THE BEST GIFT IS HOPE by: TONY MELOTO  

Posted by gksiga


This Christmas I realized is my happiest, despite the doom and the gloom I watch on television or read in the papers, because there is so much goodness in my world. Thank you for being a part of it.


Every day I walk with heroes.


Some are successful and powerful who use their resources and influence for the good of many. Most are ordinary day to day heroes who sacrifice their time with family or work to be with the less fortunate. Like the Three Kings and the shepherds, they follow the star to give hope and the priceless gift of self to the abandoned and the suffering in their search for the Savior, who came to bring glad tidings to the poor.


Every day for me is Christmas.


There is no absence of generosity or goodwill or good faith around me. People are in a giving mode all year round when they realize that they can truly make a difference and they can see where their efforts and resources are going. Vision and values are important for many to believe. Credibility is the key that opens heroic generosity.


Every day I see hope for our country.


This is the country of my deepest affection, a gift from God that I treasure. This is the country that still nurtures my belief that the greatest source of hope came to the world in the lowliest circumstances over two thousand years ago – not with economic or military might, without prejudice to color, race, status or gender. It is my faith that it is possible in this land for us to create wealth and spread it, by simply living out our greatest qualities as a people – kalinga and bayanihan – caring and sharing. This is the only way that I know for me to fulfill the dreams of our forefathers and live out the tenets of our Christian faith – to be my brother’s keeper, leaving no Filipino behind. This not only includes but prioritizes the needs of our Muslim brethren and those of other faiths who belong to the minority and are often forgotten.


Starting this Christmas, I pray that more Filipinos can be radical optimists.


Let us consciously spread hope by seeing the good in others, starting with our informal settlers and slum dwellers and the poor farmers and fisher-folks in the countryside, and wishing well and supporting all those who are helping them.


Let us make it our prayer for the day to come that no Filipino will be landless or homeless in this country where there is enough land for all. Likewise, let us make it our firm resolve to harness every idle hand and every idle land to plant and produce until we achieve abundance and no one is hungry among our people. This is not just about capital or technology but about justice and leadership. Social justice is the gift that we can give to the poor that will please the Father, if we look at the mission of the Son as the way to His heart. We need to lead everyone, by example, along this path.


With the recession and depression in the more affluent countries, the Mumbai incident, the growing unrest in Thailand and Malaysia – two Asian neighbors that many thought had it all figured out, it is clear to me that we are not so bad after all. I do not say this for us to gloss over our problems or to exonerate those who are responsible for our woes, but for us not to lose heart or blame one another or bash our country. Definitely, the global recession will affect us but it can also trigger heroic sacrifice among our people. We can turn adversity abroad into opportunities at home. We can start to produce and patronize world-class products instead of importing contaminated goods. We can channel our investments and philanthropy to the Philippines like what many migrants, expats and overseas workers are doing. They are investing in real estate and local businesses with the uncertainty of the stock and money market abroad, and helping the needy in our country, not just their relatives. Gawad Kalinga, and its mission of nation-building, is helping spur patriotic investment and philanthropy to the motherland. Many local corporations are going beyond conventional CSR and investing in viable and effective social enterprises.


Let us continue to pray for our business climate to improve, for investments to pour in, for the GDP to rise, for profit to grow a bigger social conscience, and for the day to come when transactions can be conducted more ethically without resorting to bribes and other corrupt practices. Love for God and country will help us overcome this global economic crisis, and ultimately, free us from poverty and corruption.


Let us not get tired of doing what is good and what is right.


For those of us who are over fifty, let us invest the remaining years of our life building a better world and a future full of hope for our children. Let us not consider ourselves too old or the time too late for us to make a difference. Let us turn our regret into reform and offer our country our energy, our expertise and the greatness of our spirit. This is the way of hope for many of us: the best caring for the least…raising the best to become their best…leaving no one behind…seeing no one as an enemy. It is the way to peace and our ticket to heaven.


Let our lives be good news to others.


Oftentimes, people say that media reports too much bad news. We have discovered that they are equally interested in covering inspiring stories that are relevant to the issues of the day and the needs of our times. Good news also sells.


The best news is the poor themselves. They have shown us that they do not want to beg or steal or remain idle –that they can turn troubled and ugly slums into peaceful and beautiful communities, barren lands into fields of abundance – if they regain their dignity and their dreams for their children.


The next great news is that the young are starting to believe that there is hope in this country. Many of them are mobilizing the campuses to be in solidarity with the less privileged in their communities – to build, to care, to mentor and to learn…and to reconnect with the forgotten Filipino again. It is my great belief that change is coming that will make the future much better than what it is now.


Finally, I pray that we can all be grateful for the gift of this country.


As we advocate for change, let us not forget to count our blessings. Let us discard the mentality that everything is bad and wrong in our country, while everything is good and right abroad. Let us observe a moment of grace when we can simply thank God for this beautiful land and the great privilege of being a Filipino. With all our imperfections and problems, this is still the best spot in the planet for many of us who see this country through the eyes of hope.
This is the Gawad Kalinga dream and I am profoundly grateful to all those who have made it real. From the bottom of my heart, thank you for hoping for our country and caring for our people. May God bestow His infinite blessing on you, and to all those who are precious to you.


MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR!

I WANNA BE LIKE THE JULIUS & TINTIN  

Posted by gksiga


Cheers to Julius Babao and his wife Tintin Bersola, together with their artist friends, who made Christmas more meaningful to residents of Gawad Kalinga Village in Bagong Silang, Caloocan City. They turned over the first batch of 30 houses to the beneficiaries of Julius’ birthday project, ART 40 art auction and exhibit, last July 20 which raised P2.5-M.


Said Julius, “We are happy because this Christmas, the beneficiaries will start living in their new homes. What makes our Art 40 Village unique is that the houses have artworks painted on them. I invited a group of graffiti artists to spray-paint the houses.”


Eighteen more houses will be turned over to the rest of the beneficiaries in January next year, the target completion of the project. Julius and Tintin have tapped the support of Tesda which will give skills training in preparation for the livelihood projects for the GK families.


Aside from the success of ART 40, the couple has so much to thank for this year. Julius was awarded Best Male News Anchor for the sixth consecutive time by Star Awards for TV organized by the Philippine Movie Press Club (PMPC) and for two straight years now, was voted No. 1 Favorite Male Personality by Anak TV, a yearly top-of-mind nationwide survey being conducted by the Southeast Asian Foundation for Children and Television.


On the other hand, Tintin received a special citation from the recent Catholic Mass Media Awards (CMMA) for her book The Story of Christine. She made it again to the list of Top 10 Most Favorite Female Personalities by the Anak TV Awards (her fifth from Anak TV since it was launched five years ago).


They look forward to more blessings in the Year of the Ox.

a christmas story  

Posted by gksiga


A student who was writing his paper on Christmas conducted a survey on people he met in the street on what Christmas meant to them.

On the first question, “Do you celebrate Christmas?” The most frequent answer was “a little.” He then asked a follow-up question of what they mean for “a little.” The common explanation was “the times were hard. We could only prepare just enough for every member of the family to gather around something on Christmas Eve.”

To the question, “Why do you celebrate Christmas?” Many street respondents raised quizzical eyebrows as if the question is stupid, nonsensical. “Of course, it’s the birthday of Jesus Christ!” was the usual answer.

What’s so important about that? To this question many respondents looked at the student wondering if he was kidding them. Many just walked away without answering him. Those who courteously remained for a while had varied open-ended circular replies to the question, like:

1. It’s important because it’s his birthday…
2. It’s time to celebrate, to rejoice, to be happy…
3. It makes the members of the family closer to each other…
4. It’s a get-together times for long unseen friends…

The student almost gave up his quest and thought of changing his topic to what the New Year means to the persons on the street. But in the park, that afternoon, he saw an elderly woman sitting leisurely on a bench. He approached and began to interview her. The lady was kind and happy enough to answer all his questions.

Yes, she celebrated Christmas. She usually celebrated the season for sometime now by soliciting for three weeks used toys from well-off families in the neighborhood and distributed them to some children who lived along the railway on Christmas day. In the evening, she would go to church for the Christmas Eve mass, after which she would savor the hot chocolate and puto maya in the dining stall near the park, then sit until the break of dawn on the very bench she was sitting, recalling the past when she and her entire family would celebrate Christmas Eve together the same way. She was alone now; her entire family – her husband and three sons, perished in a landslide a few days before Christmas day in a nearby classy residential area some years back.

