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	<title>Education for Life Foundation &#187; Search Results  &#187;  PBAZ</title>
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		<title>Herbal Medicine from the Aetas</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/herbal-medicine-from-the-aetas/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Aug 2010 04:52:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Philippine Daily Inquirer had this news item to day, August 29, 2010. It includes a story from Carling Domulot, Aeta leader and ELF leader-graduate.<br /><br />Some years ago, when ELF, in partnership with PBAZ, started an Alternative Learning System (ALS) for Aeta out of school youth and adults, the PBAZ leaders asked why the modules of the Department of Education did not include any on indigenous peoples&#8217; rights, or on Aeta culture, including their health practices. We asked them (and helped them) to produce special learning modules on these topics.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/herbal-medicine-from-the-aetas/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p>The Philippine Daily Inquirer had this news item to day, August 29, 2010. It includes a story from Carling Domulot, Aeta leader and ELF leader-graduate.</p>
<p>Some years ago, when ELF, in partnership with PBAZ, started an Alternative Learning System (ALS) for Aeta out of school youth and adults, the PBAZ leaders asked why the modules of the Department of Education did not include any on indigenous peoples&#8217; rights, or on Aeta culture, including their health practices. We asked them (and helped them) to produce special learning modules on these topics.</p>
<p>I think we should ask them to produce additional modules on herbal medicine.</p>
<p><strong><em>In villages of Aetas, cure found in plants</em></strong></p>
<p><em>Tonette Orejas</em></p>
<p>MABALACAT, Pampanga, Philippines—Villagers in Barangays Marcos and Macapagal here boil the leaves of acacia and roots of cogon together. The mixture is an old solution to high fever and malaria and is used to wash the patient down to lower his body temperature.</p>
<p>It is now being used to combat dengue-carrying mosquitoes.</p>
<p>Patients are made to drink a concentrated version of the mixture, according to Robert Serrano, a tribal leader in the two villages.</p>
<p>Acacia and cogon abound in the area.</p>
<p>But Aetas do not rely only on this indigenous cure, he added. They avail themselves of medical help and medicines at the provincial government-run Mabalacat district hospital in the town proper.</p>
<p><strong>The Aeta way</strong></p>
<p>In Barangay Bihawo in Botolan, Zambales, the 150 Aeta families there keep dengue away by keeping their resettlement site clean, according to Carlito Domulot, chair of the Lubos na Alyansa ng mga Katutubo Ayta sa Sambales (Lakas).</p>
<p>For two years now, they have maintained an organic farm in nearby Barangay San Juan where they grow 100-percent chemical-free vegetables.</p>
<p>“There is not one case of dengue in our tribe for years,” Domulot, 55, said in a phone interview. “Mosquitoes are rare here,” he added, referring to the carriers of the dengue virus.</p>
<p>Should a dengue case occur, Domulot said he would go up their old village at Villar near Mt. Pinatubo to look for “kupit-kupit,” a highland grass that rises to a person’s knee.</p>
<p>The leaves are heated and pressed on the forehead of a sick person. The roots are boiled to produce a mixture for drinking, Domulot said.</p>
<p><strong>Other cures</strong></p>
<p>For Aetas originally from Barangay Poon Bato in Botolan, Zambales (they now live in Itanglew resettlement), the big leaves of a tree called “dita” is a cure for high fever and malaria.</p>
<p>Elsa Novo, a village councilor, said old folk used dita during the malaria outbreaks in evacuation centers from 1992 to 1994. The tree is difficult to find in the upper slopes of Mt. Pinatubo, she said.</p>
<p>Aetas have growing trust for modern medical help, Novo said. Last week, a 17-year-old boy survived dengue because his parents immediately took him to a local hospital.</p>
<p>In Ifugao, which recorded 187 dengue cases from January to July this year, indigenous communities have also resorted to their old remedies against malaria-carrying mosquitoes, which used to be their bigger seasonal health problem.</p>
<p>Santos Bayucca, an Ifugao environmental advocate, said villagers have started burning dried peelings of locally grown pomelo. The smokey pomelo aroma had been credited for warding off mosquitoes and other insects, Bayucca said. <em>With a report from EV Espiritu, Inquirer Northern Luzon</em></p>
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		<title>Sr. Menggay of the Aetas</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/sr-menggay-of-the-aetas/</link>
		<comments>http://educforlife.org/sr-menggay-of-the-aetas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Aug 2010 06:54:20 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://educforlife.org/?p=221</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: medium;"><span style="font-weight: normal; line-height: 22px;"><em><span style="font-family: arial; font-size: x-large;"><span style="line-height: 30px;"><br /><br /></span></span></em></span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><em>This morning, Ka Carling, one of the Aeta leaders of LAKAS and PBAZ, dropped by our place on his way to attending the La Nina Summit tomorrow. We reminisced about the early years of literacy work among the Aetas, which was assisted by the FMM sisters led by Sister Menggay.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/sr-menggay-of-the-aetas/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a name="6202768953497761772"></a></p>
<h3 style="color: #000000; font-family: arial; font-size: 22px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.4em; margin-top: -5px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 0px; padding-top: 0px; padding-right: 0px; padding-bottom: 4px; padding-left: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: medium;"><span style="font-weight: normal; line-height: 22px;"><em><span style="font-family: arial; font-size: x-large;"><span style="line-height: 30px;"><br />
</span></span></em></span></span></h3>
<div style="color: #000000; font-family: arial; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.6em; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><em>This morning, Ka Carling, one of the Aeta leaders of LAKAS and PBAZ, dropped by our place on his way to attending the La Nina Summit tomorrow. We reminisced about the early years of literacy work among the Aetas, which was assisted by the FMM sisters led by Sister Menggay. He asked: &#8220;There is supposed to be a write up on her after she died, but I haven&#8217;t read it.&#8221; I told him that I think it was Ceres Doyo who wrote about Sister Menggay, and promised to post it.</em></span></div>
<div style="color: #000000; font-family: arial; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.6em; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><em>I consider the work of ELF with the Aetas, especially our literacy and ALS program with LAKAS and PBAZ a continuation of the pioneering work of Sr, Menggay and the FMM sisters three decades ago. Ceres Doyo&#8217;s column is a fitting tribute.</em></span></div>
<div style="color: #000000; font-family: arial; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.6em; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><em><a style="border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-color: #777777; color: #754c24; text-decoration: none;" href="http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view/20100811-286266/Sr-Menggay-of-the-Aetas"><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><em>Philippine Daily Inquirer</em><em><strong>/OPINION/</strong>by Ma. Ceres P. Doyo</em> </span></a></em></span></div>
