem Encountered

    United Way could not provide the piglets as promised. The long drought affected the hog-dispersal program of the United Way. They had to temporarily suspend dispersal, due to decreased production and repayments of piglets from BRIC recipients of other areas. Some members wanted complete assistance (i.e., loans for pigpen materials purchase foods and medicines, and piglet). When told that such was not within the mandate of the project they dropped out. Dropout of cluster members was due to the gap between cluster formation and release of assistance.
Meanwhile DMSF—IPHC conducted seminars on local-feed formulation. Formation of a Community Credit Group which discussed and agreed on a system of managing the group and financial assistance for the purchase of piglets.  Th IPHC project officer also looked into an alternative source of piglets for the community and organized field trips to several pig raises. On the day the pig-lets were purchased, the P.O. also accompanied the group. A DMSF vehicle was used to transport the piglets and the owners of these piglets. Members were given training in bookkeeping and how to estimate the weight of the pig with the use of a tape measure.
The United Way provided Technical Ass instance through:
1.     advising the identification of piglets;
2.     giving immunization to piglets, and
3.     helping monitor project recipients giving continuing education — such as field trips and educational tours.
After the piglet-dispersal, close supervision and  monitoring by P.O. was administered. Members who were project recipients also took active part. The spirit of sharing was felt by the group, and sharing made the group more cohesive. This was emphasized through sharing of commercial feeds and medicines. Growth monitoring was done by the group. Individual  members were also taught simple bookkeeping, and each member kept records of their project.  The United Way personnel also participated in the active monitoring for continuing education and motivated them for proper care of the hogs.  The group agreed to extend their services to non-project recipients.
At the end of the project, the education revealed that the effects on the community were the following: the community was influenced to use pigpens for proper sanitation; they came to realize the importance and practice of immunization; they also valued the attitude of being cohesive/close to each other.

The Role of the Arts and Sciences in the Process of Liberation

In the beginning, when God created the world, He entrusted that world to man. Among the tasks He gave to man was that  of naming the animals around him. (Gen. 2:19-20) That task of “naming the animals” reflects, in a special way, the uniqueness of man in comparison to the rest of creation. For the task of “naming” presupposes a consciousness, a power – of reflection which gives to man, and him alone, the capacity to take responsibility for his own decisions and actions and ultimately, to take responsibility for his own destiny. It is precisely the restoration to man – – especially to the man and woman of the Third World  – – of his right and duty to “name” things, to take responsibility for his own life, that is at the heart of the process of liberation which we are concerned with here, that is the heart of the process of liberation which we are concerned with here. For while it is true that all genuine education has as its goal and objective that of contributing to the liberation of man, i.e., to his full humanization, the process has special meaning for the men and women of the Third World whose history has generally been one of dehumanization, alienation, manipulation, exploitation, and oppression at the hands of colonizers from foreign lands like my own.

Our objective here is therefore to take a few moments to reflect on how the Arts and Sciences can contribute to this process of enabling people to achieve authentic liberation, i.e., that degree of power and control over their world, their life, and their destiny which God intended when He made them “in His own image and likeness” (Gen. 1:26); when He made them less than the angels and put all  things under their feet (cf. Ps. 8:6a, 7b).
Perhaps we could best begin our reflections by taking a moment or two to clarify our own understanding of a concept radically related tot he notion of liberation – – freedom. For, as understood here, the process of liberation is one of promoting human freedom  without which responsible living is impossible.
However, I think that normally, when we think of freedom, we think of it primarily in a negative way, i.e., as a matter of freedom from rather than of freedom for. This might be due to the fact that we are so sensitive to any reality that interferes with our desire to act, to do our own things in our way. For, as one of the posters so popular nowadays puts it, for many people “Doing what you like is freedom ; liking what you do is happiness.” Thus, students and children often complain about the strictness of their teachers or parents because they cannot do what they like Even the teachers themselves and parents who are employed professionals often complain about “oppressive” administrators or bosses who impose demands on them in one form or another so that they also cannot do what they like. In my Third World countries today we continually hear criticism of “dictatorial” governments which do not allow people to say or do what they also would like to.
However, to limit freedom to just “doing what I like” doesn’t really hit at the core of what the freedom we are concerned with here really means. For doing that we like, simply because we like it, is often as dehumanizing or even more dehumanizing than anything others may force  upon us or hinder us from doing. Ultimately, freedom is a matter of attaining greater and fuller humanity as stated earlier in these reflections.  Therefore, if we simply envision freedom as the right to avoid responsibility for our actions, for example, just because we like being lazy, or as the right to act without considering the affects of our actions on others – – like smoking in a crowded jeepney and blowing the smoke in other people’s faces just because we want to smoke – does not make us more human and therefore does not really qualify as authentic freedom. Thus, the kind of freedom we are concerned with here would be better understood as the capacity to say “yes” to what is genuinely and authentically good and “no” to what is authentically  bad or evil, without interference, – either positive or negative – from any internal or external force so that we can take full responsibility for our decisions.
Perhaps, it is here that the Arts make their most significant contribution to the process of liberation in so far as they are most significant contribution to the process of liberation in so far they are concerned with the fostering and promotion of our sensitivity to and capacity for recognizing and appreciating what is genuinely GOOD and BEAUTIFUL and TRUE, i.e., what is really humanizing. This might be oversimplifying the role of the Arts as we normally understand them, but at least for the sake of our present discussion, I would just like to focus on this aspect of what I see as truly liberating contribution of the Arts to our development as more authentic human beings. For this ability of the Arts to foster in us a greater sensitivity to what is authentically human will not only contribute to our own growth as more  “humane” individuals. It will also make us more sensitive and responsive to what will either promote or hinder the humanity of others and this is vital importance since what humanizes or dehumanizes others cannot help but promote or hinder our own search for a more authentic humanity, especially in so far as they are influenced by our choices and decisions.
I would like to return now to another basic element in the working description of freedom which I proposed earlier and to focus on the aspect of freedom as the capacity or as the ability to make authentic human choices and decisions. For freedom is basically a power given to man, but a power that must be cultivated as well as respected and defended. Although it is a power that is innate in man, not something given to us by others, it is a power that can be stifled, in terms of its exercise, by either internal or external forces. Once again I would like to suggest that often when we think of oppressive forces which interfere with our exercise of freedom we tend to think of external rather than internal forces. While it is true that there are external forces that oppress and  dehumanize us by unjustly curtailing our legitimate exercise of authentic freedom, authorities of various kinds, whether at home, in school, in our social or political life, pressures from friend or from the “expectations” of society, it seems to me that the greatest obstacles to genuine freedom come from within us. For is it not true that what we often think of as true freedom (doing what we like) is really a reaction to inner impulses and disorders which are infinitely more enslaving and dehumanizing than any external forces could ever be? often, our behavior is conditioned by greed or lust or apathy or fear of what others may think or say. These forces are obviously disordered and often lead to choices and decisions that eventually destroy our own humanity and wound that of our neighbor. In addition to these forces already mentioned as dehumanizing, there are countless other inner realities of both a psychological and physical nature which impinge on the full exercise of our freedom, realities such as ignorance, inability to communicate effectively; defective images of self, or of others, or of God; hunger; malnourishment; and the like.
At the risk of oversimplifying again, I would like to suggest that here is another area where the Arts, and at the same time the Sciences, can contribute much to the process of liberation. For it seems to me that one of the main functions of the Arts and Sciences, each in its own way, is precisely to enable us to overcome many of these negative  internal factors that stifle our capacity to choose what is good and reject what is evil, no matter what form this good or evil may take, and at the same time to increase our positive capacities to do the same. For while the Arts tend to liberate us by increasing our sensitivity to and appreciation of what is genuinely GOOD and BEAUTIFUL and TRUE, the Sciences facilitate our capacity to act with greater freedom through the knowledge and skills that they help foster within us. For example, the human sciences enable and skills that they help foster within us. For example, the human sciences enable us to attain a more objective understanding of our humanity and of the forces that influence our growth as healthy, wholesome individuals and as effective, co-responsible members of the various communities to which we belong. They liberate us from excessive subjectivity and from enslaving biases, fears, and misconceptions about ourselves and about others that hinder meaningful human relationships. They teach us concrete ways and means for overcoming negative forces inside us and outside of us which keep us from becoming more human, inner forces such as fear and depression and external forces such as cultural values, both native and imported, which have such a profound influence on our behavior.
The physical sciences also contribute much to the process of liberation from both internal and external realities that provide obstacles to more authentically human choices and decisions. It is through the scientific  method, perfected in the physical sciences, for example, that we learn to to be objective and to accept the reality of laws as part of the human situation. In these fields we learn the liberating power of discipline and respect for fundamental laws as a necessary condition for any truly human achievement. To cut corners in the realm of physical laws leads sooner or later to all kinds of human tragedy and suffering. To violate the laws of nature in the name of “freedom,” i.e acting in particular way simply because I like it, eventually brings man face to face with the essentially limited nature of human freedom, even on the moral level.
In a more positive vein, the physical sciences also contribute to the liberation of man in the sense that it is especially  through the achievements of science and technology that man has learned to control and utilize the forces that tend to be oppressive and to develop those very same forces so that they become instead positive factors in his basic search for more authentically  human existence. Through the science man has learned to conquer disease, hunger, many of the negative effects of floods and droughts. He has learned ways and means of producing instruments capable of increasing his access to information about his environment on both the microscopic and macroscopic levels. He has learned to make the earth more fruitful to make work less dehumanizing, to communicate more extensively and more effectively with his fellow human beings.
Perhaps, it is not out place to suggest here that there is a special need to reflect on the fact that science and technology have not only made a great contribution to the overall liberation of man but that they have also contributed much to the enslavement of man at a deeper level. For the world of science and technology can be very hard and cold. The stress it puts on objectivity, the ruthless inviolability of the laws of nature which science and technology are constantly engaged with, the lack of human sensitivity so radically inherent in the world of the machine and in the systems and structures which they have created serious problems for contemporary man which it would do well for the people of the Third World to be aware of and reflect upon. The ever increasing reliance and dependence on machines, the devastating exploitation of natural resources, the pollution of the environment, not only physical, but also moral and cultural, thanks to the mass media, the pressures of consumerism which feeds the world of industry and other kindred phenomena have all tended to create new form of enslavement in the world of today. In Third World societies in particular, the ambiguous promises of a better and more authentic  human life which science and technology seem to offer are actually destroying many of the vestiges of authentic humanity that survived the dehumanizing impact of their colonial history.

In the light of these realities  it is important to recognize the need to keep the Arts and Sciences together when talking about liberation. For there is a danger of seeing only science and technology as the key to the salvation of the of the Third World in its efforts to achieve liberation from hunger and ignorance and the other form of dehumanizing flowing from the massive poverty it seeks to free itself from. Unless we see the ambiguities in the development of science and technology, unless we constantly keep coming back to the ultimately goal and objective of liberation as the restoration and development of man’s capacity to become more authentically humann, we run the serious danger of creating a new form of slavery and oppression and subsequent form of dehumanization worse than what we seek to be liberated from.
While it is true that the Arts have a vital role to play in facing up to the challenge of avoiding or minimizing the dehumanizing effects that excessive stress on science and technology can create there arises a need to extend our reflection to the extremely important disciplines of Philosophy and Theology which can provide us with the ultimate basis or framework for integrating the contributions of both the Arts and Sciences to the task of liberation. The reason is that they provide the basic  knowledge and skills we need to formulate the fundamental image of man to which the other disciplines  can make only more specific, isolated contributions. For in both of these disciplines we learn to transcend the limited concerns of the human and physical sciences and of the various arts.
In the field of Philosophy, for example, one develops his capacity for analytical and synthetic thinking at the deepest possible level as he pursues that fundamental  search for wisdom which is at the heart of the philosophical enterprise. In this all-important search, questions concerning  man and what it means to be truly human take a central place. In the process of exploring the key to fundamental  mystery of man, the philosopher discovers the basic principles and values, flowing from the very nature of man himself, which should govern man’s relationship to the world around and within him.  As his insight deepens and his vision grows, he is led to the discovery of those dimensions of the truth which eventually liberate him from the “bondage of the perishable” which one contemporary Filipino philosopher, Dr. Manuel Dy, Jr., spoke of several years ago in a paper on “Philosophical Formation in Jesuit Liberal Education,” a bondage which to varying degrees necessarily limits the contribution of the Arts and Sciences to the overall process of liberation.
At the same time that it leads to a deeper understanding of himself and of his fundamental relationship with the non-human aspects of the world in which he lives, philosophical reflection and investigation eventually lead man to a confrontation with the reality of the Absolute, which or who, in more Theological terms, we call God. He is thus opened up gradually to the need for an even deeper and more extensive exploration into basic mystery of his humanity, a mystery which finds it ultimate foundation in the light of divine revelation. This leads us finally to the realm of Theological reflection.
In the world of Theological studies, which for our purposes here can be adequately defined in the words of St. Agustine as “faith seeking understanding,” one moves into still another dimension of man’s basic search for meaningful answer to such questions as “who am I?” and “what am I doing here?” The deeper one explores the truths revealed to him in his Judaeo-Christian faith the more he discovers to him in his Judaeo-Christian faith the more he discovers the truth of Jesus’ words that the truth does set us free. For while it is true that all authentic insight is liberating it is even more true of religious insight which raises man to the realm of the infinite in a more significant degree than even the most profound philosophical discourse, and in so doing leads him to a higher level of human freedom. This has become especially clear in the light of recent developments in Christian Theology where the extensive experience of human enslavement and oppression have become a major  focal point of human consciousness, especially in the Third World. For this awareness of the breadth and depth of human unfreedom has led to the realization of the extent to which the Good News which is at the heart of Christian faith is really a message of liberation for all men and women of all times. The centrality of liberation themes in all strata of Christian revelation and religious tradition has been extensively explored and articulated in what has come to be known today as “Theology of Liberation.” While it is true that the history of its evolution has been quite stormy and controversial, it cannot be denied  that its basic insights into the reality of salvation as a process of liberation from personal, social, and structural sin have presented us all with a new challenge to struggle in and Christ for the Total liberation of all men from all forms of slavery and oppression.
The reflections embodied in contemporary Christian Theological thought do more than simply provide a conceptual framework for committing oneself to the task of liberating action. They also point the way  to recognizing the centrality of the person of Jesus Christ Himself as the radical means of achieving the total liberation we need and which alone will satisfy our longing to be truly free. Thus it is Jesus Himself – the Truth, God’s Word made flesh – – Who is the ultimate Liberation of mankind. It is thus, only in Him, whether consciously or unconsciously, that man will discover once again the key to assuming more fully and in a more radical way the means of laying hold once again to his God-given capacity to “name the animals” and thus to fulfill his mission as a truly free and responsible custodian of created world that has been entrusted to his care by the Lord of History and of all Creation.