The student was stunned by what he heard but pursued his questioning. Why of all things do you focus your solicitation and distribution on toys? My donors asked the same question, she said. Well, I told them, I treasure those moments seeing my husband and my three young boys playing with their new toys on Christmas day. Actually, most of the toys I receive from the neighborhood are not old but new ones, she chuckled; and they are all ready for picking up when I moved around to collect them. One Christmas a fine lady got very interested to witness what I was doing and helped me distributed the toys to the kids. She was so happy with the experience and told her story to some friends. Now, actually I am no longer alone in distributing toys in some depressed areas. A lady circle was organized in the neighborhood and the members distributed not just toys but used clothing and packs of goodies during the Christmas season.

With that tragedy, what does Christmas mean to you now, the student asked.

I t never changes, she said. Christmas is always and will always be a thanksgiving celebration. A Savior was once born for us and that’s enough big reason why we should always be thankful and happy, not only during Christmas time but through all the days of our lives. I overcome the tragedy by counting my blessings. I once had a happy family. Yes, my loved ones were all gone now but not everybody had the opportunity to have a happy family. They died and disappeared from my sight but they are all alive in my heart and in my mind. You can’t kill a beautiful memory. You can only add more beauty to it. This I do by making little children happy with the toys that kind-hearted people give to them. Without thinking about it, my act touched and changed the lives of some people in my neighborhood. Anyway, the birth of Christ assures me that someday I will be with my family again. That what makes the season so special to me, she smiled.

Some lessons could be gleaned from the widow’s Christmas story.

First, Christmas is a thanksgiving celebration for mankind because of the birth of the Savior Jesus Christ. Thanking God for giving us a Savior is the essence of the celebration.

Second, we can overcome some tragedies in life if we know how to count our blessings. Even tragedies are blessing in disguise because they could make us a much better person. Unfortunately, many of us do not know how to count our blessings. When something bad or something we do not like happens to us we blamed other people, or ourselves or God. It is very sickening. It makes everybody feel bad. We must learn to count our blessings to make life more bearable.

Finally, we can transform tragedies into blessings to others.

The story of the woman becomes a blessing to the toy givers. It enlightens them on the beauty of life amidst the cruelty of fate. It makes them cheerful givers and more sensitive to the needs of other people. They don’t only give discards of things they don’t need anymore but share a portion of their material possessions if only to make the least of their kind happy even just for a day or two. They have become a blessing to the railway kids and street children and their families. The giving neighbors have become truly rich. For it is not what we possess but what we give away that makes us rich.

But one may say that I have no possessions to share to others. I am willing to give but I have nothing to give.

That is not true. We always have something to give away, to share with others. If not wealth, then we give our talents, our skills, and our time to some worthy causes to improve the quality of life of other people. Your cheerful mood, your contagious smile, and your capacity to listen to the wails of friends in despair make a big difference in this fickle, cruel but beautiful world.

THE LUCKY GENERATION  

Posted by gksiga


TO ALL FOLKS WHO WERE BORN IN THE 1950's, 60' s, 70's and early 80's !!First, some of us survived being born to mothers who did not have an OB-Gyne and drank San Miguel Beer while they carried us. While pregnant, they took cold or cough medicine, a te Linunod, balikutsa, bukhayo and didn't worry about diabetes.


Then after all that trauma, our baby cribs were made of hard wood covered with lead-based paints, ang uban kay duyan nga habol gihigtan ug pisi nga inigtabyog ug kusog ma pakong intawon ta sa bongbong. We had no soft cushy cribs that play music, no disposable diapers (lampin lang sa General Milling nga naa'y faded picture nga nag-salute), and when we rode our bikes, we had no helmets, no kneepads, wala pa gyu'y brake ang bisikleta.


As children, we would ride in hot un-airconditioned buses with wooden seats (Bisaya Bus nga pultahan puros ang kilid, Corominas Bus nga senimana ang brake), or cars with no airconditioning & no seat belts (karon kay Minibus na nga nindot kaayo ug sounds or Ceres Bus nga bugnaw ug aircon) Riding on the back of a carabao on a breezy summer day was considered a treat. (karon; ang mga bata wala na kaila ug Kabaw) We drank water from the garden hose and NOT bottled mineral water sa Nature Spring or Viva, or Absolute Mineral water (usahay gani, straight from the faucet or poso or Tabay!) We shared one soft drink bottle with four of our friends, and NO ONE actually died from this. Or contracted hepatitis.


We ate rice with star margarine, bahaw nga gibutangan ug asin ug mantika sa baboy, drank raw eggs straight from the shell, and drank softdrinks with real sugar in it (dili diet coke or Pepsi Max), but we weren't sick or overweight kay......


WE WERE ALWAYS OUTSIDE PLAYING!! We would leave home in the morning and play all day, and get back when the streetlights came on. Syatong, Bato-Lata, Bagol, Dakop-Dakop, Tago-Tago, Ngita'g Kaka. No one was able to reach us all day ( wala pa'y uso ang cellphone) . And yes, we were O.K. We would spend hours building our wooden trolleys (katong bearing ang ligid) or Karitong Kawayan nga karaang tsinilas ang giporma nga ligid and then ride down the street , wala ma'y gidungog nga naligsan atoh! After hitting the sidewalk or falling! into a canal (sewage channel) a few times, we learned to solve the problem ourselves with our bare & dirty hands .


We did not have Playstations, Nintendo's, X-boxes, no video games at all, no 100 channels on cable, no DVD movies, no surround stereo, no IPOD's, no cell phones, no computers, no Internet, no chat rooms, and no Friendsters. ........ ...WE HAD REAL FRIENDS and we went outside to actually talk and play with them! We fell out of trees, got cut, broke bones and teeth and there were no stupid lawsuits from these accidents. The only rubbing we get is from our friends with the words..sakit bai ? pero kung kontra gani nimo ang imong kadula,,,,singgitan lang dayon ug..Mayra,Gabaan! We played marbles (jolen) in the dirt , washed our hands just a little and ate Pan Bahug-bahug & Bagumbayan (recycled bread man diay to kay wala mahalin!)


We were not afraid of getting germs in our stomachs. We had to live with homemade guns (giporma nga kahoy, gihigtan ug garter ug lastiko) , saplong , tirador ug uban pa nga pwedeng magkasakitay. Pero lingaw gihapon kaayo ang tanan. We made up games with sticks ( syatong ), and cans ( Bato-Lata )and although we were told they were dangerous, wala man gyud to'y actual nga nabuta bah, bukol lang nuon sa agtang naa. We walked, rode bikes, or took tricycles to a friend's house and knocked on the door or batoon ug gagmay nga bato ang bungbong, or just yelled for them to jump out the window! Mini basketball teams had tryouts and not everyone made the team. Those who didn't pass had to learn to deal with the disappointment. Wala pa nang mga childhood depression ug damaged self esteem ek-ek ra na. Ang maglagot, pildi. Ang mga Ginikanan naa ra sa daplin para motan-aw ra sa duwa sa mga bata, dili para manghilabot ug makig-away sa ubang parents.


That generation of ours has produced some of the best risk-takers, problem solvers, creative thinkers and successful professionals ever! They are the CEO's, Engineers, Doctors and Military Generals of today. The past 50 years have been an explosion of innovation and new ideas. We had failure, success, and responsibility. We learned from our mistakes the hard way. You might want to share this with others who've had the luck to grow up as real kids. We were lucky indeed.


And if you like, forward it to your kids too, so they will know how brave their parents were. It kind of makes you wanna go out and climb a tree, doesn't it?!


P.S. - The big letters are because your eyes may not be able to read this if they were typed any smaller (at your age? Duh!). "Life is not a race, but a journey to be savored each step of the way."