<div style="color: #000000; font-family: arial; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.6em; margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">“MAY YOUR spirit fly to the bosom of Apo Namalyari,” a sobbi</span><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">ng Aeta leader wearing only a G-string said at the funeral Mass for Sr. Carmen “Menggay” Balazo last week, on Aug. 5. We were gathered at the convent chapel of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary (FMM) in Carmona, Cavite. Present were Sr. Menggay’s fellow FMM nuns, her immediate family, friends and representatives of the Aeta community who came all the way from Zambales.</span></div>
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<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">After the Mass we all proceeded to the FMM convent in Tagaytay City. Sr. Menggay was laid to rest directly in the ground in the FMMs’ beautiful burial place on the ridge which has a breathtaking view of Taal lake and volcano. The sun broke through the dark clouds as we bade Sr. Menggay goodbye, sang and threw flowers at her moist grave. Everything around was suddenly bright and green and the lake beyond turned misty blue.</div>
<blockquote style="line-height: 1.3em; font-family: georgia; font-style: italic; margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 20px; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 20px;">
<div style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', serif;"><em><strong>And I thought of another volcano, Mount Pinatubo in Zambales, at the foot of which Sr. Menggay and her fellow FMMs spent years living and working among the Aetas. I knew their work. I had gone there in the 1980s when they began, and followed them after the 1991 world-class volcanic eruption that set them off on a historic exodus. But I am going ahead of the story.</strong></em></div>
</blockquote>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Born 71 years ago in Misamis Occidental, Sr. Menggay passed away on Aug. 3 after a year-long battle with a lung ailment. She was ready to go. As the story went, the day before she died, she raised her arms and exclaimed several times, “Now, Lord!” And then conceded, “Tomorrow na lang.” (How we laughed over that.) Tomorrow did come and she was taken into the bosom of her God whom the Aetas reverently call Apo Namalyari.</div>
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<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I came to know Sr. Menggay during the martial law years. A bunch of us greenhorn activists (religious and lay) frequented the FMM convent in Pandacan where she was based and later became superior. Now I can say that the place was a hub for praying, reflecting, eating and, uh, plotting.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">While fixing my files of photos and negatives last weekend, I found photos of Sr. Menggay. Sharp black-and-white and graphic colored ones that I took show her standing beside a naked corpse of an activist who was killed at a rally in September 1985. We were present at the autopsy.</div>
<p><a name="more"></a></p>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Sr. Menggay who happened to be in Manila at that time called me in the dead of night to accompany her to the morgue. In the absence of the victim’s family, Sr. Menggay took charge. I was with her in choosing the coffin. In the afternoon, the victim’s next of kin arrived from the province. After snapping a photo of Sr. Menggay comforting the grieving relatives, I ran outside, slumped on the sidewalk and sobbed.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">At that time, Sr. Menggay had already begun working among the Aetas. I visited the new FMM community in Sitio Yamot in Poonbato, Botolan, Zambales, in 1982. There was no water source in the area. Water had to be brought from the town and everyone took a bath only every three days. I observed the organizing and adult education work among the Aetas and wrote about it in a magazine.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">I did go back after a couple of years (to surreptitiously document and write about the US-RP war games in the area with an Aeta as guide). This time the community had water and was abloom with orchids. The nuns’ cogon-thatched house had become bigger and the Aetas’ homes stood neatly in a row. That was the last time I would see the place. In June 1991 Yamot was buried in volcanic ash and the village was no more. But Lakas (Lubos na Alyansa ng mga Katutubong Ayta ng Sambales), which Sr. Menggay helped organize, would live on. Lakas could be considered Sr. Menggay’s legacy.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Sr. Menggay and the FMMs journeyed with the Aeta-Lakas community as they searched for the “promised land.” I wrote a feature on their search (“Somewhere, a buried village will rise again,” July 7, 1991) for the Sunday Inquirer Magazine.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">The book “Eruption and Exodus: Mt. Pinatubo and the Aytas of Zambales” is about the Aetas’ journey before, during and after the volcanic eruption. Sr. Menggay shot the photos, Sr. Emma Fondevilla wrote the text, Lorna K. Tirol copy edited. My August 1991 column piece, “Yamot is in the Heart,” served as foreword. To show their appreciation, Sr. Menggay and the Aetas brought me sack loads of Pinatubo pumice stones for my garden and a copy of the book with dozens of Aeta signatures.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Let me say, and Sr. Menggay would attest to this, that it was the Aetas, along with Sr. Emma (a scientist who was then also working among the Aetas, and now the superior of the FMM Philippine Province) that first alerted the incredulous scientific community about the rumbling of Mt. Pinatubo which had been dormant for 600 years. It was first in the Inquirer.</div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Sr. Menggay transcended ideologies, religious affiliations and cultures. After Lakas had become deeply rooted among the Aetas Sr. Menggay and the FMMs moved on. She traveled to far places and readily shared her experiences with the indigenous peoples of the Asia-Pacific region, sometimes taking Aeta leaders along. She was also involved in interreligious dialogue.</div>
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<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Sr. Menggay is truly a daughter of the Church, a follower of St. Francis, a disciple of Blessed Mary of the Passion (1839-1904), the courageous French nun who laid the foundation of the Franciscan congregation in the wilderness of India. Like her FMM sisters who were martyred in China during the 1900 Boxer Rebellion (canonized by Pope John Paul II in 2000), she did not shirk danger and remained true to her missionary calling, passionate and compassionate till the end.</div>
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<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">The Aetas will always be in her heaven-heart and she in theirs.</div>
</div>
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		<title>Rising from the Ashes</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/rising-from-the-ashes/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Feb 2010 07:44:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[When the volcanic Mount Pinatubo erupted in 1991, its lava and ashes destroyed many surrounding villages – including the traditional homeland of the Ayta, indigenous people descending from the first inhabitants of the Philippines. Today, resettled elsewhere on Luzon island, they are trying to preserve their traditional culture and community integrity through education and theatre. These efforts are supported by the Ayta organisation PBAZ, part of the Education for Life Foundation. Going back to the abandoned village is one way of keeping memories alive.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/rising-from-the-ashes/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When the volcanic Mount Pinatubo erupted in 1991, its lava and ashes destroyed many surrounding villages – including the traditional homeland of the Ayta, indigenous people descending from the first inhabitants of the Philippines. Today, resettled elsewhere on Luzon island, they are trying to preserve their traditional culture and community integrity through education and theatre. These efforts are supported by the Ayta organisation PBAZ, part of the Education for Life Foundation. Going back to the abandoned village is one way of keeping memories alive.</p>
