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Carabao Kevin Super Moderator

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Posted: Sat Aug 26th, 2006 03:27 am |
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Greetings to All:
I personally have a difficult time turning my head to the poor, regardless of their reason for being poor.
I have read nothing but GREAT things about GAWAD KALINGA.
If you would like to truly help the poor in the PHILIPPINES, check these guys out!
wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gawad_Kalinga
Gawad Kalinga links:
http://www.gawadkalinga.org/
http://www.gawadkalinga.org/howtohelp.htm#Time
http://www.cfcglobal.org.ph/gawad_kalinga/gawad_kalinga.htm
http://www.inq7.net/opi/2003/jul/25/opi_jmontelibano-1.htm
Peace be With You!
-Mabuhay-
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maven Moderator

| Joined: | Fri Jun 2nd, 2006 |
| Location: | Philippines |
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Posted: Sat Jan 27th, 2007 08:12 pm |
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From the Phil. Daily Inquirer:
FILIPINO OF THE YEAR
After Edsa I, Gawad Kalinga Filipinos’ next gift to world
Inquirer
Last updated 02:31am (Mla time) 01/28/2007
IN the 1980s, the Philippines gave the world People Power—a gift that came forth from Edsa that has kept on bringing democracy the world over.
In the 1990s, there began what the world has come to embrace as the next, necessary, follow-up to People Power as political action. If People Power was a means for reclaiming freedom, something would have to address the need to build a thriving, substantive democracy.
What began in 1999 with an effort to build a single house for the members of the Adduro family, who were living in a shanty of rusted GI sheets, cardboard boxes, plastic sheets and old tires, is now known as Gawad Kalinga. In this first decade of the present century, it has grown to represent the Philippines’ next gift to humanity.
Gawad Kalinga is becoming a global template for development—one that has expanded to Papua New Guinea, Indonesia and Cambodia, and that will soon open in East Timor, India, Nigeria and Nicaragua.
And while Gawad Kalinga is about many people, its public face is that of one man: Tony Meloto.
Any person is not only the product of particular circumstances but also the result of institutional forces, of a history that is as much one person’s as it is a nation’s.
The Tony Meloto so proudly pointed out by fellow Filipinos today is the product of the influences of his time, and of previous times.
His circumstances have surely been duplicated in many others, yet are unique in having inspired a way forward for so many. It is a way forward others have tried to find for generations.
Building communities
In internal exile in Dapitan, Jose Rizal set out to build communities—the best preparation, he felt, for a new nation.
The Katipunero Pio Valenzuela claimed that Rizal had once told him: “Tell our countrymen that, at the same time that we are preparing for a war against Spain, I desire to see a college established in Japan which will be converted later into a university for Filipino youths. I shall be greatly pleased to be the director of said college.”
To the end, the First Filipino refused to be the Philippines’ first politician.
What would have happened if the great reformers—Raul Manglapus, Manuel Manahan, Francisco “Soc” Rodrigo, to name just a few—had refused to enter politics and done what Rizal set out to do, and Tony Meloto has done?
In the 1960s, the reformist was scorned (“clerico-fascist” was a term often used). In a sense, the same skepticism continues to reign in radical circles.
But in 1967, the year Meloto entered the Ateneo de Manila, a transformation was taking place. It had its first glimmerings in the “work a year with the people” program to bring doctors to far-flung barangays, which was begun by Manglapus, another Atenean.
And just as Manglapus’ efforts would find political vindication only decades later in the careers of barrio physicians such as Juan Flavier, so did the Gawad Kalinga of today find itself born out of the contradictions of 1960s Philippine society.
Genuine stewardship
Speaking to a younger generation of Ateneans last year, Meloto described the insight he had gained—and, thus, the core belief that now animates Gawad Kalinga.
“Because we love our children, not pity them,” he told his audience, “we do not give them charity and abandon them after doing so. We sacrifice and invest in their future. With the way poverty is growing in this country, they will not be safe or secure here unless we move from charity to genuine Christian stewardship and bring our people out of poverty. Neither will they be whole anywhere in the developed countries, where they will be seen or feel second-class even if they are rich or successful, as long as the Philippines remains poor and corrupt, because we are viewed collectively as a people.”
What Meloto did was to resist the urge to involve only people like himself; what he accomplished was to bring together those previously assumed as mutually incompatible.
When he first began, he worked not to change the nation but, rather, to improve the lives of a few—the Adduros.
In helping them, he did so with concrete goals in mind but a limitless vision nonetheless: If it will work for one family, it will work for many more.
And work for many more it has.
The Adduro model
The Adduros were composed of the father, Enteng, jobless at that time; the mother, Mode, a laundrywoman; and all five of their children. (In 1999, the children were out of school, and two of them were gang members.)