I suggested at the beginning of this reflection that our focus would be primarily on the challenge of education for liberation in the context of the realities of the Third World. While it is true that we have made some mention of specific aspects of the process of liberation as it is being fostered in this context, I think there is another important aspect of the matter which at least needs to be touched on, if not developed; is the question of process. For in talking of education we can focus on content or on process, not that these need to be mutually exclusive.  Actually, we need to keep both in mind. However, owing to the peculiar challenge of liberating education in the field of Arts and Sciences is pursued is significantly more important and crucial today that the matter of content.
I am sure that for most, if not for all of you, the truth of this statement is quite obvious. For as has so often been pointed out, one of the most crippling factors in the process of education in the Third World is the fact that this process is often more manipulative and oppressive  than liberating. The colonial history of the Third World countries that has created so much cultural and other form of alienation and dependency has made the world of education a peculiarly crucial and critical one. For many of the images of man,  many of the values and ideals which motivate personal and corporate and institutional decisions and policies, many of the skills and attitudes developed in formal educational programs are imposed from outside by persons and groups more eager to control the majority of Third World citizens than to liberate them.
In both content and methodology, education is seen as a way of conditioning people, of disposing them to conform to social, economic, political, and cultural realities the benefit the powerful minority rather than the voiceless and powerless majority. Often, this powerful minority is, in itself , at the mercy of foreign interests. To attain authentic liberation therefore, it is not enough simply to focus on content of those disciplines included in the fields of Arts and Sciences or any other field, for the matter. There is also a need to be sensitive and critical of both the content and process by means of which the goals and objectives of these disciplines are pursued. Just how much has been done along these lines I must admit, I do not really know. So I am not really qualified to discuss this in any great detail. The only concrete reference I can make at this time would be to the works of a man named Paolo Friere, a Latin American educator, who has addressed himself to this problem at the expense of risking his own personal freedom and even his life. For, as we all know, talk of liberation, when it faces the real issues involved, is a very risky business. But it is an issue that needs to be faced squarely. Once the challenge of liberation is faced squarely one relinquishes his tendency and desire to control and manipulate others for personal gain. Many forms of privilege and power which enhance the comforts and social status of the elite in control of Third World societies are in the balance. Once the powerful see these realities  being threatened, they are not likely to sit back and allow genuine liberation to take place unchallenged. So I would just like to close by pointing out the importance of giving serious thought to how we pursue the liberating values inherent in the  Arts and Sciences so that their full contribution to the crucial process of liberation ca be made.
Perhaps we can summarize the main gist of the foregoing in the form of basic truth that we have all heard so often but which need to be constantly recalled, namely, that genuine liberating education must be integral and holistic; it must be directed to the development of the whole man. For it is only when we have judiciously combined the major contributions which the Arts and Sciences make in achieving the goal of truly authentic liberation, a more authentic humanity, in the light of the basic insights derived from Philosophy and Theology, that our educational system and programs will be able to make their own unique and indispensable contributions to the task of all liberative activities worthy of the name, i.e., to bring to full flowering the image and likeness of God in man as he seeks day by day to assume more and more control over his own life, his own choices and decisions, in deed, his own eternal destiny.

 

The International Conference on the Tasaday Controversy

The 1986 International Conference on the Tasaday Controversy and other Urgent Anthropological Issues was held on August 15-17, 1985 at the Philippine Social Science Center, Diliman, Quezon City. This was organized by the Department of Anthropology of the College of Social Science and Philosophy, University of the Philippines, the Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc. (UGAT), and the National Organization of Anthropologist in the Philippines. This conference sought to resolve the long-standing controversy on the Tasaday and other cases that are both of national and international concern.
Attended by about 200 participants of varied disciplines, occupations and nationalities, the three-day conference presented the highlights of the anthropological debates. The special participation of the original researchers: those who claim authenticity of the Tasaday; their counterparts who doubt the authenticity of the Tasaday; discussants from the anthropologist, archeologist’s, journalists, linguists, ethnologists, historians, theologians, public officials, and the different tribal groups and relatives of the so-called Tasadays contributed to the frank and candid discussion of the issues during the said anthropological enterprise.
The conference opened in the morning of the 15th of August with the welcome address delivered by Ms. Margarita de los Reyes Cojuangco, Chair person of the Task Force on National Minorities. Professor Jerome B. Bailen of the Department of Anthropology, UP Diliman, gave the opening remarks as conference chairman. Atty. Fausto Lingating, Deputy Minister of the Office of Muslim Affairs and Cultural Minorities, gave the keynote address in defense of the cultural minorities and their right to self-determination among other rights.

Session II

The History of the Tasaday Controversy, a documentary narrative, was given by Domingo Nun, Professor of History at Notre Dame University of Cotabato City and president of the Historical Society of South Cotabato.
The first proponents to present arguments for the Tasadays were Carlos Fernandez, cultural anthropologist and John Nance, journalist, who joined Elizalde in his PANAMIN project on the Tasadays. Douglas E. Yen, ethnologist, supported their claims.
Carlos Fernandez decried that in the Tasaday case there is more anthropology from the journalists rather than from the real anthropologists. He said that the Tasaday’s description as stone age people is now discredited. He also admitted that recent researches may disprove 70% of his original work yet he believes that the phenomena of change of the Tasaday is understood in the total picture of society as historically changing, not bonded but permeable. Describing the Tasaday as hunters engaged in horticulture, he classifies them as representatives of the hunting and gathering society. More data, however need to be gathered according to Fernandez. He added that to understand the Tasaday, it is necessary to understand their neighbors, other groups, and aggregates.
Ernesto Constantino, linguist, presented some interpretations of the word, Tasaday: it refers to people. T. Llamson, S. J. of the Institute of Philippine Culture, Ateneo de Manila University, made an etymological study rendering the Malay Tasaday as abandoned, thus abandoned people. Zeus Salazar, ethnologist-historian, UP Diliman, interprets saday as sa + aday or  aday (upstream). Ta means crest, thus tasaday means mountain. Fernandez supported this.

Session IV

Critical views on claims of the authencity of the Tasaday presented by Christian Adler, human ethnologist and physicist from the University of Munich, exposed how the so-called Tasaday “allowed themselves to be victims of a joke” propagated by Elizalde in 1971, AdIer who made a visit to the Tasaday area in 1985 disguised as a rattan dealer, said that the Tasaday story is the story of the Obu who became prisoners in their own territory with the help of the T’boli and Obu leaders who silenced them. Calling this “a crime to humanity and a scandal of the 20th century,” he pointed at the Fox-Elizalde partnership as the schemers of the Tasaday story. He theorized that Robert Fox, the American anthropologist who worked with Elizalde “recreated the Tabun men (of Palawan) in the Tasadays.”

Session V

Added arguments for the authencity of the Tasaday were presented hy Jesus Peralta, curator of the Anthropology Division of the Philippine National Museum Vividly recounting his first expedition to the Tasaday area in 1971 with Fox, he said he first met the Tasaday in a clearing where huts were constructed. He took note of the tools that he saw: a flake stone used as a high angle scraper and described as a crystalline quartz, chalcedony or opal- a stone hammer; a stone for making fire, or “batong tiktik“and some metal tools introduced by Dafal, the Blit hunter. Dafal, otherwise named Fafalu in the records comes from Blit. He joined the Tasadays as the 25th member. As recounted by researchers, he was wearing leaves and hunting in the forest and living the Tasaday way. In his second expedition with Nance and Fernandez, Peralta saw the possibility of doing archeology as his main objective. That was his last visit, however, for he never had the chance to return as much as he wanted to.
Peralta theorized that between 1971-76 or in a span of 15 years there could have been changes among the Tasadays due to their contact with outsiders and the outside world. In reacting to the hoax theory, he said that the National Museum’s archaeological data on the Tasadays have remained unchanged. He said that they are not living in one main cave. There are at least three nuclear units and there are indications of a fourth nuclear unit. He agrees with Richard E. Elkins of the Summer Institute of Linguistics and Llamson that the Tasaday is a sub-group of the Manobo. Elements of cultivation, hunting, gathering and foraging varied among each sub-group. Agriculture of the Tasadays which swidden or ‘slash and burn’ was taught by Dafal to Bilangan, one of the Tasadays. a a himself engages in agriculture outside of the Tasaday territory which is a forest. Bows and arrows come from Blit since bamboo is not available in e Tasaday area.
The theory of their isolation, however, received much reaction since the so-called Tasadays are sporting earrings similar to the Ubos and Blit. Maceda noticed that there is no inbreeding among the Tasadays even as Peralta charted their genealogy of six generations past.
Oswald Iten, Swiss economic anthropologist-journalist who made a trip to the Tasaday area in March 1986 disproved the authenticity of the Tasaday when he recounted how he met Bilangan and his three sons dressed up like lowlanders and how he found out Bilangan’s father to be T’boli. Walking for 14 hours from Surallah Airport to the Tasaday caves with the help of a map, he found out t at the Tasaday area is actually two hours’ walk from Blit, thereby disproving t e theory of the Tasaday isolation. His unannounced week-long visit was greeted by a “stage show” like a “tourist dress strategy” from the Tasadays. Their increase from 24 to 61 individuals in 15 years is a phenomenon which Iten called “super-record in population growth”.
He said that National Geographic Magazine was informed in 1985 of his planned visit to the Tasadays but before he could leave for the area, Nance was on his mission to publish his material in Asiaweek. He called this an instance when institutions, media and others have to defend themselves.
These are the conclusions of Iten:

1)      There are no cave-dwellers and stone-age men.
2) The Tasaday is a splinter-group of the Blit.
3) The caves serve not as a dwelling place, but as a religious place.
4) Elizalde masterminded the Tasaday hoax with his close associates as his assistants.
5) The Tasadays were motivated by benefits, not forced.
6) The defense of the Tasadays is a cover-up.

Zeus A. Salazar, presented his arguments criticizing the authenticity of the Tasaday. In reacting to Peralta’s views, he underscored three points:
1) When Fernandez edited a small pamphlet on the Tasaday, Llamson s article was reproduced as is in the Philippine Journal Linguistics as was Elkin’s work. Salazar’s comment however, was suppressed.
2) From the original theory that the Tasadays lived 2,000 years ago, Llamson noted that they were from 500-700 years ago. Salazar however objected to protochronology as applied to linguistics but there was no debate yet between him and Peralta.
3) Salazar’s theory regarding the age of the Tasadays agrees with Constantino’s data derived from Dafal. Salazar lamented that he had to wait 15 years to counter the proponents’ arguments or just to have a scholarly exchange.