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		<title>New Year, New Hopes</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/new-year-new-hopes/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 09 Jan 2010 02:24:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://educforlife.org/?p=194</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Yesterday, Ka Carling of LAKAS and PBAZ called me on the celfone: &#8220;The ceremony granting us the CADT to the 15,000 hectares will happen in the Botolan town plaza on January 14. Please come.&#8221;<br /><br />Unfortunately, I won&#8217;t be able to go, since I have a previous engagement. But I and the rest of ELF will be there not only in spirit, but in other ways.<br /><br />It&#8217;s one thing to get the title to their ancestral domain, which significantly includes Mt. Pinatubo. It&#8217;s another thing to be ale to develop it to benefit the Aeta communities while conserving biodiversity and protecting the forests and watersheds.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/new-year-new-hopes/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yesterday, Ka Carling of LAKAS and PBAZ called me on the celfone: &#8220;The ceremony granting us the CADT to the 15,000 hectares will happen in the Botolan town plaza on January 14. Please come.&#8221;</p>
<p>Unfortunately, I won&#8217;t be able to go, since I have a previous engagement. But I and the rest of ELF will be there not only in spirit, but in other ways.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s one thing to get the title to their ancestral domain, which significantly includes Mt. Pinatubo. It&#8217;s another thing to be ale to develop it to benefit the Aeta communities while conserving biodiversity and protecting the forests and watersheds.</p>
<p>ELF and PBAZ see the granting of the CADT as an opportunity, but even more, as a challenge. &#8220;Let us check if there have been previous CADT which have been conserved and developed to the benefit of the indigenous communities,&#8221; I told our staff meeting.</p>
<p>I teased Carling: &#8220;Unfortunately, there is greater global appreciation for the 15,000 hectares and its forests, than for the Aeta communities. But since you are the legal stewards of the area, whatever you do will be appreciated; it will also offer lessons not just for other places in the Philippines, but even for other places in the world.&#8221;</p>
<p>When ELF entered into a long-term partnership with PBAZ, the association of Aeta leaders who have graduated from our grassroots leadership course, we did not anticipate that they will get their CADT. But this new opportunity will need a large &#8220;community of leaders and learners&#8221; to insure not only that the area is protected but that it is developed in a way that benefits the Aeta communities while conserving biodiversity.</p>
<p>During the first six months of 2010, ELF and PBAZ will develop and implement a new leadership course for community-based &#8220;biodiversity conservation and sustainable development&#8221; to build the capability of the Aeta communities to protect and develop their ancestral domain.</p>
<p>The possibilities are exciting, but the challenges are daunting.</p>
<p>We have picked up a lesson from the protection and reforestation of the La Mesa Watershed. Corporate sponsors were convinced to commit 20,000 pesos per year for three years, which supported the planting of 400 trees per hectare, from the nursery to forest guards. From the Foundation for Philippine environment, we learned that 600 trees per hectare is a better number, but following the principle of &#8220;rainforestation,&#8221; only indigenous species must be used, and there should be no monoculture.</p>
<p>Carling thinks that instead of relying on paid forest guards, we should support households not only to gather wildlings and set up community nurseries, but also to take care of the newly planted tress for at least three years, assigning a hectare per household. The households should also be helped to practice organic agriculture in between the growing trees, so they have alternative income to cutting trees, and have added reason to visit their assigned areas regularly.</p>
<p>But where to get the needed cash? In one brainstorming session, we dreamt of a different &#8220;carbon trading&#8221; scheme, where individuals and communities with large footprints inside the Philippines and friends in other countries could support the cost of nurseries and reforestation, and occasionally help in the planting of trees, since there are thousands of hectares that await.</p>
<p>For the four barangays of Villar, Belbel, Morza, and Burgos, their dream is to re-establish small settlements in the mountains from which they were dispersed by the Mt. Pinatubo eruption. These will also be the places for the main nurseries, and community facilities for the various training programs that we will be offering to lowlanders and outsiders who want to learn with the Aetas about biodiversity conservation and sustainable development.</p>
<p>Carling tells us about hot springs two kilometers from the peak of Mt. Pinatubo, where he once bathed and cured some skin disease he suffered from. &#8220;We should develop a sacred grove nearby, where we plant our indigenous trees and herbal plants,&#8221; he suggests. &#8220;Perhaps that will also be the place where we can combine our indigenous healing practices and the new healing methods that Girlie is studying.&#8221; Who knows, that may be a future healing spa.</p>
<p>I am reminded of a saying we had in prison which we applied to ELF: &#8220;Happy are those who dream dreams, and are willing to pay the price to make their dreams come true.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Good News from Our Aeta Partners</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/good-news-from-our-aeta-partners/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Dec 2009 09:45:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Aeta leader-graduates and educators who have formed PBAZ &#8211; Paaralang Bayan ng Ayta sa Zambales, are the main strategic partners of ELF.<br /><br />ELF met with some Aeta leaders a few years after the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in 1991 displaced the Aeta communities from their homeland and dispersed them to different resettlement areas. Since then, they have struggled to sustain their livelihood, and their culture and identity. Integral to this struggle is their effort to have their rights recognized to their ancestral domain.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/good-news-from-our-aeta-partners/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Aeta leader-graduates and educators who have formed PBAZ &#8211; Paaralang Bayan ng Ayta sa Zambales, are the main strategic partners of ELF.</p>
<p>ELF met with some Aeta leaders a few years after the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in 1991 displaced the Aeta communities from their homeland and dispersed them to different resettlement areas. Since then, they have struggled to sustain their livelihood, and their culture and identity. Integral to this struggle is their effort to have their rights recognized to their ancestral domain.</p>
