Typhoon Yolanda Report 1

Goducate Training Center (GTC) is situated in Iloilo.

Thankfully, Typhoon Yolanda (aka Haiyan) veered north as it neared Iloilo and GTC was spared from the full impact of Yolanda. GTC only suffered minor damage and the loss of a few trees.

Immediately after Yolanda passed, our Disaster Relief Task Force swung into action. Our team has helped in other disasters but Yolanda’s destruction surpasses them all. In our previous major relief effort in eastern Mindanao caused by Super Typhoon Bopha (aka Pablo) last year our team reported “indescribable damage”. This time the same team reported that the damage is much worse!

We realize that we have to be wise in our relief efforts so that we do not waste our limited human and financial resources. Our usual strategy is to bring “immediate relief” in the first few weeks of our operations. Bottled water and ready-to-eat food is vital for those who have not had any food or drink for a few days. This is akin to setting up an IV drip for a dying patient. In our emergency-provisions are also other necessities (eg. matches, candles, canned food). Nails and fasteners are also very useful because many houses have lost their roofs and the rains continue after the typhoon has passed. With these nails they are able to use bits of wood to provide some shelter from the rain.

In our teams are trained nurses to provide first-aid to those who have suffered from falling and flying debris and provide medications for those who are sick from exposure and lack of food. We try to focus our efforts on places that are easier to reach from GTC so that we can be maximally effective and minimize costs of travel. This means that we will focus on northern Panay. We also focus our efforts on places where we have “contacts” so that eventual follow-up work will be more
effective.

Though we focus on northern Panay, we will also try to help those who are most affected by Yolanda, namely, Tacloban (Leyte). Today our team leader left Iloilo for Tacloban to survey the area and to meet our contacts there and to assess how we can help.

We must plan for this relief effort as if it is a long-distance race. After we’ve helped people to survive with food, water and medicines, we must help them to “get back” by rebuilding their houses, replanting their crops, etc. This is the difficult part of relief work that most organizations shun but this is where Goducate’s philosophy of “helping needy Asians help themselves” will be most useful.

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Damaged home
Damaged home
Damaged home
Damaged home
Tent under which family spent the nights after their home was damaged
Tent under which family spent the nights after their home was damaged

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Goducate teachers start work in Vietnam

Vietnam hopes to be an English-speaking nation by 2020. What that country lacks are teachers of English. When Goducate visited Danang, Vietnam’s third-largest city, in May this year, we had a request for a pilot batch of teachers to be sent over in September. In July, our Vietnamese partners visited the Goducate Training Center in Iloilo, to meet our trainees and staff, and to observe the kind of training offered at the Center. They reiterated their request for teachers in September.

We have thus been helping the trainees to understand Vietnamese culture, to learn a survival level of the Vietnamese language, and how to get about on motorbikes, which is the main means of transport in Vietnam.

Four teachers from Goducate are now in Danang. After a few days meeting their local co-workers and observing classes at a school, two have started teaching there. One is teaching in a language school, one will probably start at a nursery school, and two are being assigned to teach in hotels.

Our teachers now have been given an apartment, and are grateful for donations of various household items for their use. One family has also given them two bicycles—not motorcycles—which is very handy for getting to and from school and for grocery shopping, at least for three of them. The fourth has yet to learn to ride a bicycle, which is going to be daunting because, unlike the spaciousness and quiet of the Goducate Training Center, the streets in Danang are full of bicycles and motorcycles.

At Manila airport, on the way to Danang
At Manila airport, on the way to Danang
Freedom, on a bike
Freedom, on a bike
Enjoying Vietnamese food
Enjoying Vietnamese food

Goducate offers needy Myanmar children a home

Ten needy children in Myanmar are being cared for in a home supported by Goducate. Two have been orphaned. The other eight are either from single-parent families or have no homes since both parents have remarried. All are poor. Their ages range from 5 to 14.

The children are settling down well into the home’s family environment. They are getting used to their “new parents and siblings”, and the older ones have started to attend public schools.

It is our wish that the children will learn to care for one another and be familiar with the duties assigned to them. The children will have the love and togetherness that eluded them with their natural parents. This in turn will give them the desire and confidence to care for others and eventually become useful and responsible young adults. Home for now is an apartment about an hour’s drive east of Yangon.

Choosing clothes given by Goducate supporters
Choosing clothes given by Goducate supporters
Presenting a song item
Presenting a song item