THOUSANDS WALK THE GK WAY: GK HOLDS A SUCCESSFUL EXPO  

Posted by gksiga

by: Marjorie Duterte, GK News Bureau



Thousands walk the GK way of friendship, as Gawad Kalinga celebrated its 5th anniversary last October 11 at Fort Bonifacio in Taguig city, attended by thousands of GK residents, builders, workers, volunteers, partners from the government, corporate, academe, NGOs, religious organizations and the civil society -- all in solidarity for love of God and country.
It was an amazing sight: the rich and the poor walking together in unity, competitors in business encouraging each other, government leaders inspiring their compatriots towards integrity and excellence, and the kapitbahayan (GK residents) walking proudly alongside caretaker teams, their dignity fully restored.
It was a covergence of a variety of peoples formerly divided but now moving forward as one towards a common vision of a first-class Philippines. Everyone was blessed to be a part of the miracle and the friendship.
Here is a run-down of the events that transpired during this year's Gawad Kalinga Expo, an annual anniversary celebration of the pioneering movement that seeks to alleviate extreme poverty in the Philippines and the world.
THE GK Expo Highlights:
The Caretaker Summit (October 10, Ateneo)
Focusing on the heart of Gawad Kalinga, the caretaker teams soaked in a day of information and inspiration to renew and encourage them in their work as mentors for the poor. The Field Book Manual, aimed at providing the science and system to the faith-based movement, was officially launched by GK and the Ateneo GK Builders Institute. Program Heads and GK champions recounted their mission and goals for the caretakers who will empower their army working with them on the ground while partners from government and GK1MB shared their best practices and strategies.
The caretaker team were exhorted to plan and "dream for your community" as executive director Luis Oquiñena emphasized the importance of their presence on the ground. "Our presence tells them that you are important to me," operations head Mari Oquiñena affirmed while enumerating the building blocks of GK which is W.I.S.E: wholisitc, integrated, sustainable, and empowering. "There is no exclusivity in caring for others," he said and encouraged the caretakers of the vision to help the kapitbahayan become benefactors.
Meanwhile, GK visionary Tony Meloto, laid out the vision for Gawad Kalinga. He said that 2003-2010 or GK777 was a time for Social Healing, providing social justice and just structures for the poorest of the poor while moving towards the designer phase or Social Artistry (2011-2017) furthering empowering them by providing the best for the least and helping them achieve their fullest potentials, onwards to Social Progress and sustainability (2018-2024) where the dream of a first-class Philippines will have been fully realized. He announced that Gawad Kalinga's global model for development will be officially launched at the GK Global Summit at Harvard University in Boston, Massachusetts on June 12 to 15, 2009.
The First GK Mabuhay Pageant Held (October 10, Ateneo)
It was a time for celebration. GK's very own Mabuhay Ladies from various GK communities in Metro Manila came together to showcase the true beauty of the Filipino people. The Mabuhay pageant night saw an inspiring show of support from GK residents who came to cheer on their respective candidates as they participated in the talent, evening gown, and question and answer portions.
Mabuhay Lady Violeta Julian of GK Roque, West-C shone brightly among the nine finalists, winning the crown Ms. Mabuhay, as well as the titles Ms. Friendship, Best in Talent, and Best in Evening Gown. "I am very happy. I am am mother already and I did not expect to reach this, God is really good," the radiant Mabuhay Lady expressed, grateful for her neighbors who came to pray for her and give their support. Charisma Español of GK Amparo-North A and Marivic Eñal of GK Busilak-Central A were the first and second runners-up. Former Tourism Secretary and now GK Champion Tony Gonzalez lead the judges in choosing the winners based on the following criteria: social relationships, personality and leadership.
GK's Tony Meloto who happily graced the event said, "Mabuhay is a celebration of the life and the greatness of the Filipino spirit." "Matagal nilang tiniis ang pangit na kapaligiran, ngayon sila po ang bida," he added. (They long endured an ugly environment, now they are the stars). He added that everyone in GK is beautiful, good, and excellent and that there was no room for the ugly whether it be the house or their character. The Mabuhay pageant is set to become an annual event, to include GK beauties from the provinces.
Running for your country, the GK - Adidas Marathon (October 11, Fort Bonifacio)
Running for you country has now become an annual event held during the GK Expo, a tradition that began last year in partnership with Adidas King of the Road marathon. As early as two weeks before the event, registrations at P300 each to join the marathon was closed, the event was sold out with the proceeds set to go to building GK communities for the poorest of the poor. About 5,500 runners joined the event that kicked-off the GK celebrations last October 11, with a blast signaling 21 kilometer runners to start pounding the roads of Fort Bonifacio in Taguig city, followed by 5K and 10K runners. Young and old alike - the youngest being a 2-year old in a jogger accompanied by his family and the oldest a 77 year-old doctor - gave their individual contributions to the country by running for the poor.
The Executive Director's Report (October 11, Fort Bonifacio)
Attended by Gawad Kalinga's friends from the government, corporate and private sectors, GK's executive director Luis Oquiñena noted the movement's milestones for 2008. "GK is a work of renewal, it brings new things. We have had a lot of breakthroughs," he said. He announced that the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council (HUDCC) has already signed the resolution which makes GK an official beneficiary of real estate developers who are mandated by law to give 20% of their building budget to socialized housing. This recent development provides additional resources for helping reach the goal of building 7,000 GK communities by 2010.
Business competitors SMART Communications and GK Expo event sponsor Globe Telecoms, shared what they learned working with GK. "We learned what partnership and collaboration is all about, that competing corporations can come together for nation-building," said Smart's Mon Isberto. "We are very happy to see Globe as a partner of GK," he said. "Kahit umuunlad tayo, kung hindi ninyo tutulungan ang katabi nyo, maraming maiiwan," he said while sharing the story of their adopted community in General Nakkar, Quezon, whose fishermen turned sculptors gave P100,000 of the proceeds of their art sales to help build the community in GK Budlaan in Cebu.
Globe's said that working with GK, "gave the company a sense of purpose and meaning for its corporate existence." "It's not [only] the resources that we bring to the community but it's the friendship we make along the way," said Globe family's vice-president Ferdz De La Cruz who noted the hundreds of Globe employees who have been touched by GK and quietly volunteering in GK villages on their own.
Armed Forces of the Philippines General Natalio Ecarma III committed his service to the Filipinos, "Ang uniporme ay hindi importante. Ang importante ay ang samahan...Sa GK walang iwanan. Kami ay sundalo ninyo." The general is one of the dreamers for the building of a GK Village in Patikul, Sulu scheduled for the annual Bayani Challenge in April 2009. It is a major step towards pursuing peace in Mindanao through the GK way, the kind of peace that the Moslem community represented by Sultan Akraman Saripada of GK Wao, Lanao del Sur and Bangsamoro commander Hadji Sangcopan Bansil seeks to end the war in Mindanao and alleviate their poor people's sufferings. "Kapatid ko kayo. Magkakapatid tayong lahat, walang iwanan!," Sultan Akraman said. The general and sultan would be seen shaking hands during the event as a sign of unity towards this shared vision of peace in Mindanao, and in solidarity with One UTAK, the united transport group composed of the nation's jeepney and bus drivers who initiated the tie a white ribbon for peace in jeepneys and buses throughout the troubled region.
The Executive Director Luis Oquiñena reiterated the expo's them: Walang Iwanan, Anong taya mo para sa Bayan? "Yung walang ginagawa para sa bayan, yun ang squatter," he said and encouraged everyone to be anchored in their motherland, to make their stake in the country.
GK Expo Taguig Mayor Freddie Tinga capped the session with his inspiring realization that GK is the glue that brings people together for a nation long beset by division exemplified by the city of Taguig, that has a big gap between the rich and poor. Taguig which is working towards closing this gap and is one with the GK's vision in creating it a designer city. "The one thing that GK tells us is we cannot do it alone. We are changing and learning...GK is telling everyone that it can be done," he said. "If it can be done here in Taguig, it can be done anywhere in the country," he believed. "Dito sa GK, patapos na ang dilim at nagsisimula na ang umaga," he said.
Echoing his predecessor's realization that "the national government cannot do it alone," the Department of Agriculture secretary Arthur Yap committed to working with GK in producing sustainable farms so that the poor will have food on their people and Filipinos will not be hungry in a land so blessed with an abundance of natural resources. This synergy and alliance with the agriculture government will convert idle lands to productive ones, starting with 300 GK sites, where the technical expertise and support of the agriculture department will be applied in partnership with GK.
The executive director noted that the road ahead is full of hard work as GK aims to build 3,500 communities in 2009 and build a million homes. He exhorted those present to protect unity at all cost. "Do not allow cracks," he said. "The Filipino poor is the priority."
Goldilock's Birthday Blow-Out for 7,000 GK Kids (October 11, Fort Bonifacio)