Salazar commented that the arrangement and interpretation of external data gathered by the proponents of the Tasaday have inconsistencies. The external data are weak because their interpretations rest heavily on Dafal who claimed not to know much Tasaday language. He communicates with them in sign language. He is said to know nothing of the caves, too. Dafal was least success^l in introducing material elements in the area he was expert in, like making natik and traps. But how did the people learn natik making? The probable answer is that the Tasaday learned more Manobo compared to learning Dafal’s Tasaday. The statement that the Tasadays are cave-dwelling and stone-using people is not consistent with the data. Lowlanders go to the caves when problems arise to seek the assistance of the spirits of their ancestors, a phenomenon among Malayo-Polynesian people.
On the internal or anthropological data such as language, physical needs and traditions, Salazar indicated that the findings point to a later dating of the Tasaday. The language of the Tasaday is Manobo ^ a Malayo-Polynesian language. Malayo-Polynesians are neolithic, not palaeolithic. Words in their vocabulary on the other hand, indicate a later age; diwata from Sanskrit; balyam related to babaylen or babarilin, busaw, or bad spirit as used by other Philippine tribes; muna is Spanish; and faez is a stone tool and not a club. Bolo is faez bato. In B’laan, faez is a sword with a copper handle, an heirloom. This word belongs to the Iron Age. D’fang means roof or atip; lawi means lean-to. The word tukud or tukudan suggests a house, while musag or ugsod means props for cooking rice.
On the physical needs, Salazar noted that Nance on his very first visit gave the Tasadays rice, and this did not give them any problems, showing that they are familiar with it. It was also noted that there was no incidence of goiter among the Tasadays, another indication that they are not deficient in some minerals that the lowlands offer. They knew the use of the broom which showed their acquaintance with houses. Their practice of polygamy does not distinguish them from other Mindanao groups. Their use of tattoos is closely related with agriculture and headhunting. The cutting of the infant’s umbilical cord with bamboo is a Malay practice. Their practice of covering their loins with orchid leaves is closely similar to the Malayan use of loin cloth.
It was noted that the Tasaday has a concept of property-ownership, and of good brother and bad brother, concepts which belong to the Islamic and Judaeo Christian tradition.
Walter Linger and Jay Ullal, journalists from Stern magazine, a German publication, recounted their experience during a visit to the Tasaday area, just two weeks after Iten’s visit. It took them more than a days walk from Blit to the Tasaday area. This time they had a guide. By the time they arrived in t e area they were greeted by the Tasadays in the caves, all dressed up in leaves. But underneath they wore ordinary clothing. On the eve of their last day, t ere was some stir in the forest and then they found themselves surround by armed who made them hostages. These two were the last foreign journalists to visit the area.
Gov. Ismael Sueno, Governor of the province of South Cotabato in Mindanao, appealed to the body of anthropologists and foreign institutions not to waste money on researches that experiment on people but to direct t their resources to useful ends for the welfare of the people of the community, e mentioned the necessity for foreigners who come into the research area to pay courtesy calls on the local government. He also recalled that as an old resident of South Cotabato and having lived close to the Tasaday area as a young man, e never heard of the Tasaday people until very lately.

Session VI

Florence Henson, archaeologist of the Philippine National Museum presented other Urgent Issues in Philippine Anthropology related to the. Tasaday case: the Tao’t Bato, Migration Theory, Dingle incident, etc. This paper exposed Manda Elizalde’s attempt of a hoax on Tao’t Bato. Comments by discussants Leothiny Clavel, professor of Anthropology of UP, Diliman and Fernando N. Zialcita, professor of Anthropology of Ateneo de Manila University, contributed to the unmasking of other hoaxes. Zialcita said that anthropology demands ethics; while Clavel, citing Elizalde’s scholarly visits to the Ata in Romblon as a pre-text only for examining the area to determine deposits of gold while removing the marbles, said that the study of Elizalde could lead to the truth about the Tasaday.

Session VII

Gerald Berreman, Professor of Anthropology, University of California at Berkeley, read his paper. Ethics and Commitment in Anthropological Research . Citing his involvement in issues of ethics and responsibility and in the framing of the Code of Ethics of the American Anthropological Association, Berreman refuted the notion that anthropology should be value-free, adding that all social scientists practice politics, either of truth or of obscurantism. He shared the 1971 Principles of Professional Responsibility or the Code of Ethics adapted by the anthropologists of America (in their order of importance)
1) Responsibility to the people being studied
2) Responsibility to the public, thereby prohibiting secrecy
3) Responsibility to the discipline
4) Responsibility to the students.
5) Responsibility to the funding agencies.
6) Responsibility to the governments
He also recounted the ethical pitfalls when anthropologists are used by governments for counterinsurgency and other political interests thereby threatening the ethics of the whole anthropological enterprise.
Discussants on the topic of Ethics and Commitment in Anthropological Research were Wilfredo Dulay, CICM, Professor of Pastoral Theology, CICM Novitiate, Quezon City; Michael Tan, Professor of Anthropology, UP Diliman; and Louis Y. Kikuchi, Professor of Anthropology, Waseda University, Tokyo. Dulay commented that in southern Mexico where he stayed for three years the Indian life was ruptured by anthropologists. He further said that in the history of indigenous Third World peoples, the first anthropologists were at the service of the colonizers. Tan underscored the need to reassess the status of anthropology in the Philippines. He gave a positive note on the accountability of anthropologists to their peers as being emphasized now by younger anthropologists. Kikuchi contributed to the discussion saying that trust is needed “even in polar ity” since anthropology is for the people. He decried the focus of too much personal attacks among anthropologists.

Session VIII

John H. Bodley, Professor of Anthropology, Washington State University at Pullman, read his paper entitled Indigenous Peoples as Victims of Progress. Bodley said that as an approach, the policy of self-determination is more ideal; but, the more dominant approach today is the integration policy of the state.’ Indigenous peoples are called tribes, a name given by the State for administrative policies. Progress is forced by the State. There is an urgent call therefore for the State and its policies to change.
Joseph Serechsen, Professor of Applied Theology, CICM Theologiate Guatemala, and a member of the World Council of Indigenous Peoples since 1975, recounted how the Indian people who are today found in Meso America, Upper Mexico to Paraguay, became victims of progress. He differentiated the traditional indigenous peoples’ mode of government from that of the State today; in the former all the powers — political, economic, and religious — are embodied in a single unit or body, a group of elders. They do not need the right connections and political backing to be called leaders. The dominant society, however, sees them as unorganized. The State has divided them along the juris diction of land, law and politics. An example of this is the one million Kitchie Indian people in Guatemala, one people who are divided into three provinces. It was also added that for indigenous peoples the land’s value is its use, not its speculative value.
Joanna Carino, Chairperson of the Cordillera Consultative Committee, said that the test of how democratic nation states are is the response they give to the demands of indigenous peoples. The situation calls for an international institution that protects and defends indigenous people’s rights.

Session IX

Owen J. Lynch, Jr., visiting processor of Law, UP Diliman, recounted the history of the ethnic minority of the Philippines in his paper. Research, Public Policy and Rights of Minority People.
Atty. Fausto Lingating, Deputy Minister, Office of Muslim Affairs and Cultural Minorities, said that tribal customary laws and rights are recognized and yet there has been no implementation. Citing his law practice of 17 years with 96 of his cases concerning his own ethnic group, the Subanun, Lingating advocated a Philippine Constitution that respects customary laws of minorities.
Ponciano L. Bennagen, UGAT President and member of the 1986 Philip pine Constitutional Commission, gave a brief report on his proposal to the Constitutional Commission that the State respect customary laws in regard to ancestral land or right of indigenous communities to choose their own path to self- determination. Citing the provision on exploitation of natural resources under autonomy as against the Regalian Doctrine, he stressed that the political autonomy of particular regions (such as the Cordillera and Muslim regions) has to be strengthened as a base for autonomous government to respond to their own needs.

Session IX
Voices from the minority peoples were heard on the last day of the conference: from the Manobo of Mindanao, the Kankanoy of Cordillera and Ayatokah of the Ifugao.
The Manobo representative from Lumad Mindanao reviewed the history of encroachment of PANAMIN in South Cotabato. At the height of the fight between the Manobos and their Datu, Ma Falen, and the Visayan settlers, Elizalde came into the picture. Thereafter, Ma Falen was supported by PANAMIN, Similarly, other warring tribal leaders were supported by PANAMIN.
The Alliance of Lumad Mindanao Council of Leaders came up with their conclusion on the Tasaday:
1. The Tasaday mountain is not a dwelling place, but a pilgrimage area for the Tudak Manobo and Ubo.
2.The so-called Tasaday is a clan but not separate from Tudak Manobo.
3. With the growth of Visayan settlers’ population, this group receded to the hinterlands. They travel 50 kms. away from their villages to hunt.
4. Kulaman Valley is the place of abode of the Tudak Manobo. In its mountain ridge grows the Kamandag tree, treasured by the tribes for its sap which they use for their bow and arrow.

The following are appeals and recommendations from Lumad Mindanao Council of Leaders:
1. Tap tribal people who are concerned with the needs of the tribes.
2. Studies in the area should be done with proper consultation with the of the area.
3. Results of studies should be provided to the tribal people, not hidden from them.
4.There is a need for building a tribal group’s museum.
5.Artifacts taken out of the area should be returned.
6.Elizalde should come back for the restitution of what he has taken from the tribes.
7. Let the 22 missing scholars of PANAMIN return to their parents. These scholars are young tribal maidens who were taken by Elizalde with him when he left the Philippines.
8. Schools for lumad have to be opened.
9. Appeal to anthropologists and researchers not to enter the cultural area as agents of the CIA.

From the Cordillera People, a spokesperson described their situation as follows: To know the culture of the Cordillera of the Philippines one has to go to the United States or Europe since artifacts have been taken away from the Cordillera and transported to foreign museums by the foreign anthropologists, tourists, and recently, the military. There is the insensitivity of foreigners in treating people as sources of information only; research results are not fed back to the people. They demand that researches should be given to the local government and to the community.
The Cordillera situation hit the international scene in mid 1970’s in the Chico River Dam Project and the Cellophil Controversy which affected the Ting- gians. The creation of a Marcos Park for an international golf course dislocated families who used the same area as their rice and pasture land. The border between Cagayan Valley and Kalinga-Apayao is the most heavily militarize. There are nine big logging concessionaires in Kalinga-Apayao. There is an obvious partnership between the military and big business as when business men’s helicopters are used for strafing operations by the military:
These are the recommendations  of the Cordillera People’s Alliance (CPA):
a) Proper consultation with the people in the CPA office for briefing before research is undertaken.
b) Return research results to university and community. Support struggles of indigenous peoples for right to ancestral lands.

The Ifugao representative presented Ifugao as the first province in the Cordillera to be militarized in the early days of Martial Law, with the area between Nueva Vizcaya and Ifugao as the most heavily militarized. In the face of military abuses, evacuations, threats and killings, the ifugao Commission on Human Rights was established in 1974.
In Banawe, there is the problem with tourism. The widening of roads have destroyed rice terraces and people are not yet paid for their land. The concrete roads are meant to help farmers, but it is the middlemen and above all, the Philippine Tourism Authority that profit most, not the farmers of Banawe.
In Kiangan where the Yamashita Shrine stands, there is a rush to treasure- hunting by outsiders. This has resulted to the destruction of the rice terraces. The Ifugao spokesman concluded that as indigenous peoples, they have the right to own treasures.
Ray Hilot, Executive Director of the Episcopal Commission for Tribal Filipinos, posed the following questions on development: What kind of development is needed? To whose point of view is this development? Related to development is interest. The development of tribal areas by the lowlanders destroyed the indigenous community as a people and as a race. It has been proven that the knowledge of scientists can be used not to help but to destroy indigenous peoples. Hilot ended with the following recommendations:
1.Proper consultation and coordination with people involved.
2. Proper channelling of results of researches—to museum and people.
3. Appeal to all to return all stolen artifacts.
4. Respect the people’s struggle for self-determination.