Gawad Kalinga provided Enteng a job. Mode became the head of the neighborhood microfinance effort, and all the children went back to school. Four have since graduated from college (two with a 2-year degree in computer science); the youngest is in his last semester.
The Adduros’ home has expanded through their own efforts to become a 92-square-meter house where once they were content with a 30 sq.m. dwelling of more permanent materials.
Their community, the first Gawad Kalinga community, sponsored by Filipinos from Northern California, has grown to include 2,000 homes in 18 villages in Bagong Silang, Caloocan City—places that provide a decent life for 10,000 Filipinos who thought seven years ago that their lives would never change.
And as Bagong Silang has gone, so has the nation: The 1,000 Gawad Kalinga communities all over the country directly affect the lives of half a million poor Filipinos regardless of location or religious creed. (For example, Christians and Muslims are working side by side in building the 25 Gawad Kalinga communities for Muslims in Mindanao.)
P8B in 8 years
And the army of volunteers who give their time and talents to the cause give so generously that their efforts can now be quantified.
Developmental experts estimate the total development generated by Gawad Kalinga at more than P8 billion in a little over as many years (P3 billion for houses, P0.5 billion for schools, clinics and other infrastructure, P2 billion for land and site development, P2.5 billion for social preparations, donated professional services and volunteerism, programs for health, education and livelihood).
The major sources of funds are corporations and sociocivic groups, the national and local governments, Filipino organizations abroad, schools and universities, and philanthropic families and individuals here and overseas.
While the sources are many, they have common characteristics— they are not subject to graft, are neither liable for misuse nor susceptible to abuse in aid of electioneering, and are devoted to the common good.
And the resources transcend borders. The government of Canada has been giving aid directly to Gawad Kalinga, especially for calamity victims; American companies like AIG USA, Fedex, UPS and Proctor & Gamble send funds from their head offices.
Neither does it for diplomatic or commercial advantage.
View the scale of the resources raised in these comparative terms. The entire budget of the Department of Agrarian Reform (P1.9 billion) plus the capital outlays for the Department of Education (P2.9 billion) plus the budget of the University of the Philippines system (P4 billion): The figure only slightly exceeds what Gawad Kalinga has raised.
Disproving truisms
To understand the significance of Tony Meloto requires seeing that he has disproved two truisms—that change can only come from reforms imposed from above, and that it can only be accomplished through a revolution from below.
He has dispelled an assumption central to both truisms—that change requires force, either political will or force of arms.
He has shown that brute force or pragmatic politics need not trump principles. He does so because he has harnessed People Power to fill in the gaps that politics can never fully address.
Gawad Kalinga is a potent force of 200,000 volunteers—a force that dwarfs the entire strength of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, which is 130,000 strong.
Meloto has mobilized those numbers because he knows that all mobilizations, if they are to last and have a beneficial effect, must appeal to the practical but be based on self-sacrifice.
Partnership, peace
The independent life of our nation has been a story of strife, but people like Tony Meloto have shown that an alternative lies in partnership, and peace.
To be sure, what Meloto set out to do is nothing new. What is new is that he has forged ahead and has something to show for it.
Turning principle into practice, and practice into a recipe for success, is his authentic, trailblazing, achievement.
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Carabao Kevin Super Moderator

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Posted: Mon Jan 29th, 2007 05:12 pm |
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Very nice info maven.....but I don't understand the "IN the 1980s, the Philippines gave the world People Power—a gift that came forth from Edsa that has kept on bringing democracy the world over." ?????
I have read about "People Power". Did this spread worldwide and corrupted governments came crashing down? I know China tried something like that, they got shot for it. It didn't work too good. 
Thanks for the info! 
-Mabuhay-
-Kevin
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maven Moderator

| Joined: | Fri Jun 2nd, 2006 |
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Posted: Tue Mar 27th, 2007 02:09 pm |
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Tony Meloto, the visionary and driving force behind the Gawad Kalinga movement, is gifted with a Doctorate of Humanities, Honoris Causa, by the Ateneo de Davao. He then delivers a speech to the graduates of the university, a challenge actually, for patriotism and heroism. The same message will be given to eight other colleges and universities who have asked Tony Meloto to be their commencement speaker for 2007.
"The Filipino Spirit is Rising"
Antonio Meloto
2007 Commencement Exercises
Ateneo de Davao University
Today, I feel intelligent. Not only am I addressing some of the brightest minds in Mindanao, but I am also being honored by this prestigious university with a Doctorate in Humanities, Honoris Causa. This is the first doctorate that I have received and I am accepting it in all humility and pride as a recognition of the nobility of the cause and the heroism of the thousands of Gawad Kalinga workers that I represent. Thank you Fr. Ting Samson and Ateneo de Davao for bestowing the highest academic degree on a man who was born without a pedigree- the "askal" (asong kalye) who went to Ateneo and came back to the slums to help those he left behind.