<p>It has been a long struggle, and will continue for a long time for most of the Aetas. But there is some good news, with the granting of the first CADT (Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title) to four Aeta barangays, including many of our leader-graduates and PBAZ leaders.</p>
<p>Here is the news item as reported by the Philippine Daily Inquirer:</p>
<p><strong>It’s official: Pinatubo is now owned by Aetas</strong></p>
<p><strong><span style="font-weight: normal;">By Tonette Orejas</span></strong></p>
<p>Philippine Daily Inquirer</p>
<p>CITY OF SAN FERNANDO, Philippines—Mt. Pinatubo, including the three-kilometer wide crater lake left by its 1991 eruptions, is now officially <em>lutan tua</em> (ancestral land) of Aetas in Botolan, Zambales.</p>
<p>Carlito Domulot, chair of the Lubos ng Alyansa ng mga Katutubong Ayta sa Sambales (Lakas), shared this piece of information with the Inquirer on Thursday as he received confirmation from the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP) that at least 15,998 hectares have been registered at the Registry of Deeds in Zambales as a Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT).</p>
<p>NCIP Commissioner Rolando Rivera confirmed Domulot’s information, saying CADT RO3-BOT-0708-073 indeed includes the volcano.</p>
<p>“Their CADT really covers Mt. Pinatubo,” Rivera said in a telephone interview.</p>
<p>He said a CADT registered with the Registry of Deeds “perfected the tribe’s ownership and stewardship of their ancestral domain.”</p>
<p>Registered on Oct. 3 and issued on Nov. 9, the CADT is entered as Original Certificate of Title No. CAD-0-1.</p>
<p>The application originally covers 20,567.89 hectares. The size was reduced to 15,998.4748 hectares after government agencies recognized and segregated private titles within ancestral domains.</p>
<p>The final CADT spans the villages of Burgos, Villar, Moraza and Belbel in Botolan and portions of the towns of Cabangan, San Felipe and San Marcelino, the title showed.</p>
<p>Domulot said the volcano straddles Villar and Belbel.</p>
<p>The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) refers to Mt. Pinatubo and its environs as located in the tri-boundary of Zambales, Tarlac and Pampanga. The volcano’s crater lake and lahar canyons have drawn local and foreign tourists.</p>
<p>“Before the CADT came, we, Aetas of Pampanga, Tarlac and Zambales, have an understanding that Pinatubo is on the Botolan (Zambales) side and the lands there belong to us, Botolan Aetas,” Domulot said.</p>
<p>Helping Aetas protect their domain from Korean and other foreign and local business ventures, the Botolan council issued in August 2008 a resolution recognizing the ownership and management of Botolan Aetas over Mt. Pinatubo.</p>
<p>Although vigilant against Korean firms on the Tarlac side, the Aetas have not built gates or watchtowers to ward off illegal settlers.</p>
<p>The Aetas returned to the volcano about five years after the eruptions to cultivate lands there.</p>
<p>Although the lands were made fertile by volcanic materials, Domulot said the lack of farming and fishing tools make it difficult for the tribe to grow more cash crops.</p>
<p>“Our elders have been fighting for our lands since the time of [the late former President Ferdinand] Marcos,” he said.</p>
<p>Rivera said the NCIP had registered at least four CADTs covering 25,615 hectares in Pampanga, Tarlac, Zambales and Aurora.</p>
<p>Pending registration are CADTs for Dumagats in Karahume, San Jose del Monte City in Bulacan (1,817 hectares) and for Kalanguyas in Carranglan, Nueva Ecija (25,373 hectares).</p>
<p>NCIP records showed there are still 11 pending applications for CADTs over 247,261.19 hectares in Central Luzon.</p>
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		<title>Aeta Resilience</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/aeta-resilience/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Oct 2009 13:38:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[When ELF decided on a strategic partnership with PBAZ, <em>Paaralang Bayan ng mga Ayta sa Zambales</em>, I proposed that we name our program &#8220;Developing Aeta LEADERS.&#8221;<br /><br />I explained that LEADERS is an acronym for Leaders, Educators, Advocates, for Development, Empowerment, Resilience, and Sustainability.<br /><br />All the key words are part of the standard development NGO vocabulary. The only word that is relatively different is &#8220;resilience.&#8221; And yet, it may be one of the most central concept for the Aetas.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/aeta-resilience/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When ELF decided on a strategic partnership with PBAZ, <em>Paaralang Bayan ng mga Ayta sa Zambales</em>, I proposed that we name our program &#8220;Developing Aeta LEADERS.&#8221;</p>
<p>I explained that LEADERS is an acronym for Leaders, Educators, Advocates, for Development, Empowerment, Resilience, and Sustainability.</p>
<p>All the key words are part of the standard development NGO vocabulary. The only word that is relatively different is &#8220;resilience.&#8221; And yet, it may be one of the most central concept for the Aetas.</p>
<p>I thought back to this when Carling Domulot, president of LAKAS and vice-chair of PBAZ asked to meet with me last night. He updated me about the floods that destroyed part of the highway leading to Botolan, and especially the waters that uprooted all their growing crops of sweet potatoes and vegetables.</p>
<p>The LAKAS community had offered their six-hectare field to their fellow Aetas who had been displaced by the floods. They all planted root crops and vegetables on small plots,. While waiting for them to grow for the harvest, he has asked ELF for any funds we could collect, to buy rice that they could eat in the meantime. Although the LAKAS community was not flooded (it was built on slightly higher ground), all its residents, like the displaced Aetas, were without their daily income, which they earned by working as day workers in nearby fields. But these had all been flooded.</p>
<p>Carling and his fellow Aetas were looking forward to the harvest to meet their food needs. But the recent flood washed away their crops.</p>
<p>He was disheartened, of course. But rather than dwelling on their latest tragedy, he went to the local government to ask for help. Some of the students who had visited them also brought relief. Carling was grateful for the help, but he also worried that the vulnerable state of his fellow Aetas would set back the years of &#8220;empowerment&#8221; that he and other Aeta leaders had helped bring about.</p>
<p>&#8220;I remember when Mt. Pinatubo erupted in 1991,&#8221; he said. &#8220;There were so many relief agencies who came to help us. They were competing with one another. We even experienced more divisions among the Aeta communities because each agency wanted their own partners.&#8221;</p>
<p>More important, prolonged dependence on relief weakened their tradition of self-reliance. This sense of dependence, plus the added divisions among them, were the focus of their education work and leadership over the past decade. He expressed his concern that the current disaster will bring back those old problems.</p>
<p>One small measure he suggests to those who bring them help is to avoid using the term &#8220;relief.&#8221; Instead, he suggests that the help offered should be like &#8220;food for work.&#8221; In exchange for support, the Aeta communities should clean up their settlements, plant trees, and plant food crops in between the trees.</p>
<p>Above all, he asks that outside agencies should work with the existing Aeta organizations and leaders, instead of creating exclusive partnerships.</p>