The last of the tribal representation came from South Cotabato. among them were the relatives of the so-called Tasaday to give testimony to t e as^ day story. Alfredo Tahedo, Jr., otherwise known as George, from But, testile that the Tasaday area was divided into logging concessions but that there was no report of Tasaday people.
According to another representative, the story of the Tasaday began when Elizalde came to Blit. Upon his arrival, Dafal, the Blit hunter who was with Elizalde called for a meeting for the people to meet Elizalde whom Dafal called “Our Lord who has come to help us” (as translated). When Elizalde left a r a four-day stay, Dafal and Frudi Tuan called a meeting to explain to the people how they could get attention and help. They decided to wear bahag so that other people would know that they are poor. When the datus consented to e idea, Datu Dudim allowed his daughter Doloy and her husband, Yong with their children to form the group called Tasadays. Saay, the brother balayan who was then single. Sindi who was also single was married to Balayen. Datu Magafed chose his father-in-law, Kultaw, to join the group. Together with Kultaw was his son, Dafal.
The training of the BSDU (Barrio Self-Defense Unit) was then organized with two trainees recruited from T’boli, after which the representative became Commander Da Bun. When Elizalde stayed for a while in the area he asked for a wife and a Blit woman was given to him. The T’bolis were asked to join. There were no Tasadays.
Three representatives who spoke in T’boli related their relationships with the Tasadays. Blesen, a niece of Lefonok and Bilangan said that Tasaday, is the first cousin of her mother, and that Saay was brought to Maitum by her parents.
Mariano Mondragon of Kiamba, a veteran officer of World War II, Kiamba’s No. 1 Councilor in 1947-1951 and its First Town Mayor in 1951-1955 and one time Deputy Governor of Cultural Minorities in Datu Matalam, North Cotabato,  testified that he never heard of the Tasaday tribe until Elizalde came. As an officer in the Armed Forces of the Philippines during World War II and later as Councilor, Mayor, and as Chief of Police of Surallah, South Cotabato, he roamed the surrounding areas of the mountain ridge called Tasaday. Having married a Manobo lass, a daughter of Datu Dudim, he frequented the area of the Tasaday. He learned that a Manobo with his wife and two children had gone up to settle in the area and they were joined by other Manobo families under Datu Dudim, Datu Ogata and Datu Magafed. He said that it is a common practice among the Manobos that those who have committed some crime abandon their tribe and settle somewhere else to avoid punishment. He added that the 24 natives pictured by the PANAMIN to be Tasadays are Manobos. He further testified that four of his Tagabili or T’boli boys were asked to strip and pose for exhorbitant fees, and the PANAMIN had a training school for the making of a Tasaday which was cordoned and well-guarded by armed soldiers of PANAMIN.
The conference ended with the summary of issues raised: The Tasaday Controversy is connected with the whole phenomena of a dictatorship. The conference therefore was brought about by this anthropological controversy and other issues which have been the concern of the Philippine Social Science Center for the last five years. Professional ethics was underscored. The anthropologists and journalists have a great responsibility to confront the exact character of the anthropological enterprise in order to make the tribals, not just objects, but subjects of studies. Anthropologists and media were asked to consult with indigenous peoples. Respect of customary laws was urged with the suggestion that these customary laws be studied and codified. The last statement came from the tribal groups: “We indigenous peoples have the right to determine our status and pursue socio-economic and political development in terms we ourselves define.”

The Building of the Local Church of Davao: 1946-1972

The years after World War II were years of dynamic growth for the Davao Region . Each month settlers arrived by the thousands to begin a new life in “the land of promise”. These years were also years of dynamic growth for the local Church of Davao. Each year from 1946 to 1973, PME Fathers arrived from Canada to begin the missionary apostole: some years three came: some years six came; one year, as many as nine came. Gradually, more and more parishes and Christian communities were established, and the local church of Davao grew very quickly,

When the Jesuit Fathers left in 1938, the PME Fathers became primarily responsible for the evangelization of the Davao region, and they responded marvelously to the challenge. At one time in the late 1960’s, there were more that 80 PME Fathers in Davao region. However, other religious congregation and missionaries came to help in the evangelization effort. The Maryknoll Father arrived in 1958 to take responsibility for the building up of the Church in Davao del Norte and Davao Oriental. The Jesuit Fathers returned in 1948 to open the Ateneo de Davao which became instrument in forming many of the Christian leaders in the Davao region. The Redemptories Fathers arrived in 1956 for parish ministry and parish missions. The Sacred Heart Brothers arrived in Digos, in 1959 for the apostolate.

Many religious congregations of women also responded to the request of Msgr. Thibault to help in the evangelization of Davao. The RVM Sister were already in the Davao Region. They had opened schools during the time of the early Jesuit missionaries. The year 1946 witnessed the school in Mati, Davao Oriental. The Dominican Sisters of the Trinity arrived in 1948 to open San Pedro Hospital. The Carmelit Sisters established a contemplative community in 1952 in Bankerohan. St. Peter’s School in Toril was taken over by the Presentation of Mary Sister in 1953, which was the same year the St. Paul Sister arrived for the communication media apostole. The following year, 1954, saw the arrival of the Assumption Sisters to staff the school in Nabunturan. These were the early communities of religious who helped the PME Father in the task of building up the Davao Church. Many other congregations were to follow later in the 1970’s and 1980’s.

All the while , the nurturing of vocations to the priesthood and religious life was being fostered among the young people of Davao as part of the mission mandate to build up the local Church and turn it over to the native clergy and religious.

The chapter will focus on the building of the  local church of Davao: 1946-1972. Much is owed to the beloved Monsignor Clovis Thibault, PME, the first Archbishop of Davao whose  foresight, planning, and vision set the firm foundation of the Davao Church. Critical for the growth of the diocese was the establishment of the parishes and the growing involvement of the laity in the Church, especially through different movements such as the Barangay sang Birhen . A key factor instruction and the John XXIII Catechetical Center.

Archbishop Clovis Thibault, P.M.E.

Archbishop Thibault is the first of the local church of Davao. As a young priest he arrived in 1937 which the first group of PME’s; soon after he became the parish priest of San Pedro Church. During the Second  World War, he escaped to the east cost and eluded the Japanese soldier for a while until captured and imprisoned. When the war ended, he immediately returned to Davao City to take over San Pedro parish. When other PME Fathers returned to Davao, he went third Regional Superior of the PME’S in Davao in 1948.

When the Church in Davao became independents of the Zamboanga diocese in 1949  and proclaimed a prelature Nullius, Fr. Clovis Thibault was named Administrator and Prelate Ordinary. He was ordained Bishop in February 1955. In 1966, when Davao became a full-pledged diocese, Monsignor Thibault became the first Residential Bishop of Davao. In 1970, the diocese of Davao was created an Archdiocese and Msgr. Thibault became the first Archbishop of Davao, with Msgr. Antonio LI. Mabutas, assigned as the first coadjutor bishop Both were installed in September 1970. When Msgr. Thibault  resigned in 1972, Msgr. Mabutas was installed as Archbishop of Davao Perhaps, the best way to describe Msgr. Thibault is to let Msgr. Mabutas, his successor do so:

Archbishop Clovis came to us thirty eight years ago as a pioneering missionary from Quebee; we remember him wearily trudging the forest and the swamps that was then the big Davao region which now became a City and three provinces; we see him bearing the heat to the day and brunt of the pastoral ministry as far as Caraga in the east cost and then as parish  priest in the Cathedral. We envision him now as he went along those 38 years asserting his dynamic and dedicated spiritual leadership leading to the erection of the Prelature, the Diocese and the  Archdiocese of Davao in swift succession. His obsession for the upliftment of his flock led to the erection of many parishes, seminaries, Catholic school, hospitals and clinics and other charitable institutions.

Yes, we remember our beloved Archbishop, and we can think only of things we can never have again from him – his wisdom which comforted us, his lands which blessed us, his kindness which strengthened us.

He loved the Filipino people, particularly the good people of Davao. As a matter of fact, he was a Filipino in everything except perhaps his nose and French accent. He was simply one of us and passionately in love with us . And the Davao people know him and love him and treasure him. So in 1972 he was made an adopted Son. of the City of Davao, and shortly afterwards, the Province of Davao del Sur claimed him also as an adopted Son. Not content with this, the City of Davao game him the Highest award it could give to a highly-meritorous son – the Datu Bago Awards.

When Msgr. Thibalt became Administrator of the Prelature of Davao in 1949, there were 13 parishes, 31 PME’S, half of them less than 30  years old, about 40 religion men and women, 400,000 Catholics, 100,000 Muslims. There were approximately 3,000 marriages and 20,000 baptism a year, and only one seminarian at that time studying in Manila. It was a time of great promise and challenge.

He was a man of great intellectual ability gifted with excellent judgment and vision. He set the goals of the new Prelature and set about implementing them. He wanted the PMW Fathers to concentrate on the parishes building up Christian Communities. He asked the religious congregations to take care of the schools. He was able to attract many religious congregations to come Davao. He set a high priority on developing the local diocese clergy, building the college seminary and Regional Seminary for Mindanao. He was concerned about the social situation and sent prospective leaders abroad for further studies, fostering the role of the laity in social involvement . All these he did despite being afflicted with a severe asthmatic condition which often debilitated him. He was ably assisted in running the diocese by gifted and competent Vicar Generals and Chancellors; among them: Msgr. Maurice Michaud, Fr. Gilles Ouellet, Fr. Viateur Allary. Fr. Patrice Picard, and Fr. Jacque Paquin.

Msgr. Mabutas expresses very well the loving memory the people of Davao have for their beloved Archbishop on the occasion of the death of Msgr. Thibault.

Our Archdiocese is bereaved. We are poorer because of his loss. But we can all be better Christian because Archbishop Thibault has passed our way, because he has been our leader, whose character and vision, whose optimism and courage will forever linger to inspire us in the days to come.

Beloved Archbishop Thibault, let me address you for the last time: please do not leave us alone. We ask you to continue praying and interceding for us , your orphaned children. No , we will never say goodbye; we want to keep you in our midst. So your people have built a crypt in this your Cathedral so you will always be with us. So long then; till meet again. Au Revoir. Alleluia.

The Development of St. Francis Xavier College and Regional Major Seminary

What struck the PME Fathers upon their arrival in Davao in October 1937 was the scarcity of priest. There were only seven, Jesuits, some already old, for more than 260,000 Catholics in the whole Province: one priest in Cateel, one in Baganga, one in Caraga  and four in Davao City. Since one of the first aims of the Foreign Mission Society is the formation of the local clergy the first priority of their missionary work in Davao.

Shortly after their arrival they opened a kind of Apostolic School in a rented house on Claveria Street near the old convento. In May 1939 the first group of boys arrived: three from Baganga, two from Caraga, and one from Davao. In January 1941 when the new building of the St. Peter High School for boys was completed, the apostolic school transferred to the second floor of the building. While attending classes at St. Peter’s, the boys were taught Latin and prepared to be sent to Cagayan de Oro or to Manila.

The war dispersed the seminarians. At the end of the war only one came back, Raul Labasano, to die of tuberculosis one year later. Not discouraged, the PME Fathers started over again recruiting young candidates for the priesthood. In 1953, Fr. Louis-Charles Sabourin, PME, was appointed first Rector of the Minor Seminary. The seminarians were then living in Matina in a rented house near the Ateneo de Davao High School where they were studying . When the number of seminarians increased, they moved to the old Carmel convent in Bankerohan in 1954 vacated by the Carmilite sisters who had transferred to their new monastery in Bajada. After their studies at the Ateneo de Davao, the seminarians were sent to the San Jose Seminary in Manila for Philosophy and Theology. Among the first who studied in Manila and became priests later were Bishop Generoso C. Camiña , PME, Fr. Benjamin Benedicto, Fr. Paul Cunanan, and Fr. Edgar Rodriguez.

However, the sending of candidates to Manila proved very costly. Moreover, many seminarians had difficulties in adjusting to life in Manila. There was a need for a seminary here in Davao that could offer the full formation program for the priesthood. Since the young Prelature of Davao could not afford to carry out such a plan, the Foreign Mission Society of Quebec made it its own project. It provided most of the funds for the building and sent priest for studies to prepare them to staff the seminary.

The Prelature acquired four hectares of Land on the top of a hill overlooking the Davao Gulf in Catalunan Grande. IN February 1955, Archbishop Rufino Santos of Manila blessed the cornerstone of the Sr. Francis Xavier Minor Seminary, named after the patron Saint of the Foreign Mission Society. In 1956, the new seminary opened its doors to thirty students with Fr. Jean-Bernard Bazinet as Rector. Twenty two seminarians were still in Manila. In 1970 it was decided to phase out the High School Department and keep only the College Department. In 1973 there were already enough diocesan priest to take the direction of the College Seminary. Fr. Benjamin Benedicto became the first Filipino Rector in 1974. Since then the PME Father continued to help by providing one or two priest mainly for spiritual direction.

Originally planned as a diocesan seminary, the seminary continued to accept students from Tagum and Digos dioceses after their establishment. Tagum opened its own College seminary in 1981. So now the St. Francis Xavier College of Seminary of Davao serves the Archdiocese of Davao and Diocese of Digos.

The Major Seminary

Until 1962, there was no Major Seminary in Mindanao. All theology students had to be sent elsewhere, mostly to Cebu and Manila. When the Apostolic Nuncio heard of the desire of Bishops Clovis Thibault to open a Major Seminary in Davao, he strongly approved of the plan and recommended that Davao be made a center of theology for Mindanao.

In 1962 Rome formally erected the Major Seminary of Davao and Foreign Mission Society of Quebec was asked to take charge of the seminary and to provide the Faculty. The PME Fathers pledged to staff the seminary until such a time when the local church could take over. The construction started in 1963. The seminary opened a year later with 35 students from all over Mindanao. Two years later it already had 75 students.

Although meant to be Regional Major Seminary for the eleven ecclesiastical division at that time, the Seminary started as an Archdiocesan Seminary under the jurisdiction of the Prelate of Davao. It look some years before all the Bishops could agree to a true Regional Seminary and commit themselves for financially support the Seminary and to prepare some of their priest for work in the Seminary. IN September 1972 Rome elevated the Major Seminary of Davao to the status of a Regional Major Seminary, and it became the St. Francis Xavier Regional Major Seminary of Mindanao.

Before that decree, the Regional Council of the PME Fathers had already written Bishop Antonio LI. Mabutas pressing for the Filipinization of the Administration and Faculty. The PME Fathers were asking that with the school year 1972-73 the positions of Rector, Director of Pastoral Formation, Spiritual Director, and Dean of Studies be filled by Filipinos, and that as soon as possible the teaching position be also given to Filipinos. Hence, immediate steps should be taken to prepare qualified professors if some were available. Meanwhile, the PME Father were willing to carry on their work as professors.