To a person like myself who did not excel in Ateneo in my pursuit of a college degree, receiving this Ph. D. is extremely flattering being fully conscious that my principal role in this movement is to be the storyteller of the many who put in the sacrifice and the hard work and yet have remained mostly unrecognized. It is also exhilarating because it builds on the growing global awareness, triggered by Gawad Kalinga and other movements that have not given up on our country, that the Filipinos can and will build a squatter-free, slum- free and hunger- free Philippines by committing their collective genius, passion and strength towards restoring the dignity and the potential for excellence of the poor, the weak and the powerless.
The Filipino spirit today is rising wherever he is in the world. He is starting to discover that he has the power to liberate himself from being a slave of the past… that he can remove the label stuck to his soul as a second class people from a third world country… that he can correct the scandal of history of being the most corrupt in Asia despite being the only Christian nation, until East Timor, in the region.
In the right setting the Filipino has proven that he can be law- abiding, hardworking, honest and excellent.
Over the years, I have not met a Filipino beggar in my travel to the US, Canada and Australia…not a single beggar that I have seen or have heard of out of more than 2 million Filipinos in the US; many Caucasians, Afro- Americans and Latinos- yes- but no Filipinos. Clearly, it is not the nature of Filipinos to beg if he is in the right home and community environment. The mendicant culture in his native land is man- made and artificial and can therefore be unmade and corrected if we give him back his dignity which is his birthright as a son of God.
In the same vein, we know that the Filipino is not lazy. Time Magazine in its 2006 article on Happiness identifies the Filipino as one of the ethnic groups in America least likely to go on welfare. How many of us know of friends and relatives who would take on two or even three jobs in pursuit of their dreams for a better life. Hardworking when motivated, resilient when tested- that is the Filipino…that is us. It is no surprise therefore that the average income of the Filipino- Americans is higher that the US national average; the former slave is now richer than the master in his master's home country.
We must believe that we were designed for excellence. World- class Filipino doctors and nurses are healing the sick of America and Europe. Our sailors dominate the seas in every mode of marine transport for commerce and pleasure providing every imaginable form of service- and often always, they are the best navigators, the best chefs, the best entertainers. Thriving economies in Asia carry the mark of Filipino managerial expertise in their start-up stage. Filipino CEOs, CFOs, COOs captain top multinational corporations carrying on the proud expat tradition of SGV's Washington Sycip, PLDT-SMART's Manny Pagnilinan, P&G's Manny Pacis and many others.
Sadly, we are top of the line, crème de la crème, the best of the best elsewhere in the world except in our homeland. While the Jews and the Arabs were busy building abundance out of their desert, we were busy creating a desert out of our abundance.
Let us put a stop to our inanity and hypocrisy. Let us stop cracking jokes about our shame and misery. Instead let us celebrate with our hard work and integrity the return of our honor and pride as a gifted people, blessed by God with this beautiful land. Let us honor every great deed, every sacrifice, and every kindness that we extend to our disadvantaged and needy countrymen.
Let us put an end to our lamentation. We have suffered long enough. For 400 years, we have been gnashing our teeth, blaming one another, stepping on each other and yet have the temerity at the end of the day to ask God why this is happening as if it was His fault. It is now time to hope, to care, to work together and to rejoice.
Yes, we will rise as a nation if we nurture this emerging beautiful spirit of the Filipino and cultivate an intelligent heart. How? When we show our love for God by being our brother's keeper- giving land to the landless, homes to the homeless and food to the hungry. This is about love and justice in a country where the majority of our people are landless, millions of them living in shanties and slums and 17% of them experiencing hunger in a rich and fertile land. This is not about charity but about authentic Christian stewardship and nation- building.
We will rise as a nation when rich Filipinos will consider the poor as an heir, like our youngest child, equal in worth and dignity with our own children, deserving an equal share in our children's inheritance. A beautiful spirit and an intelligent heart consider the poor as family, see the face of Christ in them, and see the paradise that every slum community can become. That is why every GK home is beautifully painted and the standard of landscaping of every GK village is Ayala Alabang or Ladislawa in the case of Davao.