<p>Carling remembers 1991 vividly, and the many trials and challenges they had to overcome in order to rebuild their dispersed communities. Given the degradation of the forested mountains, and the siltation of rivers, he expects more disasters to occur in the future. He also has heard of the discussions on &#8220;climate change&#8221; and how they aggravate vulnerabilities.</p>
<p>But so long as their communities remain intact, and their leaders remain faithful to their interests, he trusts that the Aetas will recover after every trial, and will continue to pursue their vision of sustainable development. he even hopes to eventually return to the places which have been covered by the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo. He had visited some of their original settlements and was happy to see that plants have started growing where there was only barren soil.</p>
<p>That is an apt image of Aeta resilience.</p>
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		<title>PBAZ</title>
		<link>http://educforlife.org/pbaz/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2008 14:58:59 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<em>Paaralang Bayan ng mga Ayta sa Zambales</em>, PBAZ, is an initiative of the Ayta leader-graduates of ELF.<br /><br />PBAZ started along the lines of ELF&#8217;s vision of  &#8220;a community of leaders and learners.&#8221;<br /><br />Instead of the ELF staff continuing to handle the leadership formation program of the Aytas, we challenged them to handle the courses themselves.<br /><br />From that first step of taking over the leadership courses, the Ayta leader-educators expanded the program of PBAZ to take care of ALS in basic education for Ayta out of school youth and adults.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/pbaz/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-106" title="pbaz-collage" src="http://educforlife.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/pbaz-collage-300x231.jpg" alt="pbaz-collage" width="300" height="231" />Paaralang Bayan ng mga Ayta sa Zambales</em>, PBAZ, is an initiative of the Ayta leader-graduates of ELF.</p>
<p>PBAZ started along the lines of ELF&#8217;s vision of  &#8220;a community of leaders and learners.&#8221;</p>
<p>Instead of the ELF staff continuing to handle the leadership formation program of the Aytas, we challenged them to handle the courses themselves.</p>
<p>From that first step of taking over the leadership courses, the Ayta leader-educators expanded the program of PBAZ to take care of ALS in basic education for Ayta out of school youth and adults.</p>
<p>Now PBAZ defines its mission as developing and systematizing an Ayta learning system.</p>
<p>This Ayta learning system seeks to codify and systematize their indigenous knowledge system, and combine it with the knowledge and skills that they need to interact with the more dominant economic, political, and cultural system.</p>
<p>PBAZ and ELF have forged a strategic partnership to realize this mission.</p>
<p>The LAKAS Aeta community have offered one of the home lots and house in their resettlement area to be used by PBAZ as its office.</p>
<p>ELF has given some funds to refurbish the house, pay for electricity, and support regular office volunteers. We have also transferred to PBAZ many of our learning materials. We are approaching friends to donate office equipment, including computers and printers.</p>
<p>One of our shared dreams is to have an &#8220;Aeta learning village&#8221; inside their ancestral domain, on the mountains near Mt. Pinatubo, which will include a nursery for indigenous species of trees which they will use to reforest the area. In addition to preserving and developing their indigenous culture, we will work together on community-based &#8220;biodiversity conservation&#8221; and strategies for sustainable development.</p>
<p>Given the recent disasters that have hit the area, we realize the need to incorporate climate change adaptation and mitigation into our learning partnership.</p>
<p><em>Ed dela Torre</em></p>
<p><em>Deborah Wall, a Filipina from Australia, has written about PBAZ in the following article from KASAMA:</em></p>
<p align="center"><strong>Education For Life, From Life: </strong></p>
<p align="center"><strong>Lessons to be learnt from a strong indigenous tribe in the Philippines</strong></p>
<p>The Aytas, the first native settlers in the Philippines were thought to have arrived some 30,000 to 70,000 years ago. They are from 25 ethnolinguistic groups scattered from Luzon to Mindanao. The over 80,000 Aytas who live in Mount Pinatubo have attracted interest because of their preserved cultural identity. Sydney resident, DEBORAH RUIZ WALL who has an interest in indigenous peoples, came to visit the Aytas recently in Zambales.</p>
<p>“LIFE–LONG EDUCATION” was a catchphrase that appealed to me when I was doing my training in education at Sydney Teachers’ College three decades ago. For me, this meant: (1) one never stops learning, and (2) education that has value is one that has life–long application.</p>
<p>It wasn’t until April 2005 that I came to witness how this basic educational philosophy is being used in effect to re–construct the foundation of a society whose ancestry in the Philippines goes back some 30,000 to 70,000 years.* This realization came to me after I visited my indigenous Filipino friends, the Aytas, in Central Luzon. During my visit, they happened to be holding the first Assembly of the <em>Paaralang Bayan ng mga Ayta ng Zambales</em> (PBAZ) or Folk School of the Aytas of Zambales.</p>
<p>‘Self–determination’, another catchphrase, came to life for me when I saw how the Aytas are applying their learning to determine their own future in a fast changing global economy.</p>
<p>I first met Aytas in 1985 as part of an exposure tour with Australian Teachers Federation members visiting the Philippines hosted by the Philippine counterpart union, the Alliance of Concerned Teachers. In 1985, the year before President Marcos’ government was toppled, our group went to Davao, Bataan, Samar, and Botolan. Our tour’s focus was education but we were also given a broad sketch of Philippine society and economy.</p>
<p>It was in Botolan, Zambales where I first came across Aytas. Zambales is a province in Luzon Island north of Manila. We went to a village called Masikap, and stayed in one of the Aytas’ huts. When we arrived, one of my companions had a fainting spell. No one knew what to do because we were far away from ‘civilization’. The tricycle driver had gone and would not be back till the morning. In those days, there were no cell/mobile phones for instant communication.</p>
<p>Anyway, one of the Aytas came and since I was the only Pilipino language speaker, I was asked if the Australians didn’t mind if they used their local healing method to treat our companion, a Principal from Adelaide High School. The husband of the woman asked me if I thought that was all right. I said that it wouldn’t do any harm. So their healer came with a branch or two, chanted and rubbed my companion’s knees and legs, and immediately, colour came back to her face, as though she came back to life. She rose from the wooden bench where she was lying looking half dead, and was herself amazed at her instant recovery.</p>
<p>In the Philippines, people either go to a qualified medical practitioner or to a “<em>hilot</em>’” (local healer), or to both. The following morning in town, my companion asked a practitioner trained in Western medicine to look at her knees and leg, but he couldn’t find anything wrong and suggested an x–ray if she was still concerned. “No, thank you,” she replied thoughtfully. We noted the link between health and education as an issue. Apart from this incident, it occurred to us that indigenous people in Botolan had much to share about their healing techniques and their local herbal medicine.</p>