The PME Fathers who had done pioneer work in both seminaries started a gradual withdrawal from the Major Seminary in May 1974 when the Society of the Divine Word (SVD Fathers) accepted the direction of the Seminary. Fr. Vicente Braganza, SVD, replaced the last PME Rector, Fr. Generoso C. Camiña. At present the Faculty is made up of diocesan priest and religious from different  congregations. Among the religious, some are Filipinos and some foreigners. The Faculty is some what international but is becoming more and more Filipino with the dioceses taking a greater share of the responsibilities.

In a span of twenty years, from 1966 to 1986, the Regional Major Seminary of Davao has formed a total of 334 priests. With the fast increase of vocations in Mindanao, one Regional Seminary for the Island soon  become insufficient. A second Major Seminary was opened in Ozamis in 1980 and a third one in Cagayan de Oro in 1985.

The PME Fathers consider what they have done for the development of the local clergy to be one of their major contributions to the local Church in Davao.

The Parishes and the Growing Involvement of the Lay People

Originally, the PME Fathers came to Davao to do missionary work among the non-Christian. However, this initial intension was quickly changed because thousands of settlers were arriving every month from Luzon and the Visayas to begin life anew in ” the land of promises.” Most were Catholics, and there was a need to care for them pastorally. As these settlers cleared the land and established towns, there was the call for the setting up of parishes and Christian communities. The PME Fathers were ready and able to respond to the challenge.  This vast region that in 1937 had only four parishes, one in Davao City and three on the east coast: Cateel, Baganga, and Caraga, was transformed by the creation of parishes which became the centers of Christian Communities. The PME’s alone established 35 parishes, while the Maryknoll Fathers, Redemptorists, and Diocesan clergy also established parishes.

While most of the settlers were Catholic, many were so only nominally, so there was the need to deepen their faith and encourage their involvement in the Church. This was an even greater challenge than setting up parishes. In this effort, Msgr. Thibault was at the center, presenting a vision , encouraging new ventures, giving freedom to his priest to try new apostolates, really serving as an unifying and inspirational force to the efforts of so many.

Different movements helped to deepen the faith and involvement of the people in the Church. In the late 1940’s, many of the parish priest promoted the Enthronement of the Sacred Heart in homes. This fostered devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Soon after, the Legion of Mary became very active in many parishes encouraging lay activity.

Perhaps, the movement that most was the Barangay sang Birhen. The key figure for the growth and development of this movement in Davao was Fr. Andre Pigeon, PME. Recalling those years, Fr. Pigeon said that the most beautiful years of his priesthood was when they had responsibility for fostering the Barangay sang Berhin movement on the parish and diocesan level.

The Barangay sang Birhen was founded by Antonio Gaston, an active Catholic layman from the town of Silay in Negros. He realized how many Catholics did not know their faith and thus could not be involved in the Church. In his own parish there was only one priest to take care of 80,000 Catholics. So he formed a group of laymen to teach catechism which gradually  grew into a vast organization giving lectures in religion to the popular masses. The movement became very strong in Negros and brought back thousand to the church.The Barangay grouped together families to pray together, to learn their faith together, and to help one another. It was a forerunner of today’s Basic Christian Communities.

Msgr. Thibault first heard the Barangay sang Birhen movement from the Bishop of Bacolod. When the diocese of Cotabato had its first Barangay Congress in 1953, Bishop Mongeau invited the Bishop of Davao to send two representatives to hear the lectures of Antonio Gaston. Fr. Andre Pigeon and Jean Lalonde were chosen. Both became deeply convinced of the value of the movement and convinced their fellow PME’s to spread this movement in Davao Fr. Pigeon became the Diocesan Chaplain of the Barangay.

One of the main features of the Barangay was the teaching of religion by laymen. This active involvement of men in teaching religion to others not only had a favorable effect of spreading and deepening the faith for may whose contact with the church was minimal, but it also had a tremendous effect on the male teachers themselves. The  change from a passive involvement to an active involvement in the Church encouraged active participation in many areas of Church life.

Fr. Pigeon started publishing a small leaflet The Apostolate of the Barangay at a rate of 4,000 a week. It served as a guide for the lectures given at every parish center or sub-center. Many people were attracted to listen to these lectures.

All movements have their time to flourish and time to subside the Barangay sang Birhen was no different. After growing  and flourishing for ten years, it gradually diminished. It had prepared hundreds of laymen for responsibilities in different forms of the apostole and increased the lay activity in the parishes. Truly , it was forerunner of the present day Basic Christian Communities, in Visayan, Gagmayng Kristohanong Katilingban (GKK).

Other key person and movements were Fr. Gilles Ouellet, who was very instrumental in promoting Catholic Action in the 1950’s,fostering a social involvement on the part of the laity. Then, the  growth of the Catholic Youth Organization (CYO), Student, Catholic Action (SCA), and Young Catholic Workers (YCW) involved the youth and workers in Church activities. The late 1960’s saw the emergency of the Cursillo movement which further activated the role of the laity, especially the men in the Church.

Another important contribution to the Church of Davao was the work of the Redemptorist Father in preaching parish missions. They would spend a week or two in each parish. Beside preaching , they would visit many of the homes of the parishioners, It had a tremendous impact. Many marriages were validated, and many of the  faithful returned to the sacrament and active involvement in the Church.

Perhaps, one of the strongest influences on the local Church was the establishment of school which formed Christian leaders and increased the influence and presence of the Church. The first involvement of the PME Fathers in education was to take over St. Peter School opened by the Spanish Jesuits in the early 1930’s on the first floor of the Convento of San Pedro Church. In 1940, the PME’S built St. Peter’s High School which stood on the present site of the Ateneo de Davao University. St. Peter,s High School was closed during the Second World War and eventually destroyed in a bombing raid. Fr Rolland Hebert was the Superintendent of Schools from 1951 to 1982. The PME’s established 28 high schools, usually attached to a parish. The religious congregations also established schools. Getting the Approval from the ministry of Education was difficult because everything had to be processed in Manila. Usually, Fr. Herbert and the Chancellor of the Diocese would help in the process. They made it easier for the parish priest and the religious congregation involved in setting up the schools. Gradually, the Davao Association of Colleges and Schools was formed to be a coordinating body of the educational efforts in the regions.

The Ateneo de Davao University started by the Jesuit Fathers has played a key role in the educational effect in the region. Besides a college, high school, and grade school, it also has a law school and a graduate school. Msgr. Thibault requested the Jesuit Father to begin a law school in the early 1960’s because he wanted Christian witness in the legal profession in Davao. This was a good example of the foresight and vision of Msgr. Thibault In the late 1960’s, the Ateneo de Davao established a Graduate School which has helped in the training and formation of many of the educational leaders in the Davao region.

The Holy Cross Press was founded in 1961 by Fr. Guy Poupart the PME Regional Superior at that time, and Fr. Guy Riendeau became the first Director. He was succeeded in 1962  by Fr. Georges Courchesne. Fr. Paul Han became Director in 1963 and has guided the Holy Cross through its year of growth and expansion.The Holy Cross Press is now the largest printing press in Mindanao and renders service not only to the Catholic Schools and Parishes of the Davao region but to the entire church  of Mindanao.

The Communications Media Apostolate has been promoted by the PMEs and is now carried on primarily by the Daughters of St. Paul. Msgr. Clovis Thibault started the first Diocesan newspaper, the Davao Sentinel; the first Director was Fr. Marcel Turcotte. Through the years, Msgr. Antonio Mabutas  has supported this apostolate. the name of the diocesan newspaper has changed to Ang Taboan and finally to the Davao Catholic Herald. The present Directress is Sr. Eugenia Gornis, D.S.PS All these efforts helped in the growth of Christian communities and the growing involvement of the lay people in the Church.

Religious Instruction and the Pope John XXIII Catechetical Center

As the laity became more involved in the Church, there was the realization that what was needed was not only an active laity, but a laity that was well formed and knowledgeable in the faith. For this,an adequate program of religious instruction and formation was essential.

The separation of church and state as provided for by the constitution of 1935 prohibited the teaching of religion in all public schools throughout the country. Consequently religion could only be taught in the churches or parishes. At the time of the arrival of the PME, the catechetical apostolate of Davao consisted of a few Damas Catolicas who taught religion to schoolchildren . the local school authorities were disposed to allow the teaching of religion within school premises on the condition that it was held outside of regular class hours. Now , the problem was to train enough catechists for a widespread deployment in Davao schools.

In the old parishes in the east coast a form of a catechetical institute was organized by Fr. Yvon Guerin in Baganga in 1939. This institute provided a month’s course of catechetical training. In the San Pedro parish in Davao City, Fr Eugene Ouellet had prepared a five-week formation program for catechists. With the cooperation of parents and the Catholic Association of the Philippines, the school authorities were on certain occasions persuaded to permit religious instructions to be held within regular school hours. Fr. Ouellet was able to train 140 catechists before the war broke out.

After the war , when Fr. Gerard Campaign attempted to revive catechetical work he realized that he had to start all over again; securing the signatures of parents, paying visits to school authorities, and following up catechists. Building on the work started by his predecessors, Fr. Campaign organized the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and published the Confraternity Visitor to sustain the zeal of catechists especially those who were living in the remote barrios.

Catechetical instruction was given an unexpected impetus in 1953 when Pablo Lorenzo was appointed Secretary of Education by President Elpidio Quirino. During this time the school authorities allowed the teaching of religion in public school. As religious instruction required more and more teachers, the remuneration of the catechists became a serious problem . Funds had to be obtained because only those who could meet the problem of compensation for catechists could continue employing them. Msgr. Thibault decided to systematize catechetical work by setting up a catechetical center in the diocese. In 1968, Fr. Patrice was sent to Lumen Vitae is Brussels, Belgium, to study catechetics and to observe existing catechetical centers around the world in preparation for establishing one in Davao.

Fr. Picard’s work started with a survey of parishes and schools in the diocese of Davao to find out the needs of the catechetical apostolate. The result of the survey were studied and discussed in a seminar-workshop which was attended by priest and religious, as well as lay catechists. On May 1,1971, Fr Picard, working with one secretary and seven catechists as staff started to operationalize the t. John XXIII Catechetical Center (JCC). The JCC was founded on six fundamental principles:

1. The staff is the greatest importance .
2. The staff works as a team but each one has a specific area of responsibility. The work of each staff member is evaluated weekly for the purpose of coordination and collaboration.
3. The organizational structure is likewise evaluated regularly depending upon the needs of the parish or school, and the potentials of the team members.
4. Changes must be for the better, removing people or equipment without being able to replace either must be avoided.
5. The JCC is not the monopoly of one religious community or member of the same organization. The whole catechetical apostolate should feel responsible for the Center.
6. Asking for help from outside should only be resorted to after the diocese’s own resources are exhausted.

Fr. Picard tried to coordinate the different resources in the Archdiocese of Davao making use of the different religious communities and educational institutions. This enriched the efforts of the JCC. He also relied very much on the team approach at the Catechetical Center. The JCC originally envisioned only the training of catechists as its sole task. However, a growing apostolate has other needs, and now the center runs various programs in responses to these needs. The catechists formation program is now a four year college course. The Holy Cross College offers Catechetics as a major course in either AB, BSE, or BSEED program. On the other hand , the training of volunteer catechists was perceived as an equally urgent need.

The image and morale of volunteer catechists, especially catechists of children needed to be improved if only to avoid its telling repercussions on the quality of religious instructions. Katekista na lang. (Only a catechist)  were word that indicated a low regard for this apostolate. To remedy this, the JCC held a special seminar for catechists of children. The first group of forty was gathered in the Cursillo House and received an intensive formation program that lasted for three weeks. The workshop was in effect a trainors program, and the forty catechists who were given the course were later assigned to Pastoral Zones in the parishes of San Pedro, Sta. Ana, Bunawan, Toril, Digos, and Padada. Each  Patoral zone  had a group of volunteer catechists who were trained by the former group, A Zone Animator and a Head Catechists were designated for each of the Pastoral Zones and together these two were in charge of the seminars for the training of volunteer catechists.

The  1969 survey also showed that catechesis in high school as well as colleges was not better than that taught in elementary level. Few religious education teachers, even among religious sisters in Catholic schools were trained catechists. In 1973, the JCC offered catechetical formation to teachers of religious education. More than 200 teachers responded and subsequently attended the Christian Communities Program (CCP) seminar and in-service training.

The JCC had been producing its wan training materials e.g. syllabus for catechetical instructions since 1973. Before this the Center had been largely dependent on Manila for its instructional literature. When Martial Law was declared in 1972, the CCP Guide was forced to stop operations. All catechetical work and catechist throughout the country at this time were restrained by strict government and military procedures.

