It has been two decades since Ryan Cayabyab has written the song, "Paraiso" and today it still stands as controversial as it was when it first came out in the 90's. As the song continued to ring truth around the world, the people have yet to find and utilize the hope they have long been searching for amidst the trash. Last year, I had a chance to volunteer for Aspiring Citizens for Community Empowerment (ACCE) for a short while and although the head of the organization told us that Smokey Mountain has changed a lot from what it was before, you can visibly tell that it's still far off from actually improving. Some houses have been built with concrete but had cardboards inside as mats and a thin blanket for windows and doors. That is for only a little part of the place. If you go further, you will see houses built with thin plywood on top of trash. The supply of water is also scarce - only certain parts have it. They deliver it via a long hose duct taped together to reach the place. Guess what the hose travels to? Yes, garbage. People there get sick from diarrhea and typhoid. These are all preventable diseases really and yet the Filipinos there get infected and much worse yet, they die.
During the interview with a local household there, the Japanese students and I found out that a family survives with only five hundred pesos (Php 500.00) a week at maximum. That is around seventy - one pesos (Php 71.00) a day. With the current minimum food requirements attainable at a doubled price of a hundred and seventy-two pesos (Php 172.00), I think it is very apt to say that they barely "eat". And for that amount, the government expects five members of the family to eat the following meals for a day:
During the interview with a local household there, the Japanese students and I found out that a family survives with only five hundred pesos (Php 500.00) a week at maximum. That is around seventy - one pesos (Php 71.00) a day. With the current minimum food requirements attainable at a doubled price of a hundred and seventy-two pesos (Php 172.00), I think it is very apt to say that they barely "eat". And for that amount, the government expects five members of the family to eat the following meals for a day:
BREAKFAST
An egg plus rice
Coffee with milk
LUNCH
Mongo with malunggay
Latundan Banana
Rice
MERIENDA
Pandesal
DINNER
Tulingan fish
Boiled Kangkong
Rice
Then what of those who live of with lesser income? Must they rely on picked up food from the trash? Or must they only offer their children noodles and rice for breakfast until dinner? Must they continue to think that everything with a "Sangkap Pinoy" seal is healthy enough for them to eat everyday?
Supplements are good but not enough to keep people healthy |
What's more shocking to me is, the government is actually using this food bundle price to measure the poverty rate. "It was never our intention na pababain ang poverty incidence. Siguro dapat lang ma-stress na ginawa lang tong refinement so that we can more accurately identify the poor.", Jessamyn Encarnacion, the Director of Social Statistics Office stated in a news interview with GMA.
Seriously? They got away with it for almost ten years? |
Really? How low can oligarchs go? There are so many dimensions to scale poverty and they only choose this? Saddening. Truly saddening. Having worked at public hospitals during my time there as an occupational therapy intern, I met with the sad truth that poor people are getting poorer. There even used to be a "free" classification for those who can't afford being treated at hospitals but now, there is none because of the millions of pesos cut from health. On top of that, the government can boldly tell people not to worry as they suck their brains dry from the budget cut on education as well. The government is raising a generation of people to be dumb enough not to question them with their corrupt ways. And by being ignorant, we, in turn, are raising them as well!
The news about food bundle for 2011
Apathy is what keeps us from reaching paraiso. In twenty years, everything has changed and it had turned for the worse. I don't mean to put the blame on anyone but in all sense, we make ourselves. We did it to ourselves - the past generation and the present alike. Keeping track and just watching isn't making a difference at all. It just makes you part of the problem too. And in all honesty, for the past few months that I've been staying here in Canada, I am saddened by the mindset of those who have fled from the Philippines. Not that I can blame them though, most of them had really tough lives when you hear them out. But it's heartbreaking when you hear how they just plan to live off their lives peacefully here because the condition in the Philippines is really bad. You always hear them talk about how bad it is there, how lucky that you're here and things like, "wala na tayo magagawa". Coming from the mouth of a fellow Filipino tsk tsk tsk! Yes, we are the lucky few who did get here! Yes, we are the Filipinos who have more power than those back home! Yes, we can do something!
YES!!!
YES!!!
YES!!!
I'm sick and tired of people who say NO! If we truly care about the land we were born in, we would look back. And we will act now! A later or an "I'll think about it" is a chance for things to turn for the worse. And although poverty is far off from disappearing, together, we can start the change. Together, we can make a difference.
Don't let the next decade sing "Paraiso" still.
For the next generation, let us make a stand today.
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