<p>Most interesting was the literacy program for Aytas sponsored by a missionary order. Sister Fe Villanueva gave us a briefing on their program in Masikap Village which was a mirror image of how mainstream schools taught literacy. We were tactfully informed by our guide that another nun up the mountain used a different approach. It was different because the literacy program was taught not only from the Aytas’ cultural and linguistic background but also from a holistic context: which included understanding the socio–economic environment in which they live.</p>
<p>With lowlanders, the Aytas traded their fruit and vegetable produce from the mountains. Their lack of literacy and numeracy meant that they were most often cheated by middlemen and traders. We were exposed to two different education approaches: one distinctly assimilationist; and another which contained the seeds of political and economic awareness and the possibility of self determination. Upon our return to Australia, participant teachers on the tour gave talks around Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and Adelaide about the result of our exposure.</p>
<p>My re–acquaintance with the Aytas took place in 1999 when three young Aytas came to Australia on a tour to link up with other indigenous groups and share their stories. I was living in Redfern, inner city Sydney at the time doing research about Aboriginal and non–Aboriginal reconciliation in an urban setting as part of my Graduate Diploma in Ministry (Theology) with the Sydney College of Divinity. The three Ayta visitors were: Epang Domulot, Orosco Cabalic and Tubag Jugatan – ages 15, 17, and 19.</p>
<p>During their visit to Australia, they were accompanied by Sister Carmen Balazo of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary (FMM). Sister Carmen, known as Sister Menggay, provided support to the Aytas’ commitment to self determination and self reliance through introducing a liberating educational pedagogy. This pedagogy is the Paulo Freire method of teaching literacy and numeracy with a social context. What was fascinating about her approach was: she did not proselytize.</p>
<p>Sister Menggay’s religious order was meant to complete its task with the Aytas in 1992 but Mount Pinatubo erupted in 1991 and the Aytas had to go down from their mountain home to lowland resettlements. This was very disruptive because this particular Ayta group, who stuck together under their banner of ‘LAKAS’ (an acronym which collectively means ‘strength’), had to deal with government officials, told where to go and what to do and would have had to merge with other Ayta groups who did not have the same holistic orientation in their training.</p>
<p>LAKAS wanted to return to their mountain home after the eruption, but that was impossible. The place was covered with volcanic ashes (lahar). Sister Menggay through her initiative was able to secure adequate funds to purchase a block of land in Bihawo, Botolan to keep the community together. This did not happen without a struggle, but eventually LAKAS made it. They began by planting trees around the bare 7.5 hectares of land and built their huts for the 155 families that live there now. They also began replanting the mountain, no matter how challenging, on 47.5 hectares of land which LAKAS does not legally own but is under their stewardship.</p>
<p>Is this a land rights issue? There was no land title system thousands of years ago. The government recognizes indigenous people’s ‘ancestral domain’ but what this means in terms of land rights and usage is not entirely clear. A land development plan, for example, still needs to be drawn up. Recognition is a first step, and the rest of what this means in practice is a process that needs to be worked out.</p>
<p>SOME BACKGROUND ABOUT LAKAS</p>
<p>LAKAS stands for <em>Lubos na Alyansa ng mga Katutubong Ayta ng Sambales</em> or Negrito Peoples Alliance of Zambales. Formed in 1984 with 45 members from 12 sitios of Barangay Villar and Maguisguis, its main activities were: literacy classes, cooperative building, and training on the rights to ancestral domain. It became a Federation in 1985 and was registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1987.?It has been six years since the Ayta Youth visit to Australia, and now I was their visitor. The community gave me a welcome under their wall–less public space. There were speeches and dance presentations. It was a delight to watch very young Aytas do emceeing and performing with hardly any inhibition. Such an inspiration, I thought, for our public speaking classes at TAFE colleges.??At night I was taken to a guest house on the coast in the township of Botolan belonging to another supporter of the community. The guest house is a <em>“bahay kubo’</em>”- nipa hut with bamboo floors, very airy and comfortable as it was situated close to the sea. The Australian Aboriginal circled–room layout for gathering is equivalent to the Aytas’ wall–less open space layout. The basic structure for a gathering is open space under a roof, and posts planted in the ground or cement to hold the roof. The place where we had dinner was a long table under a thatched ceiling directly facing the ocean, so whilst I couldn’t see the ocean then because it was a moonless night, I could hear the waves and feel the sea air envelop us as we chatted and ate the fish, rice and chicken adobo.</p>
<p>The following day was a big day for LAKAS. The first General Assembly of Indigenous Leader Graduates of Paaralang Bayan ng mga Ayta ng Zambales (PBAZ/Folk School of the Aytas of Zambales). PBAZ was formed by the graduates of the Education for Life Foundation (ELF). Some Aytas have travelled overseas to compare notes with folk school systems in Denmark, Australia, Canada and the Americas. Some even had the privilege of meeting Paulo Freire in person in Brazil.</p>
<p>THE FRUITS OF THEIR LABOUR</p>
<p>Some Aytas obtained top school achievements resulting in mainstream school administrators altering their perception of Aytas. They are beginning to feel respected and racist thinking and behaviour towards them are gradually disappearing. They told me that local mainstream schools are requesting Aytas to teach their folk dances at their school. Non–Ayta farmers now also request Aytas to give them training in organic farming and leadership. Respect and recognition of indigenous skills and knowledge by the wider society help them regain trust and confidence in their ability to deal with lowlanders on an equal footing. Their experience shows that a ‘bottom–up’ approach to training can make an impact.</p>
<p>The morning of the PBAZ Assembly was spent introducing the officers and the guests (including me), and asking groups to give impromptu presentations – to sing or dance. The afternoon was serious business. It was intended to ask the Assembly to make amendments, if required, and approve their Rules and Policies. Since PBAZ began, 123 Aytas had graduated from a six–week leadership training course (four are deceased). The course is a prerequisite for membership of PBAZ. Upon course completion, they can choose to exercise their newly acquired leadership skills through the seven existing committees: culture and literacy; health and sports; negotiation and advocacy; research, documentation and evaluation; education, information and training; livelihood; finance and membership. Folk education is community rather than individual oriented. Graduates become aware of their larger responsibility, and exercise leadership for and with the community.</p>
<p>I spoke to a few of the guests: the ELF Director for Distance Learning Program, May Rendon Cinco and the local mayor, Rogelio Yap. I can see that the aspirations of the Aytas are realized through their own self determination and negotiation for support with NGOs (non government organizations) like the Education for Life Foundation and the LGOs (local government organizations) represented by the Mayor. The Mayor is able to assist with infrastructure building such as provision of day care centres, support for out–of–school youth, irrigation and regeneration with planting 50,000 seedlings. On health issues he is targeting elimination of tuberculosis and malaria.</p>