Catechesis is not meant exclusively for school, although the bulk of young people from seven to twenty years are found in these institutions. Catechesis has to reach both young and old alike in order to be meaningful. Until 1982, the JCC was conducting youth center under the youth Formation Program. When a diocesan youth center was established and the St. Paul parish, the JCC turned over the work of the community youth catechesis to this parish.

Similarly, the catechesis of adults within the context of the community became an urgent concern of the JCC. The vision of forming Basic Ecclesial Communities was in the mind of many church leaders especially after Vatican II. In the Philippines the Christian Communities Program was an approach to community oriented catechesis. In 1973 Martial Law was proclaimed, the CCP Guide which served also as material for adult catechesis, ceased publication and the Christian Communities Program was abolished. Consequently, the JCC held a workshop involving both religious and lay leaders for the purpose of producing an adult catechesis program. The outcome of the seminar was a formation program in four phases:

Phase 1- Evangelization Seminar, a course given to parishes and barrios. This Seminar was first given in 1973 by Fr. Roger Begin to priest, religious , and a core group of lay catechists.
Phase 2-Seminar on Christian Life and Sacraments. The instructional materials for this  seminar was available in English and in Cebuano beginning 1978. Phase 3-Vision and Organization of Small Ecclesial Communities. Phase 4-Formation Seminar of Different Lay Leaders in the Ecclesial Communities.

At the request of Fr. Andre Pigeon who started the kasaulugan sa Pulong (KSP) in his parish in Sta. Cruz in 1965, the JCC agreed to integrate and coordinate the KSP for the Ecclesial Communities. A Pangulo sa Liturhiya (PSL), chose from among those who have undergoing Phase I of the Adult Formation Program was delegated to lead the KSP in the chapel or barrio level. Recently , the PSL was also turned over by the JCC to the Archdiocesan Liturgical Center. In its stead , the Center has initiated the Pangulo sa Alagad (PSA) formation for the training of the officers of Basic Ecclesial Communities.

The John XXIII Catechetical Center has embarked upon an undertaking for the promotion of catechetical work as an integral part of the evangelization. In pursuing its mission, the organization works along the framework of subsidiarity. The JCC performs work which other organization of both the staff and its work: there is development of member  by theory and praxis; there is a balance between the time given to interpersonal relationships and the demand of the work; and finally , there is the realization of the bishops and priests’ indispensable role in the catechetical apostolate.

Many priests, religious , and laity have been instrumental in the development of the John XXIII Catechetical Center. Fr. Patrice Picard, PME, was the founder and first Director. In October 1978,Fr. Roland Denis, PME took over for 6 months. In 1979, he was succeeded by Msgr. Bonifation L. Burlaza, who was ably assisted by Sr. Nicolasita C. Villarin, MIC. In 1987 , Fr. Jaime Oxales succeeded Msgr. Burlaza as the new Director.

The EAPI Summer Course on the Pastoral Ministry to Youth

Ninety participants attended the 1985 East Asian Pastoral Institute Summer Course on Youth Ministry in Manila, May 13-June 14, 1985. Of these, 39 were male Asians, 11 male non-Asians; 32 female Asians and 8 female non-Asians; comprising 31 Priest, 6 Brothers, 27 Sisters and 26 Lay Persons. According to nationalities, 50 came from the Philippines, 15 from the Fiji Islands, 9 from Malaysia, 2 from Indonesia, 2 each from Taiwan, Singapore and Thailand and one each from Hongkong, India, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Saipan, and Zambia.
The course started with general orientation during which delegates introduced themselves, and group needs and resources surfaced. After the participants had expressed their own perception of their own perception of their country’s youth  a profile of Asian  youth was given and later illustrated by a sample research on Filipino youth. Lecture on the Ministry in the Church closed the first week.
The second week opened with talks on Adolescent Psychology and its attendant relevance to guidance and counseling. In line  with their psychological  growth, the youth experience moral and faith development which ultimately shapes their religious identity. This psycho-religious development pattern requires a program of religious education suited to it.
Such a type of religious education was explained in the third week, in conjunction with value education. Growth is a difficult process for the young especially in these times when they have to confront as many divergent forces-drugs, sexual exploitation, the influence of mass media, economic and social insecurity. Besides, youth have a culture all their own. Adults should understand this sub-culture if they ever hope to reach the young.
The fourth week was devoted to a Youth Camp and to liturgical celebrations for youth. A group of forty boys and girls from different parishes of Manila were invited. How do young people interact in a religious atmosphere? For three days the delegates had the opportunity to watch and participate in the event.
Campus Ministry, an apostolate relatively new in the Philippines, was the subject of discussion in the fifth and final week. It was followed by ministry to out-of-school youth. The rest of the week took up pastoral initiatives in the forms of organizations and services like the Tahanan Outreach Projects Seminars (TOPS), Charismatic Renewal, Foculare, Balik-Sinag, Antioch Communities, Dulaang Sibol, Bigkis and Ministry to Girls in Trouble.
The following is a summary of the main talks:
Dr. Mina Ramirez offered a framework for understanding the youth of Asia from the perspective of their social creativity and the central role they play in development efforts. She observed that, despite geographical, historical, and socially-rooted differences, there seems to be a homogenization of culture among Asian youth. This phenomenon she accounted for on the level of global realities in the economic, political, and cultural dimensions. An international economic order, based  merely on profit, reinforces inequities between the  developed and the developing countries and between the rich and poor in each country. To enable business firms oriented to the world market to operate without interference from labor movements, a national security ideology makes sure that political stability becomes the primary consideration in the Third Word. The most subtle form of domination is in the realm of international information and communication order. The transnational corporations and their political partners maintain control of all forms of media. This promotes attitudes of materialism and consumerism, especially among the youth.
Dr. Jose M. de Mesa contented that the understanding of ministry in the  Church today is only possible when we take into account both the Judeo Christian tradition and the contemporary experience of people. Just as the early Church was sensitive to the society of its time and responded to it, so must ours be today. To be a real sign of salvation, it is necessary for the Church to be in culturated and contextualized – she must be a part of the world within which she is a sign.
We find in the New Testament three characteristics that distinguished the ministries in the early Church: (1) Christian ministry is not a sacral office. (2) Christian ministry is an action. (3) Christian ministry is universal and diverse.
In the early days of the Church the relationship of Ministry and Community was very strong. The ministry leadership was a call of the community. Ministry developed around community. For certain historical reasons, however, this ceased to be. These reasons were: (1) the division of the Church community into the clergy and laity, (2) the episcopalization of the ministry, and (3) the sacerdotalization of the ministry of the leadership. Ministry is service so that the Kingdom of God comes by way of doing the will of God, responding to the needs of the people so that the experience of God’s graciousness and goodness may become the heritage of all.
A developmental view of adolescence was presented by Dr. Naomi R. Ruiz. Since adolescence happens to the family and not only to an individual child, it is important to see this period from two developmental frameworks – Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory and the Stages of Family Life Cycle.
Erikson describes life as consisting of eight stages from to death. At each stage of development a crisis emerges which may either be positively or negatively resolved. A positive resolution leads to strengthening of the ego and therefore to greater adaptation. A negative resolution weakens the ego and inhibits adaptation. How a person resolves a crisis will have a lasting effect on one’s view of self and society.
Only the first five involve adolescents: basic trust vs. mistrust, autonomy vs. shame and doubt, initiative vs. guilt, industry vs. inferiority, and identity vs. identity diffusion.
The family with children of adolescent age is the particular stage of the family life cycle when both parents and children undergo major interlocking transition in their  development. The adolescent’s shift of loyalty to the peer group coincides  with their parents’ midlife crisis. The teenagers’ own ambivalence towards independence makes it all the more confusion for parents. Parents are bothered and bewildered by age-appropriate behaviors of adolescents. These are their need for privacy, their need to rebel, their need to be away from family, their mood variations, and peer group pressures.
Quite often, appropriate support is not given to teenagers because of inability to recognize adolescent depression when it occurs. The norms used are usually those for adults. However, adolescent depression is basically different from that of adults. Teenagers express depression in different ways. Their depression elicits different responses in those around them and is minimized by adults. It is intense and has a lifelong impact.
Parents should try enhance communication with adolescents by empathizing with them, creating a non-threatening atmosphere, by using active listening and the I-message (a direct and honest way of expressing one’s thoughts and feelings without putting down the other) and by the no-less method of resolving conflicts.
According to Rev. Paul Byrne, SSC, the identify of a young person could be examined from three different angles: from the phase of his past, present, and future; from the community to which he belongs; and from his own sense of uniqueness. The way youth go (emotionally), so grows their faith. The process of identifying formation is successful if the resulting identity is clear: ” I know where I stand vis-a-vis my past, present and future. I can find my place in the community and I realize my uniqueness.”
Fr. Byrne took the definition of faith according to James W. Fowler as (1) “SRADDHA,” a search or a setting of one’s heart upon; (2) “BELIEBEN,” a cherishing dear; and (3)”CREDO,” an entrusting or a committing. It is something personal and deep within each person. It takes place in a kind of “relationship.” At the beginning, a person joins with his parents, his family , his peers, priests, ministers, all the people who have helped him come to appoint of shared center of value and power. This center operates like a symbol to bring together the meanings and purposes of a person’s life. Fowler’s  faith stages start with infancy and end with adults of 35 years and more who they try to integrate everything that has been good in their and get in contact with their deeper selves.

Bro. Miguel rapatan, FSC, talked on Religious Education. The student, he noted, has three basic needs that every religious education program should try to meet: effective, assertive, and creative. The young need to perceive their religion teacher as an affirming presence. They want a spiritual guide, one who will walk with them as Christ did with the teo disciples at Emmaus. Principal among teenagers’ assertive needs is their need to maintain a “sense of the holy” in a rapidly-changing world. The creative needs of young people surface in their desire to express their spirituality in unique and varied forms. The Religion Program of St. Joseph’s High School, a Free Scool, a Free School of the La Salle Brothers in Bacolod City, takes into consideration these needs.
Since values are important in any kind of religious education, Mr. Ernest tan followed up with a talk on “Values Education.” The process of valuing begins with choices. Our choices depend on our cognitive structure, some of us having more elements in our cognitive structure than others. When we help the young go into this exploration process, the first thing we do is to help them to get in touch with their cognitive structure. Furthermore, decisions cannot be objective because part of us is the effective element, so we cannot help but consider decisions also with regards to feelings and emotions. Lastly, many times our behavior pattern jives or does not jive with what we are doing.
Values, according to Louis C. Raths, involve Choosing, Prizing and Acting. A value is something that is freely chosen from alternatives and is acted upon, that which the individual celebrates as being part of  his creative integration in his development as a person. The seven steps of choosing freely are: choosing from alternatives, considering the possible consequences, cherishing, affirming publicly, doing, and doing it repeatedly and consistently.
There are three kinds of values: (1) Act Values – these are values that are part of us, having already been integrated into our system: like security and a sense of self-worth. (2) Choice Values – these are values not yet integrated, on which we are trying to work, especially in pressure situation. (3) Vision Values – there are values we could ideally like to develop, but which we could only attain by working on the constraints.
Mr. tan next explained the Phase of Consciousness. The Phase of Consciousness is our perception of the world and our role in it. Phase I is similar to the stage of an infant who sees the world as a mystery. Phase II comes when the individual realizes that part of his survival in this world belongs to a world of do’s and don’t s. Phase III looks upon the world as a project. The self is seen as independent. The focus is Me. What can I do? In Phase IV, the world is seen as a mystery I care for, because of the potential it carries. The focus now is on the We as Life-Givers. many people find the process a liberating experience. It forces them to take charge of their life and to take self-direction.
Dr. Telly Somera gave a summary of Kohlberg’s moral values theories. Moral development has a cognitive base, but to achieve higher status of moral thinking, one has to go beyond the first three of Kohlberg’s stages (punishment-obedience, pleasure-pain, social approval). The cognitive stage does not assure the development of higher moral stages. Stages are sequential and invariant. Earlier stages do not disappear. Individual variation enriching stages of moral development is enormous, dependent on the age structures of a person, his biological condition and environment. Reciprocity – clear recognition of social sanctions – involves interaction of equals: What I will do is dependent on what he does to me. Schools/families tend to perpetuate the lower levels of morality. Principled morality requires the ability to think abstractly and independently. Developmental views concentrate on the reasons for behavior and not on specific content. Value relativism is strongly denied by all developmental theories.
The three goals of value education are re-orientation re-direction and transformation. values contribute actively towards the integral development of a person. The four basic dimensions in his ofle are physical, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual. If he is moving towards their  integration, he is valuing; if not, he is dis-valuing.
Rev. Gerald Arbuckle, S.M gave a general overview of Culture and Youth. We must realize, he said, the power of culture. Culture teaches us to hear things, to smell things, and to see things that other cultures do not see. Culture directs emotion along certain directions.
There are two broad types of culture – the Folk and the Associational. In Folk Culture what happened in the past will determine what happens in the present and in the future. In Associational Culture there is constant change. Language in Folk Culture is repetitive and concrete; in Associational. absolutely short. In Folk Culture time is of the essence, everything is  clearly and definitely timed. In Folk Culture the older you get, the more wisdom you are supposed to have, the greater prestige you have. In Associational Culture, to be young is to have power. While in Folk Culture the emphasis is on the group in the Associational it is on the individual, as shown in the land tenure. Folk Culture stresses group loyalty. Among the methods used to control the group are the fear of gossip, the fear of the supernatural, and the fear of ostracism.
Culture is a network of symbols. Rarely do we appreciate the power of symbols. Symbols relate to the heart; they bring feelings out. Evangelization can touch people only if we move to their  symbols. We should ask ourselves whether the symbols the adult culture is placing on youth are causing them grave and even unnecessary tension.
Ethnocentricity is thinking we are bigger that we actually are. It comes out of an excessive love of our own culture and is an obstacle to understanding another culture. Our own culture, our age bracket, give us colored glasses through which to see the other culture.
Youth culture is a process in contemporary and traditional cultures. Family system in associational culture, for example, is carried into politics – on the one hand the youth are learning the necessity for justice and respect for the individual, yet they are finding that the family system of pressure and intrigues and injustices is being carried on.
All cultures need ritual. Young people need space to work through their confusion, to touch the rules of life. Ideally, the process is geared to internalize values of creativity and certainty, to give a sense of roots, to develop questioning. The tragedy of our times is that the initiation of our youth is provided by schools; though human formation is rarely provided because the adults themselves are confused.
Youth culture is a mini-politics of rebellion against obscure social forces. It creates a collective symbolic identity and explores the excitement and vitality of being young. Youth culture is reacting to adult control culture. The signs of rebellion are: (1) alienation through contact/conflict, (2) culture of poverty or anomie, (3) alienation within the family, (4) quest for community, (5) alienated elite, and (6) youth themselves.
The last speaker was Mr. Augustine Loorthusamy who talked on Media and Youth. All of us who are interested in values, attitudes and knowledge in terms of behavior, hoping to become change agents or models to the youth, should try to understand the forces of social change, asserted Dr. Loorthusamy.
What are the determinants of social change? War/revolution, ideology, religion, colonization and, most important of all, theological revolution – the wheel, writing, the printing press, stream, electricity. Electricity caused the emergence of sensorial, electronic communication. In working with youth, we adults should always be aware that we belong to a different culture from theirs. Ours is the Book Culture – call it track I. We are very cognitive, logical, linear, legalistic, stiff, and formal. Young people, on the other hand, Track II, are audio-visual; they are effective,  sensorial, mosaic, imaginative and non-formal. To reach them, we must start with the affective. We have to update ourselves. We have to go deeper into youth to find out their audio-visual culture and, knowing it, try to enter through their door.

