Livelihood program for women in Laguna expands

When the women in Laguna making decorative items out of scrap paper strips received an order for 1000 pieces of their handicraft from a shop in San Pablo City a couple of months ago, it was seen as a huge step forward for them. They have had another boost with the recent festive season. A gift shop in Divisoria Manila, a market district in Manila, placed an order for 20,000 pieces.

To meet this order a Goducate Literacy Center was turned into a temporary stockroom and workshop for a week, during which classes for the children were held in the open. The women who worked at the center were victims of Typhoon Hagabat, whom Goducate has been helping.

Women from the local community who had been taught earlier how to make these decorative items worked from home. When I saw the little daughter of one of these women come to the center to collect material for her mother, it occurred to me that this project is also teaching little children how to help their parents in a simple way.

A new project that has been started is a tailoring project. A Goducate volunteer who used to be a dressmaker was asked by a ready-to-wear store to supply blouses for a school uniform. She decided to take this opportunity to give other women in the community a chance to earn a living and has started to teach some women how to sew. The project is hampered by the limited number and type of sewing machines they have. Thus only three women, one of them an experienced dressmaker, are sewing the blouses, and they can undertake to deliver only 86 pieces a week.

Vcitims of Monsoon Hagabat making decorative items
Little girl picking material from stockroom for her mother
Making blouses for school uniform

Goducate Orchestra raises funds for victims of Typhoon Bopha (Pablo)

The musicians in the Goducate music program in Laguna have been trained to help themselves. Some have gained music scholarships to enable them to continue their education in high school or college, those in the orchestra earn some income by playing at local events, and others earn money by giving private music lessons. The musicians also help others. The more accomplished musicians are volunteer music teachers for newcomers to the program. At the end of last year the orchestra also staged a concert to raise money to pay for the school fees for several of their members.

About a week ago, on Dec 23, members of the orchestra raised funds for victims of Typhoon Bopha, known locally as Typhoon Pablo. This “supertyphoon” was the strongest tropical cyclone ever to hit the southern Philippines island of Mindanao.

Goducate Laguna has been helping the victims of Typhoon Hagabat, which affected people in Bay, in Laguna Province. Goducate has been training some of the victims of Typhoon Hagabat in livelihood skills. The men have been taught agricultural techniques and offered some work at the Goducate Model Farm in Laguna, while the women have been taught how to make soap and other handicraft.

Mindanao is nowhere near Laguna. However, it so happened that just before Typhoon Bopha struck, Goducate Laguna had been visited by some friends from Compostela Valley, one of the areas affected by Typhoon Bopha. Hence the orchestra decided to raise funds to help the victims of that typhoon. The rather impromptu “mini-concert” that the orchestra put up, mostly of Christmas songs, was held in the open, at the entrance to the building in which the Goducate Music Studio is sited, and a small sum was raised from passers-by.

Rehearsing for the mini-concert
Concert venue at entrance to building

Goducate soapmaking livelihood program in Laguna gets big break

Soapmaking was introduced into the Goducate livelihood program in Laguna, the Philippines, as a means for the women to earn some extra income for the family. Initially they made plain soaps and liquid detergent for personal use or for sale locally. More recently they were taught to make herbal soaps. And then they had a big break with an order for 400 pieces of herbal soap, from a couple getting married in Singapore and wanting to use the soaps as door gifts. The couple chose two kinds of soap—moringa and guava.

Moringa soap is made with extract from the leaves of the moringa plant. This plant contains many nutrients. Its leaves are rich in niacin, which as used in skin-care and anti-ageing products is said to promote skin health. Guava soap is made with extract from guava leaves, which are said to have antibacterial properties.

The team of 15 making or packaging these soaps was led by a Goducate supporter, an education graduate who had learnt about herbal soapmaking as a student while preparing for her thesis, and by a Goducate staff member overseeing livelihood projects. The soaps were wrapped with purple trimming, purple being the theme color for the wedding, and then placed in commercially bought abaca bags, which are made from the fibre obtained from the stalk of the abaca plant, a banana-like plant native to the Philippines.

We hope that this livelihood project will continue to be one that will benefit the needy being helped by Goducate.

Nicky and Mechie Making the soap
Soap in its wrapping
Soaps in presentation bag