<p>From having hardly any educational opportunities before Sister Menggay’s Paulo Freire literacy program, LAKAS today prides itself with four university graduates, ten continuing university students, and many high school and primary school children all studying. The focus is not on money but on community building. People who finish their degrees have to serve for two years within the community, and when they start to work outside the community they are expected to contribute a proportion of their income to LAKAS. If anyone marries outside the community, they can only continue to live in the community if their spouse believes in its ethos and is prepared to abide by community precepts. Such measures are intended to ensure that the strength of the community is not undermined.</p>
<p>COMMUNITY GOVERNANCE</p>
<p>Community Governance is what fascinates and impresses me with LAKAS. Everyone from the age of reason is taught to make decisions collectively and to practise leadership and negotiation skills. LAKAS is very particular about moulding minds right from infancy and being community– minded. There are categories of belonging within the community: the very young (e.g. under six years), primary school age, secondary school age, LAKAS youth, men, women, and the aged. Decisions reached are consolidated at the community level.</p>
<p>Back in Manila, I met Edicio de la Torre who used to be a Society of Divine Word (SVD) priest and whose work on liberation theology I read when I was doing my sociology thesis about church–state relations. He is no longer a priest and is currently the President of the Education for Life Foundation (ELF). ELF initially provided LAKAS the 6–week leadership training course. LAKAS responded to the challenge of conducting its own training based on a train–the–trainer system.</p>
<p>Under President Marcos’ dictatorship, Ed was put in gaol for nine years. Many human rights activists suffered the same fate. These long years in gaol gave Ed the opportunity to think things through. Upon his release from prison in 1986, he thought that while the people had overthrown the dictatorship, much more needed to be done. Popular democracy had to be rebuilt from the ground up. There would need to be a new generation of leaders aware of their rights and ready to defend them. They would need negotiation skills to talk to those holding positions of power and influence. To flesh out his vision, he helped establish the Institute for Popular Democracy (IPD). IPD wanted to develop a comprehensive leadership formation program, which would not only change poor people’s quality of life but include everything that underpins sustainable and equitable development.</p>
<p>Ed discovered during a Popular Education Consultation in 1986 that many people shared his vision. As a result of two conferences, a network called Popular Education for People’s Empowerment (PEPE) was formed. In 1987, Ed attended a conference at Hillerod Hojskole, a school in Denmark, and found himself ‘staring at his dream’: the folkehojskole (or folk school). He found that the idea of a folk school was not new — the Danish in the 1830s had a visionary, Nikolaj Frederik Severin Grundtvig. Grundtvig’s country in 1783 was in a time of change. Political reforms were taking place. Their national identity was eroding, their monarchy was weakening, their self confidence was being undermined by the loss of territory to Germany. Some of the people were becoming extremely rich, but the majority were poor. The boy, Grundtvig was searching for his own identity. Fortunately he was filled with folk tales and songs of his Nordic tradition by his mother and another elderly woman. He knew who he was, what his roots were, and where he belonged. He dreamt then of helping his people remember their roots through establishing an education for the poor majority, the <em>almue</em> (root word: <em>almuegjort</em> or ‘made to be ignorant’). During Grundtvig’s time, the <em>almue</em> were mostly farmers who were excluded from any political decision–making. The folk school he envisioned would be about life and teach purposeful living. Through storytelling, poetry and song, students would learn about their identity and cultural heritage. They would interact with each other as co–learners. It would be an education for the whole of life.</p>
<p>It took 15 years for this vision to materialize. In 1844, The Rodding Hojskole was founded by Christian Flor, a professor of the Danish language at Cologne University. Other folk schools were founded later in different parts of the country, and now, over 100 folk schools exist in Denmark; 128 in Sweden; 93 in Finland and a few others in Iceland and Faroe Islands.</p>
<p>And so it was in 1987 that Ed de la Torre sent word to IPD about the <em>folkehojskole</em> and how such a school could be established in the Philippines. In 1991, Ed was in the Netherlands. He and his partner, Girlie Villariba wondered whether, with the help of the Danish, it was possible to build a <em>folkehojskole</em> in the Philippines. At this time IPD was experimenting with different leadership formation  programs. Ed and Girlie approached a funding agency, and the result was positive. A proposal was put together within a few days which included the result of village consultations with grassroots leaders as well as with NGOs experienced in popular education. An alternative education system was conceived with the twin aims of empowerment and sustainable development rooted in the community. To encourage the folk school project, the Education for Life Foundation was established.</p>
<p>Girlie Villariba and Marichu C. Antonio were ELF’s first staff. With partnerships as their tools and ideas as their materials, the school was built between 1991 and 1992. ELF’s NGO partners were: the Institute for Popular Democracy which developed the comprehensive leadership training program; the Philippine Rural Reconstruction Movement’s program for sustainable development and democratization in rural districts; the Cooperatives Foundation of the Philippines, Inc which organizes cooperatives for the poor; the Center for Urban Community Development which applies these concepts for the urban poor; and Popular Education for People Empowerment, a network of popular educators. With these partners, ELF was able to put up a proposal to Danchurchaid. The proposal was approved, and the funding was to come from the Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA).</p>
<p>The next challenge was the process: how to implement this vision in the Philippine context. It was decided to strengthen the local organizations of the poor sections of rural and urban communities by training their leaders. Before the six–week residential formation course was conducted, there had to be a curriculum. Concepts and themes were drawn up through informal discussions and formal workshops with popular educators, development workers and activists including specialists and resource persons. This phase of the program was called <em>pagbibinhi</em>, or selecting seeds and growing seedlings. The water to nourish the seedlings would be the philosophy of ‘education from life and for life’. The seeds were: people’s empowerment, grassroots leadership, Filipino psychology and culture, ethnicity, nationalism, popular economics, tradition and rituals, gender sensitivity, pluralism, coalition, learning to learn, learning to lead, learning from life and for life, and negotiations.</p>
<p>ELF thought that a story–telling workshop where participants share highlights of their lives and stories of their communities, their values, tradition, the problems they face, and their leadership experiences would be a useful preliminary workshop before participants begin the course. This sharing would be documented and would become part of their training material. This is truly ‘education from life’.</p>