In celebration of Gawad Kalinga's 5th anniversary, Goldilocks Bakeshop treated the SIBOL, SAGIP children and Kids for Christ members to a big birthday blow-out with an hourly party from catering to 1,000 kids per batch. Many of the kids, who have never had a birthday party before in their lives and cannot afford a birthday cake, were all happy to have the opportunity to celebrate their birthday with other kids, the next generation of Filipinos. The children were treated to a program with games and blowing of their birthday cakes. All were happy bringing their gift packs from Goldilocks after the party.
Building a Nation (October 11, Fort Bonifacio)
The session began with a riveting performance of GK SIGA members in a powerful play written by Ron Capinding entitled Tao Po (It is I), co-presented by Gawad Kalinga and the Department of Foreign Affairs. It was a show of world-class excellence featuring the talents of our GK youth who just came from Indonesia to teach and perform with fellow Siga members there. Their performance during the GK Expo with foreign dignitaries and company presidents as their guests, was simply exceptional. It showed that the poor can really excel given the opportunity and empowerment. The famous choir from GK Tatalon also performed to an amazed audience.
"You just have seen the transformation of our greatest asset," GK visionary Tony Meloto began as he welcomed honorable diplomats from different countries. "These are the lost Filipinos," Meloto said, noting that there are talents in the most depressed areas. "Today, we see a convergence of our people, raising the least of our brethren to their highest potential for excellence," he said as he introduced Gawad Kalinga's next phase of development, Social Artistry or the designer phase where the best Filipinos give of their excellence to help the least attain to their fullest potentials as well.
He honored the caretakers from Couples for Christ in Bagong Silang who started GK with a sense of mission. "In the spirit of sacrifice, we have built GK," said the chief inspirational officer as he presented the Addurru family, whose house was the very first home built by GK. They represent the many GK communities since then whose lives have been changed. Bagong Silang, the largest baranggay in Metro Manila and formerly the haven of dangerous gangs and criminals, has been transformed from within, evolving steadily into GK's designer baranggay.
Former Philippine Ambassador to Milan, honorable Amb. Peter Chan while representing the DFA diplomatic corps handed out a cheque to Meloto saying it was "a gift from the heart" from overseas Filipino workers in the country were he served.
Bukas Loob sa Diyos represented by Bro. Ric Pascua said they are striving to raise 1,000 GK communities. "We are all children of God. This work is too big for any one community to handle. It is for everyone," he said.
Meloto called on competing schools Ateneo and La Salle to participate in a "Patriot Games", which unlike the coveted men's basketball championship, would compete
instead for the most number of land donated for the poor of the country. "Now, we are united as a people. We have a dream that unites us," he said as he spoke of the vision for the Philippines, as the first world-class nation in Southeast Asia.
Partners from local government lead by inspiring mayors Sonia Lorenzo of San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, Camarines Sur Governor LRay Villafuerte, and Taguig's Freddie Tinga who all espoused good governance, integrity and excellence, agreeing that GK is integrative. "It brings people together and it integrates the dreams of the poor," Mayor Lorenzo said. Our motto now is "Maka-Diyos, maka-bayan, at maka-deliver," as she affirmed her commitment with GK.
"I sought change - and with unrelenting determination, took off to a path that was unexpected, unconventional and untested," shared Governor Villafuerte of how he transformed Camarines Sur into a world-class tourist destination with its now famous wakeboarding facility. Akin to the revolutionary and faith-filled spirit of GK: Build it and they will come, the inspiring governor embraces wholeheartedly GK's vision of christening Cam Sur as a Designer province with world-class GK villages complete with bed and breakfast homes for guests, a livelihood ran by GK's residents.
"The partnership of GK and Cam Sur is a match made in heaven - it is an answered prayer - because it came at a time when I felt the compelling need to do more for my people," shared Gov. Villafuerte. " I wanted to elevate our humble success to a more meaningful level," he said.
Meanwhile, dynamic mayor Freddie Tinga affirmed his all-out support for GK's vision for Taguig as a designer city, " Taguig is going to be a great city. GK is making people believe lalo na ang mga mahihirap na kaya pala!" Paranaque mayor Jun Bernabe also reaffirmed his commitment, "Itinaya ko na po ang aking sarili, and aking pamilya," he said.
Former Wyeth chief and marketing brain, now GK champion Boy de Claro said that he now has the best brand to sell to the world: The Filipino.
"It is a great gift and a great privilege to be a Filipino," Meloto affirmed.
40,000 GK heroes join Martsa ng mga Bayani
(October 11, GK Expo Grounds)
The annual GK tradition -- the parade of heroes honors the caretaker teams, kapitbahayan, partners and volunteers who tirelessly work on the ground to build the country of their dreams. This year, the GK expo ground was filled to the brim. A 40,000-strong army of GK heroes from all over the country and the world, joined this year's march for a massive show of unity.
What is notable of this year's march is its changing face: the rich and the poor march together in full equality, and many more partners fully adopting their GK communities. The kapitbahayans were the main focus with their caretaker teams proudly marching alongside them as friends. It was the emergence of "The New Middle Class" as GK's Tony Meloto puts it. GK heroes from as far as Mindanao and patriots returning from America, all waited in line to join the parade. Many GK communities showcased their province's treasures in a float, notable of them were Batangas and Laguna. Some came with full marching and dancing bands such as Metro Manila's West sector that reminded one of great festivals in the Philippines.
Company presidents marched with their employees and GK1MB volunteers from schools, universities and fraternities marched fully in support of the GK vision. Even Ateneo and La Salle laid aside school pride, sharing a float together acknowledging that they were only rivals in the basketball court but more imporantly, co-builders of the country. Lastly, it is significant to mention that almost all the baranggays of Taguig came, having the longest delegation in an all out show of their support for Gawad Kalinga.
This year's Martsa ng mga Bayani, showed the significant growth of the movement. Indeed, we might need a bigger area in the future as GK continues to grow to its fullest potential.
The GK1World Concert
(October 11, Fort Bonifacio)
The renowned Fort Bonifacio grounds used for international concerts, was filled to the brim. The only difference now is that the poor who cannot afford to go to these international events, were the very important guests for GK1World's concert aired worldwide through internet television.
Vice President Noli de Castro graced the auspicious event affirming that: "Ganyan talaga ang magkakaibigan, walang iwanan!" He thanked Gawad Kalinga's gift of building transformative friendships. "True friendship brings about change in those involved in the relationship."
He said that his friendship with GK transformed him personally as the inspiration of ordinary citizen sacrificing for their country, humbles him, engages him and allows him to be focused on providing the basic needs of the poor Filipinos. "Your own zeal and enthusiasm for the mission is contangious," he said as he honored the many heroes of Gawad Kalinga. "We must remain focused on our mission in GK," said the servant of the people.
"Walang atrasan, at ito ang taya ko!," the vice president said. He encouraged everyone to resolve to keep moving forward in spite of the current global crisis and challenges faced, and to rely on those transformative friendships to keep moving on towards the fulfillment of GK's dreams for the poor.
Representing the corporate sector, SMART committed to send a team to Sulu for the 2009 Bayani Challenge for a peaceful Mindanao, pledged to send a representative to the GK Global Summit in Boston, and vowed to provide internet connection to GK communities all over the Philippines. Meralco committed to continue building Sibol schools and provide light to GK villages while Shell committed to growing and develping its GK farms and to be a staunch ally of Green Kalinga. Wyeth committed to continue raising healthy homes and developing healthy kids in GK communities.
"My fellow citizens, ano yung taya ninyo?" challenged GK's executive director Luis Oquiñena. "Pamilya ko, eto ang taya ko" as he committed his kids and family. Many people expressed their commitments through SMS or text as they quietly prayed and considered their personal contributions to their country.
Representing GK's international network, Dr. Charlie Capati who has lived in the USA for 37 years, committed to helping spread the vision of GK in America. "This is our time. [Let us] embrace our destiny," he said. Filipino-American entrepreneur Tony Olaes, committed to never forget the Philippines. "My heart is for the Philippines and it will never leave you, I promise you that," he affirmed as he continues to promote the work of GK in States and raise villages with other Fil-Ams in business.
The expo drew to a close with everyone renewing their commitment and hope hope for the Philippines. The GK heroes on stage and on the ground locked arms in a show of solidarity singing together "Bayan Ko."The concert ended with a praise fest, everyone expressing their love for God.
World-class Filipino talents Ryan Cayabyab, River Maya, 6Cycle Mind, Imago, Sponge Cola, Cueshe and Gloc9 contributed their talents towards a first-class Philippines. According to many participants, the GK1World Expo Walang Iwanan: Anong Taya mo Para sa Bayan? was the best expo to date.
Happy Anniversary GK Bayani!