Growth and Yield Performance of Seventeen (17) Varieties of Sweet Potato in Catalunan Grande, Davao City

Introduction

Sweet Potato (Ipomomea batatas) has been considered one of the more important root crops in the country not only because it is consumed extensively as a major substitute of our staple food such as rice and corn but also because of its great potential value in industry, locally and abroad. Sweet potatoes are utilized either as food, feeds, or as raw materials in a number of industries. It is a potential source of starch, industrial alcohol, glucose, and alcoholic beverage. Root crops, especially sweet potato, have been continuously providing consumers with carbohydrates. Moreover, the increase in the price of animal feeds has forced many farmers to use cheaper feedstuffs. This study was undertaken to determine which of seventeen (17) varieties of camote perform well and are adaptable to Davao conditions.

Materials and Methods

The research project was conducted in San Pedro, Catalunan Grande, Davao City, which is fifteen (15) kilometers from the Ateneo de Davao University main campus. The research area is approximately two hundred feet above see level with a slightly sloping topography. The total research are was 60 square meters and has a sandy clay type of soil with a pH value of 5.6.

Preparation of the land was done by plowing and harrowing 2 to 3 times followed by fallowing to control the nematodes that may be present in the soil. This was completed one week prior to planting. The soil was then hilled-up to facilitate easy operations and to avoid early overlapping of vines.

Experimental Design

The experiment was laid out as a randomized complete block design with seventeen (17) treatments and three (3) replicates.

[Refer to the Original Copy]

Terminal vine cuttings of about 30 to 40 cm. long were used as planting materials. These were taken from original plant varieties grown and propagated one year before the conduct of this study. Originally, 21 variety cuttings were propagated in the same experimental site. Close spacing was used to facilitate planted per hill. Full attention was given to the newly planted cuttings but due to unfavorable conditions only 17 varieties were able to survive.

Planting was done at the onset of the rainy season at a seeding rate of three (3) cuttings per hill. The distance between hills and between rows was 120 centimeters. Three (3) hills per treatment per replicate were planted. Organic in two parts; one-half was applied two months after planting and the other half one month before harvest. The tubers were harvested 120 days from planting. Data on number of tubers and tuber weight were collected immediately after harvest.

 

 

The International Situation of Women

In an unprecedented and historical meeting of almost 15,000 women in Nairobi, Kenya, the United Nations marked the end of the International Decade of Women. Two conferences, governmental and non-government, were convened to assess the decade’s accomplishments, with regard to the themes set, namely, Equality, Development and Peace.

The Non-governmental Organization Forum (NGO), scheduled 1,000 workshops within an eight-day period, setting the frantic pace for the delegates who had to care for their own workshops and to sit in others that caught their interest.

From the very start, the NGO Conference, called FORUM ’85 was already hounded by events that reflected the circumstances surrounding the true status of women in the world today. For example, there ware clear pronouncements from the organizers that the women should steer clear of political issues and should limit themselves to purely women problems. The angry reply from progressive delegates was that women’s problems were political in nature and therefore it was inevitable that political issues would be brought out. In electric workshops ranging from breastfeeding, to prostitution, to revolutionary struggles, delegates evaluated the UN countries’ gains and losses in the past ten years.

Equality

In the last few years, more and more women have come to realize that society treats them structurally and systematically different from men. The main consequence of this “other treatment” is that women have relatively less freedom to arrange their lives according to their own wishes. There is therefore an unequal balance of power between men and women  manifesting itself in various levels of societal and personal life. For instance, women work indoors and outdoors. Indoors: doing housework, rearing children, feeding them, washing, cooking, cleaning, etc. Outdoors: working in the factory, teaching in school, selling in the market, being employed in an office, etc. Yet despite these, women are NOT a social power of any importance. Many of their tasks are unpaid and unrecognized. In Third World countries, including the Philippines, peasant women are expected to help in the weeding, planting, harvesting, tending of a vegetable garden, raising livestock, aside from rearing the children and housekeeping. Yet their contribution to farm and production is largely uncompensated. Among middle class women in the Philippine society, we see housewives employed in the offices at the same time earning extra on the side by doing a little buy and sell business. Her efforts may result to her getting higher income or bringing home bigger pay compared to that of her husband. Yet she is considered a secondary wage earner.

The widespread concept that women are supplementary income earners has further hindered women’s struggle for higher pay and equal opportunities in promotion. That women are secondary wage earners is really a myth, for lately, with more and more men being laid off, more and more women have become the major or only wage-earners. Coupled with the woman’s inherent resourcefulness and initiative, her salary plus other income may result in a higher take home pay than that of her husband.

Education wise, throughout much of the developing world, school is still considered a luxury to be enjoyed primarily by boys.  Although worldwide it is reported that school attendance by girls has risen, still when choices are made as to who gets educated first, the girls have to bow to traditional home decisions that boys have the priority. At present when tuition fees have soared beyond the capabilities of low-income families, many girls will be made to drop out of school.

Unequal opportunities are also the lot of women. In a workshop on working women, some issues were raised: Why is it that multinational companies not only prefer to employ women in their factories but are also increasingly making use of homeworking? Why is an advanced technology being coupled with a pre-industrial form of labor? Why do women, irrespective of their level of education, get recruited into low-skilled and low-paying jobs?

The women who tried to answer these questions countered by saying that the value of women’s work is defined by an ideology which circumscribes their role in the family and by male definitions of feminity. Whereas men are given that status of “real” workers outside the home, the “breadwinner” role which renders them the titular “head of the household, women’s work and attitudes are redirected by their supposed primary roles as wives, mothers, and careers. Even many of their professional roles- in schools, hospitals, and the social services- are seen as extensions of their roles as teachers of their own children, nurses at home, and careers of the home and heart. Although they have vital tasks in any society, they are generally undervalued and underpaid. In this way, women’s subordinates position is sustained through their financial dependence on a higher male income.

Seeing women’s role as domestic also contributes to justify inadequate education and training facilities and lack of promotion for  women. They are not supposed to mind boring and repetitive jobs and are supposed to be unsuited to the acquisition of “trained skills.”

Women who lose their jobs in factories are often unwilling or unable to return to their families in the provinces. They remain in the areas around the factories. For lack of income, they are forced into prostitution as their only means of survival.

The issue inequality is most blatant in the case of women’s situation in the labor market. Filipino women constitute more than of our 56 million population. But until now, they comprise only 1/3 of the recognized labor force. Housework is not counted in the computation of the GNP. In Europe, there is an ongoing movement to recognize housework as part of the productive labor force and to seek compensation from the government for these efforts. These European women announced that on October 24 they will leave their homes, leave their children in the care of a few women, and they will stay in the park not doing any washing, cooking, cleaning or any other housework for at least one day if only to dramatize the importance of housework.

Last week, I saw on TV, a short film clip on housework and how such  a particular household task would cost if we were to put a price tag on it. For example, it enumerated certain tasks and the equivalent amount they deserve: tutoring a grade schooler on his homework, so many dollars; taking care of a sick baby, so many dollars; ironing the husband’s shirts; another set of dollars; and so on and so forth. The amount totaled was staggering, supporting the claim that housework is that the valuable and that underestimated.

In its Nairobi report, NEWSWEEK magazine says that today, women perform 2/3 of the world’s work but earn only 1/100 of its income and own less than 1/100 of its property. Representing half of the world’s population, women still remain bound by cultural, political and economic  constraints that prevent them from becoming full equals of men. Nowhere is women’s burden heavier than in the Third World; which brings us to the second theme of the decade, development.

Development

Here in Mindanao where rural areas highly underdeveloped, women wage a desperate war against the incursion of multinational companies and the consequences of their profit hungry activities. In areas which have been hamletted or bombed chemically, the forced evacuations have caused loss of land and property and even loss of lives. In cases where husbands or other male members of the family have been arrested, detained or even salvaged, many women have been forced to become major wage-earners for their families and at the same time to follow-up cases of those arrests and detentions. Poverty is so common that many young women have gone to the city or urban centers in the hope of finding jobs but often end up as exploited domestic help or worse, as hostesses in bars and nightclubs, or even prostitutes in military bases and tourist belts.

In the name of development, Third World countries prostitute, literally and figuratively, their natural and human resources. The tourism business in our country wittingly or unwittingly promotes the exploitation and degradation of women and children alike. In military bases, in tourist spots in Metro Manila, and in resorts like Puerto Galera or Buracay, children from 9 to 14 years of age fall prey to the evil needs of European and Japanese men who take advantage of the extreme poverty of the people. If this is not sanctioned by our government, why do we have offices that give licenses to these prostitutes? Why are there free VD clinics to check the hospitality girls? In its new pursuit of the all powerful dollar, the Marcos administration has wittingly or unwittingly encouraged prostitution in all forms- mail order brides, tourism hospitality girls, even overseas employment.

Also in the name of development, there is a new phenomenon in the world today called the international division of labor. The last 15 years have seen growing internationalization of industries that traditionally depended heavily on women’s work, such as the textile and garment industry, electronics factories, and miscellaneous manufacturers which include toys, sports goods, etc. Women are now working worldwide in a global assembly line: from the Levi Strauss factory in Tenessee, USA to the Levi Strauss Jeans Factory in Glasgow, Scotland to the Levi Strauss factory in Manila. Then there is the electronic chip plant in Silicon Valley, California, to the micro-chip plant in Silicon Geln, Scotland to the micro-chip plant in the Penang Free Trade Zone in Malaysia. Large firms such as Sony, Philipps, and Motorola have relocated their production from the first world countries play an active role here. They set up free trade zones to attract the off-shore assembly firms to produce under sub-contract for the first world. It is interesting to note, however, that the important stages of production are in the first world while the function of assembling only is given to the third world factories. Let’s take the case of the micro electronic components industry. The work of designing and fabricating the chips is retained in the first world countries. It is the labor intensive process of assembling the chips into wiring harness to make components which is relocated to the third world. The capacity to initiate technological in the industry remains largely in USA and Japan.

Today, for women working worldwide in labor intensive factory jobs, divisions are created by the ever-present possibility of jobs being relocated. The threat is “if you don’t accept the wages and conditions we offer, and produce the output we require, then we will lose orders, and we will close down, we will move elsewhere.” Because the women are numerous and eager to keep the jobs they need badly, they become willing to work twice as hard for a smaller fraction of the wages. American women are set in competition with  Mexican women pitted against those in Southeast Asia; those in Southeast Asia against those in China. The irony is that everywhere, women are designated as cheap labor in comparison to men. They are regarded as less skilled, although they have “nimble outbursts” and had better be discouraged from joining unions, “just in case.”