<p>And now ELF’s and LAKAS’ effort has borne fruit. Graduates of the ELF six–week training course have now reaped a new harvest and sown yet another seed: the formation of PBAZ — a folk school for Aytas in Zambales in partnership with LAKAS and ELF. Their goal in having their own school is to be able to lift their quality of life and have a peaceful and progressive community.</p>
<p>In formal schools, young indigenous people often face discrimination and are discouraged from attending classes. In 2003, PBAZ conducted a General Leadership and Alternative Learning System course. Topics covered in the leadership training course included: philosophy and process of learning, presentation of self and ideas, communication to small groups, ecosystem, conflict management, leadership and organization, leadership and empowerment, sports, Ayta culture, and the Indigenous People’s Rights Act.</p>
<p>FOLK SCHOOL FOR AYTAS</p>
<p>More seeds can be sown from my meeting with Ed de la Torre. Already we can see a sharing of experiences between indigenous peoples in Australia and in the Philippines on life–long education and alternative learning systems. Ed told me about ‘<em>Biyaheng Ayta’</em> (Aytas’ journey), a theatre group that travels to various Ayta communities covering themes such as history (elders) and youth (land and dance). Ed is interested to learn about the process involved in certifying indigenous skills such as bolo making or basket–weaving and other indigenous arts and craftwork to give recognition to these practical skills and to ensure that they are not lost.</p>
<p>In Australia, we have had some years of experience now in the application of ‘Recognition for Prior learning’. We also have an indigenous education system: Tranby Aboriginal Cooperative College in Sydney and Nungalinya College, an ecumenical theology college in Darwin. EORA Centre, an Aboriginal College, also exists within the Technical and Further Education Commission in Sydney.</p>
<p>I see that indigenous people from Australia can benefit from seeing how the whole–of–life education process and alternative education system are applied by ELF and PBAZ in a rural setting. I see that indigenous people from the Philippines can learn from the challenges experienced in Australia in setting up an independent indigenous–run educational establishment and how skills from prior learning are recognized and certified.</p>
<p>Before becoming President of ELF, Ed held the position of Director of Technical Education and Schools Development Authority (TESDA). TESDA in the Philippines is similar to TAFE in Australia — a government agency providing technical education and skills development programs. It endeavours to work in partnership with local industry and with people who need particular skills to gain entry into the job market. Perhaps another joint venture is in the offing beginning with sharing of experiences that would benefit both communities across the seas.</p>
<p>It all starts from a vision, imagination, a dream. Seeds to be sown from life, for life.</p>
<p>ABOUT THE AUTHOR:</p>
<p>DEBORAH WALL was born in the Philippines. She is currently a member of the Executive Board of the NSW Reconciliation Council whose aim is to propagate reconciliation between Aboriginal and non–Aboriginal Australians</p>
<p>REFERENCES:</p>
<p>Padma Perez (1999) ELF Story Book: Paaralang Bayan, Paaralang Buhay, Education for Life Foundation: Quezon City, Philippines.</p>
<p><em><strong>Salinbuhay</strong></em>, from life, for life, August 2003 No 16.</p>
<p>NOTE: The exact time of the first appearance of Negritos in the islands is a contentious issue, but it is largely accepted that they represent the most ancient prehistoric peopling of Asia going back as much as 70,000 years.<strong> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negritos">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negritos</a>).</strong></p>
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		<title>What We Do</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 06:46:47 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[ELF provides lifelong learning services to communities of  grassroots leader-learners. For 2009 we have  the color coded learning series in our logo:<br /><br />Green for  agriculture and environment, specifically organic farming in rural and urban areas, and biodiversity conservation<br /><br />Blue for education on grassroots leadership and citizenship.<br /><br />Purple for gender and women&#8217;s lifelong  learning.<br /><br />Red for advocacy and campaigns e.g. Education for All, Participatory Local Governance.<br /><br />Yellow for the lifelong agenda of grassroots communities from renewable energy to spirituality.<p><a href='http://educforlife.org/what-we-do/' class='excerpt_link'>Continue Reading or Post a Comment ...</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ELF provides lifelong learning services to communities of  grassroots leader-learners. For 2009 we have  the color coded learning series in our logo:</p>
<p><strong>Green</strong> for  agriculture and environment, specifically organic farming in rural and urban areas, and biodiversity conservation</p>
<p><strong>Blue</strong> for education on grassroots leadership and citizenship.</p>
<p><strong>Purple</strong> for gender and women&#8217;s lifelong  learning.</p>
<p><strong>Red</strong> for advocacy and campaigns e.g. Education for All, Participatory Local Governance.</p>
<p><strong>Yellow</strong> for the lifelong agenda of grassroots communities from renewable energy to spirituality.</p>
<p>We are active in the green movement <em>Go Organic! </em>ELF<em> </em>has finished a 16-week -long training on organic rice cultivation in Naujan, Oriental Mindoro, in partnership with the PBAA. The Go Organics movement is our national network  for green and yellow education. More than six hundred farmers enrolled in the organic agriculture course that <em>Go Organic! </em>started in December 2008. This April, we harvested 4.2 tons of rice from the organic learning farm and the Department of Agriculture was happy with the results. On April 18, 104 farmers will receive their diplomas of completion  while 30 farmers will get their certificate of attendance (because they were not able to attend all the learning sessions).</p>
<p>We are also developing a project with La Mesa Dam Eco Park  to build an <em>Eco-Academy</em> where  education on  biodiversity and sustainable lifestyles will be offered to teachers and students on a regular basis .</p>
<p>In the  formal and parallel education domain, we help install Folk Schools and  the Alternative Learning Systems (ALS).  We keep leader graduates  of the folk schools  abreast of developments in education. This year, we are helping the <em>Paaralang Bayan ng Ayta sa Zambales</em> (PBAZ) to build their capacity to run their own folk school and provide literacy training to their communities. We  help local government units and civil society groups develop their community-based alternative learning systems and train their instruction managers.</p>
<p>We partner with various organizations and institutions  in enhancing their  adult learners &#8216; platforms. The National Electrification Administration (NEA) is our partner in developing a strong consumer movement in the energy sector. We have visited the various electric cooperatives and held orientation meetings with them.  On April 22-24, ELF discussed the benefits  of an energy consumer education to local government units and electric cooperatives.  On August 2-3, we participated in NEA&#8217;s  global conference on 40 years of rural electrification in the Philippines. We also launched with NEA a book  on rural electrification, with the title <strong>Electric Dreams</strong>.</p>
<p><em>Girlie Villariba</em>.</p>
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