RUN FOR YOUR COUNTRY WITH GK AND ADIDAS  

Posted by gksiga

Filipinos in Manila and Dublin, Ireland are putting their best foot forward to run for the country's poor.

On October 11, 2008, coinciding with the annual Gawad Kalinga Expo, Adidas will be holding the "King of the Road 2008" marathon where GK volunteers and partners in Metro Manila and surrounding provinces can run the 5K, 10K, or 21K marathon for an affordable registration fee of P300.00, inclusive of race singlet, race number, certificate, and entrance fee to the GK Expo. The race starts at 5:30 am at 28th Street, Fort Santiago in Taguig City and is open to youth and adults ages 13 years old and above.

To join the Adidas-GK marathon in Manila, you may register from September 22 to October 9 at Adidas Shops in Podium,Trinoma, Megamall and Rockwell. For bulk registrations of corporations, schools and organizations, please register at the ground floor of Vazquez-Madrigal Bldg., Annapolis Street in Greenhills, San Juan.

Meanwhile, several thousand miles away in Ireland, Liza Jane Jorque is getting ready to run the challenging 42K Adidas Dublin Marathon, along with other GK advocates, on October 27,2008 to help raise funds for Gawad Kalinga.

If you are living in Ireland, you and your family can also participate. The Dublin Marathon showcases a 3-mile Family Fun Run and is open to all the families. You can walk, jog or run for the poor in the Philippines.

SUCCESSFUL CYD CONGRESS HELD  

Posted by gksiga

by: Jonathan Rickard, GK News Bureau


The GK Child and Youth Development Congress was successfully held last August 23 at the De La Salle University-Manila campus. Community leaders and subject specialists came together to share their experiences, knowledge, and expertise for the benefit of GK children and youth.

Evangelina Lawas presented the Rights of a SAGIP Child, answering the significant question "How do we protect our children?" including those caught up in such widely prevalent slum-issues as youth crime and drugs. GK community leaders discussed how their communities should interact with authorities in order to achieve constructive outcomes for all.

The second session of the congress focused on the value of education in Gawad Kalinga, highlighting the participation of some of Manila's private schools such as Poveda in aiding the GK children’s education through volunteer tutoring and school group involvement, and the creation of GK's very first grade school at GK Pinagkuartelan village in Pandi,Bulacan.

The Caring Jesus Elementary school in Pandi was built through the generosity of the Pineda family, with son Dino Pineda working with Gawad Kalinga to bring to fruition a vision that started with his grandmother and father who wanted to provide quality education for the poor. With GK Pinagkuartelan housing 650 families, the Caring Jesus elementary school will be opening one new class every year for the next six years, until grades 1 to 6 are provided for the community.

While GK has provided pre-school education through its SIBOL schools, this is the fist instance of elementary education being provided inside a GK community.

Gawad Kalinga Reaches Out to Aetas  

Posted by gksiga

By Patricia Esteves, The Philippine Star, March 2, 2008

GK Worker with Aeta kidsIn a Gawad Kalinga village in Burog, Bamban town, Tarlac, neatly dressed Aeta children gather inside a Sibol classroom, GK’s pre-school facility, listening intently as their teacher reads books and counts numbers.

Their parents, meanwhile, are out in the field, harvesting fruits and vegetables or tending to livestock.

A few years back, Aeta children and their mothers picked through trash for bottles, metal scraps and newspapers that earned them around P50 a day, while others simply roamed around the city begging for food.

For a time, Aetas in Tarlac have been used to living in poverty, with misery and ugliness all around them, and people paying little or no attention to them.

But today, things are different. The 100 Aeta families in this town now live in brightly colored, clean and sturdy homes and are beneficiaries of free schooling and sustainable livelihood.

Apart from this, Singles for Christ (SFC) and Couple’s for Christ (CFC) members continue to care for the Aetas through various “Kapatiran” and fellowship activities meant to “reinforce GK’s thrust on building not just homes but more importantly, relationships.” CFC members conduct values formation programs among the Aetas.

Last February 12-14, SFC members from Zamboanga Sibugay, Metro Manila, Tarlac, Canada, Australia, United States and the Middle East spent three days in GK Burog to bond and interact with the Aetas.

After having built more than 150 houses for the Aetas, GK said that by bringing volunteers to the Aeta sites, they are able to show that GK genuinely cares for them.

SFC members like Delson Villanueva, an engineer from Qatar who participated in the event dubbed “Kapatid, sa GK walang Iwanan,” said they did not only teach the Aetas but also learned their culture, history and way of life.

“The event wanted to highlight the beauty and the treasure within the Aetas. It also aims to awaken participants on some social issues affecting the Aetas,” GK champion Tony Meloto said.

‘Survivor series’

The SFC participants did not just construct houses but activities, patterned after the “Survivor Series”, were integrated in the building process. A total of 33 participants were divided into three tribes such as Manwelek, Oyha, and Abukay, Ayta Mag-antsi for a large forest rat, deer and civet cat, respectively. Some of the workshops/challenges were the “Hunt”, where participants were taught how to use the bow & arrow used by the Aetas for hunting; and archery.The participants were given an overview of the history and culture of the Aetas and were oriented on the Mag-Antsi language of the Aetas.

The indigenous people harvest and sell papaya, the main source of income in GK Burog, for only P10 pesos per kilo (farm-gate price).

‘Love the other’

Filipino-American Justin Claravall said he felt a profound calling to “love the other” when he spent time with Aetas in Burog.

“When I first got off the minicab and saw the children playing, shouting, rolling on the dirty ground, a thought invaded my head: ‘These kids are dirty.’ How embarrassing it was for me to judge these kids so immediately,” Justin said, recalling his first visit to a GK site.

He said he reflected on his guilt and asked for God’s forgiveness and this drove him to be close to the children.

“After a couple days, the Aeta children returned love in spades. Little girls followed me around, hugging me and telling me they’ll cry when I leave,” Justin said.

“From the initial prejudice up to the time we left, I felt more accepted and I cared more for the well-being of the villagers, especially the children, who lavished me with so much affection,” he added.

In totality, he said the whole experience brought him closer to God by showing him that to love Him, he must learn to love his neighbors.

Justine was raised in California and is a member of the GK Builders Corp for six months.

Delson, who also spent time in GK Burog, was introduced to GK by SFC-Qatar. As an overseas Filipino worker (OFW), he realized that GK was the perfect vehicle for him to express his love to his poor kababayans, particularly street children.

“Everytime I do GK work, I’m very inspired because I know that it is full of love – love for people, love for country and love for God,” Delson said.

“It’s a different experience for me. We were very happy to be welcomed by the Aetas.

You can see that they were very willing to learn and improve their lifestyle. They do not want to beg but they would rather crave for attention, understanding and love,” Delson said.

“My commitment to GK is to continue to support their program and as an OFW, I will continue promoting GK in our area in the Middle East particularly in Qatar. By God’s will, I want to be a full time GK worker someday. We in SFC-Qatar have a GK pledge and that is going to GK San Martin every year, that’s the place we want to build a village,” Delson said.

The Aetas’ homes, free school education and livelihood programs are part of GK’s Indigenous People (IP) program, which aims to help indigenous communities build ecologically sound and sustainable villages, sharing a common vision that is economically progressive, promoting social equity and providing a good quality of life.

“So we are bringing in the programs for health, education, food production together with improvement of shelter that respects the history, tradition of indigenous peoples,” said Meloto in an interview.