Although the global assembly line does in some ways divide women, it also gives woman some things in common. They are exploited in these assembly lines. Poverty in the third world countries has forced women to take and guard any jobs they get- therefore high production targets are imposed, long working hours required, low wages endured, harsh working conditions experienced as management techniques characterized by patriarchy and racism are patiently endured by these women who need the jobs badly. Even very harsh working conditions that threaten their health are undergone by women who need to be able to continue working. For example in a factory in Barnsley, England, which makes tennis balls, women workers were poisoned by chemical fumes. Six hundred altogether were affected and 24 were made to stay in the hospital for some time. In India, asbestos workers have very few anti-pollution or dust control measures. Here in the Philippines, a similar asbestos factory has a been accused of not providing safety measures for its workers. In most factories especially in electronic plants, the areas are very clean. In most Export Processing Zones, such as in Malaysia, India and Thailand, the health risks are so great for workers that most women are laid off when they are about 23 years old. It means they have reached the end of their capacity to work. These are usually women in heavy duty garment factories. In Hongkong, a study was done in 1981 on electronic workers. It was found that 90.2% of those using microscopes had eye strains, and those who had been working there for a long time were in danger of losing their eyesight. They were all women.

The Philippine government’s report on the status of women shows that more women have been employed these past ten years compared to the period before 1975.  It is true, but what kind of work have they gotten into? A British manufacturing company established in the Bataan Processing Zone has materials coming from Hongkong but the labor  is Filipino. Why? At least ten Filipino workers can be had for  the price of one British worker. This is supposed to be development, but for whom? So much is invested in projects that enhance the prestige or tourism of a third world country, but little attention is given to basic services like water system, transportation, health care and the like.

Peace

To stress the theme of Peace, a peace tent was set up in the University of Nairobi campus, the site of the Conference. Easily one of the most popular places in the ares, it accommodated  discussions, debates, spontaneous sharing, formal  press conferences and informal dialogues on the controversial issue of Peace. The university of this topic affecting so many women in many countries today, drew a lot of support so much so that on the third day of the Conference, the Kenyan Government, threatened to close it down. Only when the NGO Coordinator, Dame Nita Barrows threatened that if the Peace Tent were closed down she would close down the entire Forum, did harassments of the Peace Tent stop. However, the number of military men in plain clothes tripled in the following days:

This kind of action is typical of numerous events manifesting the many faces of militarization in liberationists countries today. State violence against women is rampant but is most intensely felt in countries for genuine liberation. In Nicaragua, El Salvador, Chile, Guatamala, Erytria, Zimbabwe and in our Philippines, more and more women are uniting and openly fighting the effects of militarization in their own nations. Yet peace is a ticklish issue. The Philippine government’s report did not include any details about peace. In a sincere attempt to explain the true condition of Filipino women especially in highly militarized areas like Mindanao, GABRIELA, presented a special report on peace entitled, “Peace Is An Illusion.” Cutting across all sectors of Philippine society, the issue of peace is a dream most avidly desired by the sectors. The peasant women are losing land, property, husbands, children, and brothers in their fight for survival against elements such as the military, paramilitary units, and armed fanatical groups.

The labor sector encounters the force and might of military power as they exercise their right to strike, picket, or express their grievance against an unjust and unfair management. The crackdown on labor continues as more and more workers who are suffering under the intensifying economic crisis are airing their legitimate demands. The urban poor women are in constant fear for their own safety as well as that of their families as raids, zoning, strafings, and salvaging become ordinary occurrences in communities.

Tribal Filipino women suffer in the hands of military forces who come with the incursion of multinational companies that grab their tribal land and destroy their indigenous way of life. Teachers have the National Service Law to contend with, and the students, increasing campus militarization. Even church women are not exempted from the regime’s harassment and repression as more and more religious women who are involved in mass actions are accused as leftist organizers of innocent people. The middle class women who used to enjoy some amount of comfort in their lives are now the nation’s noveau poor not the noveau rich, as they become direct and indirect victims of the regime’s repression. When we look around and see children dying from hunger it is not only a scandal but a grave mortal sin against God and the people.

Peace is truly an illusion in the Philippines. In a country that has more than 750 recorded political detainees, more than a hundred are women. This tragic state I have become personally involved in since the arrest of my husband, and since I joined FREEDOM. In Bicutan, political prisoners are called public order violators, a clear indication of the regime’s denial of the existence of political prisoners.

The End Results of the Forum

It is unfortunate that the United Nations did not look at the non-governmental forum as a meeting of the minds so significant as to warrant a plenary session with a synthesis and a collation of resolution. In the absence of this, women delegates, nevertheless agreed to meet again five years from now to assess once again their  decision to implement concrete programs that sprung from their decade get-together. The consciousness-raising will have to give way to specific action to ensure women’s health. economic quality, true development, political clout, and genuine liberation. The solidarity expressed by women from the first world countries for the suggle of the third world was truly inspiring and the warm embrace of statehood by other liberationists countries was enough to assure the women that they are not fighting a lonely battle against oppression and exploitation.

We, in the Philippines should begin to cast away the centuries old feudal traditions that tied us to home, that limited our growth, and that reinforced the feudal, patriarchal mentality that women are dependent on men, and inferior to them. We should join other women who have awakened to the reality that unless they participate int he struggle against all forms of domination and oppression, we cannot attain dignity and true freedom. If we are concerned not only about our own happiness but also that of our children, and their children after them we have to take our place  in the national struggle for liberation. The decade just ended, but for us, the task building a new nation is just beginning. The forces of imperialism must be banished from our shores for they will dehumanize not only the women, but even our own men. Together with other Filipinos advocating democracy, nationalism and independence, let us all be one in our struggle for true change.

Reflection for the Feast of the Assumption “Pista Noon at Ngayon”

As is clear from the theme for this year’s Fiesta, the Ateneo Community is being invited to look back to the past in order to rediscover and reaffirm the significance of the historical and cultural roots of this important event. It is hoped that by so doing, we will attain a better understanding of our present situation and of the challenges we face as we continue to move forward to an uncertain future. This on-going effort of the Ateneo as a Filipino school to promote a deeper awareness and appreciation of our national identity and cultural heritage will focus our attention on a very important but often neglected sector of our community-our brothers and sisters among the tribal minorities, whose own festive traditions remind us of the deep roots we have as a fundamentally religious people.
While many of us may tend to think of fiesta as peculiar to the type of Christianity which we inherited from Spain in the sixteenth century, a study of the culture of pre-Spanish times shows that this is not so. As we have learned from our tribal brothers and sisters, religious celebrations similar to what we now call “fiesta” had been a part of the lives of our ancestors for centuries before the Spaniards set foot on our shores. As a religious people, these forebears of ours acknowledged their basic dependence on “divine beings” and ex pressed this sense of dependence thru rituals of thanksgiving, petition and appeasement at significant moments in their lives. Planting time and harvest time were celebrated thru joyful religious rites whereby they besought “God’s” blessing and gave thanks for a bountiful harvest. Other ritual celebrations met their need to implore divine help in times of widespread sickness and natural calamities while at the same time seeking reconciliation for any offenses the community may have committed Him.
While it is true that each religious ritual had its own specific theme or motif- thanksgiving, petition, appeasement, etc. — as religious rituals, all of them served to deepen the community’s sense of security by maintaining a meaningful relationship with the “spirit world” on which their basic well being depended. One of the main fruits derived from this network of religious beliefs and practices was a corresponding sense of hope based on their experiences of “divine benevolence” throughout their stormy history. And it was this sense of hope, whether conscious or explicit or not, that enabled them to face the uncertainties which the “mystery of Life” held in store for them.
Owing to the basic nature of man as a conscious being, hope has always played a vital role in the fundamental dynamic of living a “meaningful life.” As a being which, as it were, “creates” its own future through the choices and decisions of each day, without hope and a solid basis for that hope the creative energies which propel man forward to his ultimate destiny would remain basically stagnant. The common tendency to withdraw from life’s challenges or to remain passive in times of crisis or even to terminate one’s own life in difficult times are all born of despair. The horrible specter of a “dead end” paralyzes man and renders him impotent. And it is here perhaps, more than any place else that man’s basically religious nature manifests itself. For if hope is to be any thing more than just wishful thinking or self-deception a mature and balanced relationship with God as the ultimate guarantor of a meaningful outcome to a life that often times seems to be going nowhere is absolutely essential.
Living as we do in a highly secularized world, where human achievements  and ingenuity have opened up breathtaking possibilities for progress and development in almost every aspect of life, the readiness of “modern man” to acknowledge and celebrate his utter dependence on God for a meaningful life has diminished considerably. This truth has not left our own historical and cultural development untouched. A rapid overview of the evolution of our fiesta celebrations will show that this is so. More and more our fiestas have become secular celebrations, an escape from our humdrum daily existence, with only a more or less reluctant nod being given to their once basically religious nature. While it is true that certain religious activities have been preserved in this connection, it is likewise true that the secular aspects of our celebrations often receive more of our time and energies.
If this observation is valid and if it is true that religious belief is the basis source of that radical hope every reflective and critical person needs to live a meaningful life, then perhaps the secularization of our fiestas is a sign that many of us have lost, sight of the fundamental basis of our hope for the future. It would be well for us therefore to take time and ask ourselves, just what is the point of this fiesta? What is the significance of the Feast of Our Lady’s Assumption? Where does this apparently irrelevant reality fit into the over all picture of the cares and concerns that constitute the more concrete dimensions of our daily life?
Perhaps we can find the key to the “Mystery” we celebrate at this time and discover its meaning for our lives by reflecting for a moment on a very important passage in Lumen Gentium, Vatican M’s “Dogmatic Constitution on the Church.” There the Fathers of the Council tell us: “In the bodily and spiritual glory which she possesses in heaven, the Mother of Jesus continues in this present world as the image and first flowering of the Church as she (the Church) is to be perfected in the world to come. Likewise, Mary shines forth on earth, until the day of the Lord shall come … .as a sign of sure hope and solace for the pilgrim People of God.” Much of the confusion, uncertainty and insecurity that we experience throughout our earthly lives are manifestations of the reality referred to in the conciliar expression “pilgrim People of God.” For the expression reminds us that “we have not here a lasting city.” We are a people on the move. We are a people with mission. We are a people with a task that has only just begun and which will only be completed at the end of our human history. We are all aware of the fact that we are not yet what we should be, that there is much more for us to do and become both as individuals and as a people. We are also aware that despite all our good intentions and significant talents, the road ahead is very rough and filled with unknown dangers. We have all been tempted at times to just give up for very often the struggle does not seem to be getting us anywhere. Side by side with every victory or step forward, other forces apparently stronger than ourselves seem to divert us from our path and even drive us back a step or two. The resultant fatigue and discouragement are, at, times, almost too much to bear.
As a man very much in touch with the world of our times. Pope John XXIII was very much aware of the fact that the situation described above often leads us to despair. Himself a man, radiant with a joy born of unshakable hope, he once expressed his own belief that the greatest sin of Christians today is to lose hope. For he also believed that we, of all people on the earth, have every reason to hope. We alone, of all the people on the earth, have a concrete basis for hope. We alone know, without doubt, that as a great Christian mystic, Juliana of Nor which once wrote, “all things will be well, all things will be well; every manner of things will be well.” What is this basis for hope? The three basic truths of our Faith: the Incarnation, the Resurrection of Christ and the Assumption of our Lady. For these three truths concertize for us God’s total and irrevocable commitment to the victorious outcome of the various tasks He has entrusted to our care. By becoming man and passing faithfully through the Horrors of His Passion and Death, Jesus has conquered, once and for all, the forces of sin and death in all its forms. In raising Mary to glory in the fullness of her humanity. He gives us every assurance that if we, like Mary, persevere in the task we have received of transforming the earth for the benefit of every man we too shall share in the glory that is hers today. For she is the model of the Church, the symbol of all that we are called and therefore are enabled to be. Her victory is our victory if we, like her, will be not Just “hearers of the word but doers.”
Let us then open up our minds and hearts to the warming, healing life-giving splendor revealed in Mary’s Assumption into Heaven. Let us renew our faith in the promise of glory that this “Mystery” offers to each and everyone of us today in the midst of all the fear and suffering that surrounds us, no matter how difficult and hopeless things may appear at times to be. Strengthened by this hope that has been entrusted to us, let us renew our commitment to the particular task that still lies before us to bring to fulfillment the unforgettable experience of Mary’s maternal love and concern for us as a people that tools place during the “EDSA Revolution”. In this way we will not only be in full harmony with the historical and cultural roots of fiesta tradition, we will actually be contributing to its evolution as we bring to it a new level of human hope. In this way we will be able to bring about that deeper level of understanding and cultural solidarity that we also hope to achieve through our fiesta this year with its very relevant and challenging theme: “Pista Noon at Ngayon.”