When we build first world communities for the poorest Filipino, we give them dignity and first world aspirations that will motivate them to dream bigger and work harder with support and nurturing. A recent study of GK Brookside, Payatas conducted by the UP Diliman College of Economics revealed an amazing result – the confidence and self- respect of the residents, many of them former scavengers, rose from 17% before GK to 99% after GK; 93% consider themselves better off in terms of quality of life and 96% believe that their economic situation will improve in the future. Clearly the spirit of the poor is rising because those with the most share their best with the least.
This nation will rise if her sons and daughters abroad will see wisdom in helping not just their relatives, which is an admirable Filipino trait, but also the poor they do not know who need help the most.
Last night, I arrived from a 1- week trip to the U.S. for the world premiere in Chicago of "Paraiso", the Gawad Kalinga movie, and to attend GK events in Los Angeles and Las Vegas. The movie was a big hit but the bigger hit for me was the phenomenal response of our patriots in America to help the motherland by building self-reliant and sustainable GK communities. The UST Medical Alumni Association of America Board was planning not just building more houses but also hospitals and community health programs through Gawad Kalusugan. USTMAA president Dr. Primo Andres is building a beautiful GK Village for his wife, Sylvia in Panabo, Davao where she comes from as an expression of his deep affection for her. Another Davaoeno, former Cabinet Secretary Cito Lorenzo, joined me in booming Las Vegas to honor Filipino entertainers and realtors who are investing in the rebuilding of their home country.
Passion for the Philippines was evident everywhere I went. From successful young San Diego businessman Tony Olaes who spoke about sleepless nights in his excitement to help fund 20 new GK villages with his Filipino business partners to the SouthCal Ancop Sikad Bikers pedaling to build Sibol Schools and the Bayanihan Builders who are retired professionals in Los Angeles repairing homes of neighbors to raise resources to build homes in Bicol, to the 8 nurses in NorCal working extra shifts to fund their individual GK villages. The Filipino exile is waking up and starting to unleash a stream of Patriot Funds that will augment the OFW flow in fuelling the Philippine economy.
Today, I am here to salute the beautiful spirit and the intelligent heart of the people of Mindanao. Many of our volunteers here, like many in other parts of the country, build homes for the poor when they themselves do not own land or home. Christians here starting with caretakers from Couples for Christ set aside fear and comfort to serve our fellow Filipinos in Camp Abubakar and other Moslem GK communities. Your students are going out of the classrooms to learn about life and love of God and country by serving in poor communities. The LGU of Davao led by Mayor Duterte and many throughout Mindanao are doing massive land banking in solidarity with our conviction that no Filipino deserves to be a squatter in his own country. And many families here are starting to understand that giving a part of their land to give dignity and security to the landless and homeless poor is not only right with God but also builds peace, triggers economic activity, improves land values- creates a win- win situation for all.
And to you my dear graduates, what can I say? Congratulations of course for finishing what you began and for joining the ranks of the elite few of the Filipinos with a college degree. I thank your parents for their sacrifice and for giving us sons and daughters who will steward this country better than us.
You are entering adult life equipped with a degree from a respected university at an auspicious time in the life of our country. It is your destiny to reach maturity during this great season of hope, this exciting time of awakening, this period of great challenge and heroism.
You have the choice and the opportunity to correct the mistakes of our generation and build a future full of hope in this country. You can be the new breed of political leaders who will gain your mandate through visible and quantifiable performance, rather than mastery of the art of winning elections through cheating and corruption. You can be the new captains of business and industry who will work for profit with a conscience, expanding the market base by wisely investing in developing the potential of the poor for productivity. You can be the new elite of this country who will not be happy to send your children to exclusive schools and live in exclusive subdivisions if out of school street children are ignored and Lazarus continues to live as a squatter outside your gates.
Who can stop us from claiming our Promised Land? Spain is not our master anymore. America is not our master anymore. Japan is not our master anymore. Our enemies are not the corrupt politicians, the greedy rich, the lazy poor, the religious hypocrites and other convenient scapegoats. Our enemies are not out there anymore. Our enemies are now within us.
We have compromised our values and tolerated corruption. We have lowered our standard and tolerated poverty. We have sacrificed the truth for hypocrisy. We have chosen convenience for vision, popularity for leadership…and have chosen despair over hope.
Do we fight or do we run? Is there a King Leonides among you who will fight for honor and freedom? Are there 300 Spartans among you who will confront our enemies with extraordinary courage and love? Can you be the army who will lead our people to victory following the path of peace? Are you the generation of patriots who can shout to the world that no Filipino will remain poor because you will not allow it; that no Filipino will remain a squatter because you will not allow it; that no politician will remain corrupt because you will not allow it?
If you are, then join us in Gawad Kalinga. Together, we can build a great nation, first world in the eyes of God and respected by other great nations.
Godspeed to you our patriots and heroes. God bless our beloved Philippines.
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