Their goal is to preserve the beautiful culture and unique qualities not only of Aetas in Pampanga, Zambales and Tarlac but also of the Mangyans in Mindoro, the Dumagats in Aurora and Rizal, the Palawonons of Palawans, the Bilaans, Tibolis, Mamawons, Subanens and other indigenous peoples in Mindanao.

Come take up your Flag & Follow Me  

Posted by gksiga

by Willy E. Arcilla

Come, take up your flag and follow me. In answer to the clarion call of the country’s Church officials for “communal action” and the public clamor for a new brand of people power amidst the unfolding ZTE bribery and corruption scandal, the social-realist painter Joey Velasco, whose famous work “Hapag ng Pag-Asa” moved millions in the country and around the world, has responded with his newest creation entitled, “Take Up Your Flag”. The oil-on-canvass painting depicts Jesus Christ, who is no longer dead on the cross nor meek as a lamb as usually projected, but grim-faced and defiant. Jesus has taken up the role as the country’s paramount leader, to symbolize the need for a reunification — not a separation — of religious beliefs and temporal affairs. It is a message to all our leaders in government, the church and civil society to live a “unity-of-life” in communion with Jesus Christ and in consonance with his teachings — as real-life disciples, and not merely nominal Sunday churchgoers.

Jesus Christ is boldly depicted raising a tattered Philippine flag, a poignant symbolism of the countless upheavals the country has been through ” from the Cry of Pugad Lawin in 1896 to the volley of musketry in Bagumbayan in 1898; from the Fall of Bataan to the infamous Death March in 1942, from the anguish of 1983 to the euphoria of 1986, and then again in 2001. But now, after all the time consumed and the energy spent, we find ourselves once again caught in a turbulent maelstrom. Many already show signs of frustration and weariness, hopelessness and despair as a tattered nation. So Velasco has decided the only real way to move forward is if we anoint Jesus our paramount leader.

Velasco shares his thoughts and feelings, “The face of Jesus beckons; the eyes challenge us; the tough stance tells us there is no way to lose. We will definitely win this war. And the battle cry is love. He is offering his life in the frontlines of the battlefield. His Eucharistic action of life giving is extended to social action. Hence, it is a call to action”.

What makes Velasco’s painting even more gripping is Jesus has not only picked up the tattered flag — which in fact resembles many flags around the country — faded and torn — but He has inverted the flag showing the red band atop the blue, declaring that the nation is in a state of war. Jesus seems to rally His people for the final conflict in the saga of the Filipino nation. Jesus is urging all Filipinos to join an uprising He will personally lead — not only against graft and corruption — but against all forms of human wrongdoing — yet not through violent means, but by pursuing the ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity, reinforced by the human virtues of courage and confidence, infused with the supernatural virtues of faith, hope and charity, powered by prayer and brought to life in action and leadership by example. Jesus issues a “call to arms” in the war of the good over the evil. Indeed, amidst all the seemingly intractable challenges and crises that continue to bedevil the country, we must all agree that our nation is not at peacetime. Our nation is at war.

We continue to fight the massive and protracted war against graft and corruption; against the vicious cycle of poverty and destitution; hunger and malnutrition; landlessness and homelessness; poor health and high mortality; the war against illiteracy and inferior education; the war against unemployment and underemployment; labor exploitation and low productivity; the war against the lack of opportunities causing the Filipino diaspora; against selfish gratification and ostentatious hedonism; the war against a widening rich-poor gap and undue concentration of wealth; the war against alcoholism and illegal gambling; drug abuse and prostitution; and all forms of crime and violence; the war against pride and hubris; greed and avarice; the war against colonial mentality and crab mentality; the war against nominal Christianity and religious intolerance vs. our Muslim brothers; the war against all physical and armed conflict — extrajudicial killings and communist insurgency, terrorist attacks and secession; abuses by the armed forces and abuses against the armed forces; the war against marital infidelity and broken families; against indecency and immorality; lust and licentiousness; the war against apathy and indifference; negativism and pessimism; the war against treachery and hypocrisy; the war against “Bahala Na” fatalism, “Pwede na” mediocrity and “Pasensiya Na” excuses; the war against excessive politics and an obsession over intrigues; the war against bureaucratic red tape in government and a culture of privilege among oligarchs, the war against a lack of competitiveness and inertia to change in the face of an increasingly competitive global market; and the war against environmental degradation and climate change — indeed, this is an all-out war we need to wage against all forms of evil in the country and across multiple fronts — not only in government but in civil society, at work and at home, not only against the evil in others but more so, the evil within ourselves.

Velasco muses, “These were the same issues before the Shepherd was slaughtered; before He died a poor man’s death. Before the cross became a religious icon, it was, in His time, a punishment for slaves and rebels. ‘Take up your cross,’ spoken before Jesus died on the cross and before it took on a religious meaning, in the ears of Jesus’ listeners, meant ‘commit yourself to those principles and actions which will bring you to the cross.’ For Jesus, taking up the cross meant committing Himself to liberating His people, especially the poor over the authorities, tradition and laws, and the corrupt state of His time”.

Even after 110 years of independence, our country remains in disunity, not only from a culture of regionalism imbibed over more than 400 years of western colonization, but what is more insidious is the deep division between the forces of good against evil. Yet history also shows how Filipinos have galvanized themselves as one nation in times of adversity to put up a valiant fight against common enemies, such as the revolt of the first 8 provinces against Spain, and the whole country against the Japanese occupation; our victory against the tyranny of a despot in 1986 and the immorality of a drunkard in 2001. This must be the inspiration for Jesus Christ to call upon all Filipinos to fight the final battle against all enemies of the common good so we may enjoy true and lasting freedom.

“Thus for the followers of Jesus, ‘take up your cross,’ means to stretch out one’s arm and to ‘take up the flag,’ and to commit oneself in word and deed to protest the cheating and lying, to put a stop to the extrajudicial killings of activists, journalists, and members of pro-poor movements, to bring justice to the victims and their families”, adds Velasco.

To dramatize this declaration of war and remind ourselves of the need to remain vigilant at all times, Joey Velasco seems to recapture a dramatic moment in our nation’s history when Andres Bonifacio, founder of the “Kataas-taasang, Kagalang-kagalang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan” led the Filipino revolutionaries to tear up the Spanish cedula in the Cry of Balintawak. Our nation may not be at war in the traditional definition of armed conflict, but it can be argued that we are engaged in a war no less daunting or real because the outcome of this war will dictate whether we can win the true freedom we cherish from all human oppression on earth — material and spiritual. Velasco is hopeful his latest painting can motivate each province, city, town, municipality and barangay; each diocese and each parish; each factory and each office; each school and each family to follow Jesus Christ and invert the Philippine flag to display and keep the red band on top until such time that we achieve our common mission of defeating all forces of evil and oppression. Then and only then can we achieve real victory for prosperity and peace. Then and only then can we deserve to fly the Philippine flag with the blue atop the red.

There is no doubt in Velasco’s heart this is a war we can win because it is our destiny — but only if we fight this war together as one people — in the name of God and Country — to transform what has been a “nation run like hell by Filipinos” to a “nation run like heaven by Filipinos”. We will win this war because we will follow our one true and only leader, Jesus Christ, so that filled by God the Holy Spirit, we may all renew the face of our nation, and ultimately fulfill our God-given mission; help renew the face of the earth.

Velasco says, “Jesus calls to each and every Filipino today, “Come, take up your flag, and follow me usque ad staturam Christi.” (until we reach the stature of Christ).”

Engineering a Better World  

Posted by gksiga



Kate McDonell, GK Volunteer..

How do explain what it is like to spend three weeks in the Philippines working with Engineers Without Borders? I certainly can’t explain it in a couple of paragraphs but it is definitely an overwhelming and life changing experience.

The first twenty two years of my life I have lived as an only child. I used to joke that I had adopted siblings (my close friends) because I didn’t have any real siblings. But then I went to the Philippines and lived with a family, now my family. I now have three younger sisters (Lerma, Lan Lan, Carla) and a younger brother (Christian) in addition to a massive extended family. More often than not during the day my cousin dropped her baby, Jacinta, off with my mum (Leni) when she went to work. I met my Dad once, who worked for Manila Water as a driver, but he was at work all the time. So this was now my family and we lived in a house that volunteers had built the year before and was of the same design as the houses I was building.

Eight of us lived in this house, 14m2, made of hollow concrete blocks with concrete, of unknown mix quantities, filling the holes, rebar for the columns and a tin roof. We lived simply and happily but without much privacy. In the first couple of days, used to being an only child, the lack of privacy and lack of acknowledgement of one’s personal possessions frustrated me. I couldn’t go to the toilet without being asked where I was going. I would check my bag to look for my sunglasses and find that not only were my sunglasses not in my bag, neither were my hat or my camera. My things weren’t stolen. My siblings had them. From their perspective they weren’t ‘my’ things; they were ‘our’ things and so could be taken and returned as they chose. The rule applied to all of their possessions also, of which there were not many.

It was somewhere between learning all the words to ‘I will survive’ by osmosis, being comfortable with singing karaoke sober and learning to enjoy cold dipper showers that I knew my life had changed for ever.

I learnt so many life lessons from being there, particularly from my family. I think the most important one was about my responsibility to do something about poverty. You can watch the television and see people in poverty but then you can turn it off and it somehow goes away. But I can’t do that anymore because my family lives in poverty. My little sister, Lerma, can’t go to college because our family can’t afford to send her. This is not someone else’s responsibility. It is my responsibility now. They are my family and I have to do something.

engineers without bordersBeing part of their community, learning about their stories, just being there to listen meant so much to them. I think it was equally hard for the community to understand why we, as westerners, would bother to come. They didn’t think that we owed them anything. I tried to explain my reason for going. I was born in a lucky country. Everyone deserves a chance no matter where you are born. It took them a long time to understand and in the end our families changed too.

Our families changed because we were there not for ourselves but for them. They needed to know that somewhere far off people they didn’t know who didn’t “owe” them anything were thinking of them. That they hadn’t been forgotten by the world. That people didn’t turn of the TV and pretend that their struggle went away. They needed to know that they were valued and loved. Even now it is hard for me to grasp how we, who where there for such a short time, helped fulfill this need.

My family told me about how they felt about living in the slums. They said they felt hopeless and that the world had forgotten them. The fact that we, as westerners traveled all the way around the world to be with them, and continue to think about them was a powerful source of hope and human dignity. Merely by being there was a more important gift to the community than we could ever give through building houses.

As one volunteer said “you cannot buy the happiness of the families that live in these houses. If you want to help others, you also need to sacrifice. Our sacrifice was monetary and timely, but our gain was much greater than anything we sacrificed.”

As engineers, I believe we should not always think of the fastest, cheapest, most economical way to do things, but to think of the interest of PEOPLE first, because ultimately, we should be servants of people and communities; not money and time.

Still, to this day, it really makes me rethink all my priorities when I remember how my family, who has always lived in poverty, is happier now that they have ever been.

Hope Every College/University be like this ONE!!!  

Posted by gksiga

just to update you of what Saint Michael's College of Iligan is doing:

1. The Administrative Council in its last meeting has realigned all its Research, Instruction, Policy and Extension (RIPE) towards integration to GK. No less than S. Ma. Yolanda C. Reyes, RVM herself presided the realignments and ensured that every department and / or colleges including the basic education departments will be integrated to Gawad Kalinga. First engagement will be the ALAY NI IGNACIA: PanGKabuhayan Project, in partnership with Barangay Tambacan and GK Rainbow Village with the College of Business and Technology taking the lead in tapping its students in conducting Feasibility Studies for the Productivity program set to be launched by the end of the month.

2. In the same meeting, the Council also agreed that the Mother Ignacia Center for Social Responsibility will also realign its existing operational structure that will fit to the institutional thrust of integrating with Gawad Kalinga. GK is now the institutional template for : institutional volunteerism, total community development, social transformation and nation - building. From Alay Ni Ignacia to Alay Ignacia: Gawad Kalinga, from Ignacian Volunteers to Gawad Kalinga Isang Milyon Bayani, and from Banwag Iligan Leadership Development to Gawad Kalinga Builders Institute.

Also up for realignment are the various College Extension Programs under U ROCK MICHAELITES:

College of Business and Technology - Kalinga Michaelite (GK La Farge Productivity Program) to Bizrock!

College of Education - Rock Educators ( RockEd) making the successful Mangrove Project in Barangay Dalipuga and Santa Felomina as the enviro - productivity program of Gawad Kalinga La Farge MPTV apart from operating the SIBOL Schools using the SMC Curriculum and the CYD Programs.

College of Nursing - Kids Rock will be integrated to Gawad Kalusugan

College of Arts and Sciences - Tambayayong Kabataan will now be Rock Kabataan that will look after the CYD and Kapitbahayan Programs of GK

College of Criminology - Rock D' Road to Rock Kapayapaan that will train GK Communities on law and order and various skills enhancement related to crime prevention and control.

College of Engineering and Information Technology - the overwhelmingly successful Rock IT! will just shift its free IT Literacy Training Program / TESDA Certificate Training Course to GK communities.

College of Hotel and Restaurant Management - the newest College of SMC, has yet to launch its own U ROCK program but for sure, it will be focusing on the Mabuhay Program of Gawad Kalinga.

The Graduate School - all research papers and / or dissertations will be on Gawad Kalinga

The Basic Education Department (BED) - set to be launched is the BED Rock! it is aimed to mobilize all basic education students for Gawad Kalinga Isang Milyong Bayani.



3
. Gawad Kalinga was also officially presented to the following institutional events:

a. Higher Education Parents - Teachers Assembly held at the Main Campus Auditorium given by yours truly. GK HED Coordinator Jamil Asum, a Muslim, was also formally introduced to the assembly much to the delight of the Muslim parents present.

b. Basic Education General Assembly exclusively for Gawad Kalinga Orientation at the SMC BED St Joseph Gymnasium with significant number of parents present Orientation given by GK BED Coordinator John Michael Bentoy

4. Gawad Kalinga is also now part of the SMC Leadership Training Program (Ignacian Formation, GK Formation, Basi Leadership Formation and Basic Governance Skills Formation) this coming July 11 - 13, 2008 that will develop Michaaelite student leaders taking a dynamic role in nation - building. Giving the session is the GK Builders Institute Training Team of SMC.

5. The SMC Alumni Association has also agreed to take part in the integration to Gawad Kalinga. Under wraps are various programs for the 94th Foundation Day Celebrations and the 2008 Grand Michaelite Homecoming this coming December for GK.

6. Sister Yolly has already convened the Iligan City GK Board of Consultors. Present in the meeting at the SMC Hotel's Coffee Walk were Mayor Lawrence Cruz, City Councilor Voltaire Rovira, City Planning and Development Officer Architect Gil Balondo, City Housing and Resettlement Officer Rey Roque, Tito Caloy Subang, Tito Jun Yape, Tito Nonoy Haim, SMC Vice President for Administration Dr. Romero Hermosilla, DPA and yours truly. Social Preparations for the GK Designers Challenge Iligan has been scheduled and Strategic Planning to follow. Sister Yolly committed P 100,000 to seed fund the GK Designer Villages Project.

7. Sister Yolly also organized a GK Orientation for the various women religious communities in the City of Iligan yesterday July 5, 2008.

8. The Gawad Kalinga Office is now open in the SMC Community Relations Office. It is with the Mother Ignacia Center for Social Responsibility. In the office are two GK workers: John Michael Bentoy (GK BED) and Jamil Asum (GK HED). Sister Yolly also took GK Volunteer Denlister Tabuda as a GK Scholar and is now enjoying free education privilege with the College of Hotel and Restaurant Management ON THE SPOT during the first BOARD OF CONSULTORS meeting.

"Walang Michaelite ang makakuha ng diploma na may TATAK logo ng SMC, PAASCU at ng GK pag hindi ma completo ang four hours a month volunteer policy!" - Sister Yolly to the NSTP CWTS Summer 2008 Class

Bawat Michaelite, Lakas Ng Pagbabago!

BAYANIHAN. BUILDING A NATION.  

Posted by gksiga


Bayan is the vision

Bayani is the response

Bayanihan is the movement of new Filipino heroes


At the root of poverty in the Phils., and many other poor countries similar to it, is the broken spirit of its people and the broken relationships among them.

Many of the poor squatting in Manila and other urban areas, have a history of brokenness and woundedness -- from the provinces where they come from.

Victims of calamities, conflict, social injustice.

The first step to development in both urban areas and in the countryside is healing this brokenness among the poor… and among other sectors of society around them.

We have to bridge the great divide among our people : social, economic, political, religious, cultural.

Bayanihan : Movement of Filipino Heroes

It is intrinsically a very Filipino value

Dating as far back as the building of rice terraces.

It is achieving a common goal through cooperation and helping one another.

It is also a very Christian quality

Exemplified in Acts 4 : 32-35.

“The community of believers was one heart and one mind. They share the resources with one another. There was no needy person among them.”

It means - strive for every Filipino to cross the finish line

It should be our concern that we all rise together.

The Filipinos are an intelligent and talented people but most have been pursuing the path of individual gain and achievement without a conscious effort to work for the common good.

We are driven by ambition, self-interest, pride and the need to provide for our children beyond their need.

As a result, we have turned a blind eye to many others who have a greater need.

Without bayanihan, we endanger our future and the future of our children

In a country that will not provide opportunities for most to thrive we will produce more criminals who will be a constant threat to our own well-being.

Even for those who succeed here or abroad

Individual achievements will not remove the stigma of being looked upon as second class by the world as long as this country is perceived as third world.

We have to get our act together. Otherwise, we will all sink together.

Rich and poor alike, we will be victims of our own making.

Bayanihan is working with the best that each has to offer

Let us stop bashing our country.

Let us stop lashing out at each other, bashing each other, bringing other people down.

Let us not judge others. Even Jesus Christ saw something good in the tax collector, the adulteress woman and the Samaritan.

We should not drive out the wicked

Instead we should drive out the wickedness in people

We can only do this not by being blind to the things that are wrong around us but instead by shining a light to the good that resides in all of us.

Just like a piece of gold -- if you throw it around and kick it around on the ground for 400 years, it will not look like gold anymore; it just looks like a piece of dirt.

This is what happened to a lot of Filipinos. After being kicked around for 400 years they no longer see the gold in themselves, or in one another. They only see the mud. Our challenge is to help every Filipino see that the gold is still there. It is still possible to bring the good out in every Filipino.

We do this by taking the path of bayanihan
A convergence of different sectors working on each others strengths

Allowing the gold in each one of us to shine through

Moving as a United People : GK1MB (1 Milyong Bayani)

We have to have a common vision. It is to re-build this country.

One community at a time, one town after another through a multi-sectoral effort.

A. Transcending religious differences

Let us put our faith into practice, by learning to love this country and work together as one people. Catholics, Christians, Iglesia ni Cristo, Muslims – together building peaceful GK communities. BLD, Philippine Evangelicals, Yahweh’s Love, Cursillo, the Mother Butlers Club, 7-Day Adventist and Muslims are now starting to build their own GK communities. This is more concrete and effective than promoting peace talks. Because when you talk peace, oftentimes you have to discuss the conflict.

B. We have to rise above partisan politics

By working with all politicians regardless of political affiliation. Let us welcome all who will partner with us – all who are willing to follow our standards of integrity and excellence. This is a higher cause, a greater vision - that is inclusive in nature.

C. Going beyond corporate social responsibility

Following the GK spirit of partnering with the community, corporations maintain a committed presence and build real relationships with the beneficiary. This goes beyond the donor-donee relationship. It is real human relationships. By forging real partnerships with the community, they mobilize their personnel to get involved becoming an advocacy of nation-building, as individuals and as a corporation.

D. Creating a global movement for Filipinos to re-connect with the motherland

Now Filipinos abroad can build first-world villages in the town or province where they come from. From exiles they are now partners in sustainable development for their people and their land. They have become catalysts to reverse the image of their motherland.

Now is an exciting time for all of us.

Let us see beyond our differences and instead see the rich tapestry we shall create.

Let us all start a new culture of patriotism. Let us lead a new lifestyle of nation-building.

Let us create a new identity as a Filipino people and take our place in this growing bayanihan chain that will heal and bind our broken nation

Let no one be left behind this time.

Let us share the privilege to be a hero to each and every Filipino with GK1MB.

We are witness to the re-birth of the Filipino people, of the Filipino nation ---

The Filipino rising from poverty, corruption and indolence.

The Filipino finally claiming his birthright – a people of integrity and excellence

The Filipinos finally rising together as a proud people

BAYANI. A CALL TO LIVE AS HEROES.  

Posted by gksiga

Bayan is the vision

Bayani is the response

Our objective is to build a country of heroes

Christians following the path of Jesus, Muslims following the path of their religion.

Each person living out a life of integrity, of selflessness

When people talk about heroes, they refer to dead heroes.

Today we talk about living heroes. Our goal is Bawat Pilipino Bayani!

A hero gives his all for his country -- to get his country out of poverty.

To restore the dignity, not only of the poor, but of Filipinos all over the world.

And to build a legacy for our children and future generations - a legacy of a peaceful and prosperous nation.

II. Key Traits of Heroes

Passion

What is a life without passion? It is a life of nothingness, of emptiness, of boredom.

Lives are meant to be led driven by passion - to the point that you feel you are ALIVE.

A potent passion that is faith driven. Faith in our God and faith in ourselves as a people.

Faith in our strong Filipino and family values.

There is the kind of passion that brings about change – the passion driven by anger and hatred - cultivating a culture of conflict and violence.

The GK brand of passion is a passion fueled by love - for God, for country, for our children. This kind of passion builds a culture of peace, a culture of cooperation – it is where we get the bayanihan spirit that is inherently and instinctively Filipino.

For Christians, it is following the passion of Christ who took the path of sacrifice.

The path of padugo - just as Jesus was willing to die.

We should be willing to die to self so that others can simply live.

We have always believed that our happiness is dependent on others making us happy. Now happiness for us is making others happy.

Change Begins With Me

Our aim is to build a cadre of heroes. But heroism has to begin with ourselves.

It starts with integrity. Integrity is our holiness.

Living our lives in accordance with our faith, in accordance with the way our creator designed us and living our life according to the purpose he defined.

There have been heroes who have been unable to build lasting change

because there is no integrity.

A bayani does not look for change in the government, in society.

A bayani knows that change begins with himself.

We have lived generations where our values have been corrupted and compromised. It’s not about who is to blame… because everyone is accountable.

We all have failed our country.

It is not about money. The solution is not in money.

It is not about getting funds to fix the problem.

The solution lies in the transformation of our hearts.

Bring out the heroism in others

Everyone created different from the other, all part of God’s mysterious design

Our goal is to bring out God’s beautiful in each and every Filipino whoever he may be

--- wherever he may be.

That’s why we see the potential in the poor

That’s why we call the men to be heroes

Because poverty has been most devastating to the men

We turn the beneficiaries to become benefactors

That’s why we do not judge anyone, rich or poor, whichever party you come from

Everyone is wounded, everyone is broken, no one is spared of sin

But everyone is transformed by this work

An environment that empowers everyone to be a hero

Nothing less than great for your country

You have been great in your jobs, in sports, in your music, aybe as a leader or a friend

We have been heroes for our family -- a hero as a father, a brother, a husband

Heroes even for the companies we work for, people we work with

But it is time to raise the level of your greatness. Raise the level of nobility.

Your country calls for it. Your Lord has set the way for it.

It is time to be great for the poor. It is time to be great for your country.

Greatness calls us to love the poor,

To love the majority of our countrymen who are now poor.

But being great is not only in giving your money, your time or your talent.

Being great is bringing out the greatness in others.

This is the greatest challenge… to love this country

And to influence our family, our friends to love this country…

For your country and your countrymen.

And for those who leave this country, not only to succeed and prosper

But to see the beauty of the motherland wherever you are.


VI. Conclusion

Now it is once again time to start a new journey. A more exciting one. A passionate one. A journey of our faith in action.

We are called to be the beacon to those who have lost hope, to those who are leaving in pain, to those who have had to compromise, to those who have stopped believing that there is a God amidst one crisis after another, to those who have stopped dreaming in order to just survive.

It is time to start to rise as heroes. Today we start the process of bringing out the greatness and heroism in ourselves and in each other.

This is the new brand of heroism :

Less for self, more for others... so that there will be enough for all.

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