Goducate musicians inspired by concert by Manila Symphony Orchestra

The Goducate music program in Laguna has enabled many students in the villages around Bay to learn to play a musical instrument. We now have a senior and a junior orchestra. Many of the senior students give of their spare time to go out to various villages to train others. The program has enabled some to get scholarships to tertiary institutions on the strength of their musical ability, and some to earn pocket money either by giving private lessons or by performing as a group at various events. Most of all it has trained the musicians in qualities such as discipline, perseverance, team work, and leadership.

What the Goducate musicians do not have much opportunity for is to listen to concerts by professional musicians. In my effort to help them find this opportunity, I wrote about our group on the Manila Symphony Orchestra Facebook. Two days later Mr Jeffrey Solares, the director of the Manila Symphony Orchestra asked me to meet him. The result was some tickets for a concert for our Goducate musicians, and an offer to help improve their skills.

Listening intently
Listening intently
The performers
The performers

Last week 17 of our musicians attended a concert by the Manila Symphony Orchestra. Before the concert they met Mr Solares, who invited one of our violinists, Liezl, to attend his violin class at the Scholastica College Manila. In 2011 Liezl was one of five Goducate violinists selected by Channel News Asia’s “Once Upon a Village” Program to spend a couple of weeks in Singapore being trained at the Wolfgang Music Studio. She was subsequently invited back by the Wolfgang Music Studio to prepare for her Trinity College Grade 5 examinations, which she passed with a merit. In June this year Liezl completed a 3-month TESDA (Technical Education and Skills Development Authority) Performing Arts course at Arellano University

Our musicians were struck by the difference in level between their play and the Manila Symphony Orchestra’s. One of them, Aira Joy, who is one of the most promising of the junior musicians, said, “This is my first time to watch concert live and I am so much encourage. I want to be like the violinist. I want to play fast musical pieces”.

Backyard farm in Tranca, Philippines, helps family and neighbors

Backyard farming is one way by which Goducate believes that communities in poor villages can help themselves. What they grow can provide nutrition for the family, and what they save by not having to buy vegetables and fruit can go towards other family needs. Some households started a communal farm in Tranca, a village in Laguna, Philippines, towards the end of last year. Inspired by the progress that the communal farm is making, one family whose house abuts on to a piece of abandoned land needed little urging from me to cultivate that plot two and half months ago.

They prepared the beds, and Goducate provided them seeds from the Goducate Model Farm. When I visited them recently, I was happy to see different kinds of vegetables growing well. Tatay [“father”] Benny, head of the family said, “Every two days we are able to harvest okra [lady’s fingers] from our vegetable garden enough to feed my family with fresh vegetables. Our backyard garden gives us fresh vegetables and we are able to share with our neighbors. It makes them happy and we are also happy that we become a help to them”.

Other vegetables growing in the backyard are squash, potatoes, eggplants [brinjals, aubergines], cucumbers, string beans, moringa, and ginger. The fruit trees include papaya, banana, and guava. And Tatay Benny is planning to plant even more varieties to maximize the space he has.

Setting up the beds
Setting up the beds
Setting up the trellis for string beans
Setting up the trellis for string beans

Art contest held to mark Nutrition Day at Goducate Literacy Center in Laguna

About 60 parent-pupil pairs from the five Goducate Literacy Center sites in Laguna, Philippines, participated in the drawing contest held on Nutrition Day on July 25. That Nutrition Day was part of the nation’s observance of Nutrition Month, whose theme was Gutom at malnutrisyon, Sama-sama nating wakasan (Together, we can end hunger and malnutrition).

For the contest, the parents outlined the shapes of the different vegetables and fruits. Their children, who are attending Goducate Literacy Center nursery classes, waited with excitement for their turn to color the drawings.

In this fast-food generation, children prefer to eat junk food such as hotdogs, burgers, chips, soda, and processed food over fruits and vegetables. A study from the Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI) revealed that Laguna is one of the provinces with the lowest consumers of vegetables. FNRI reported that a person may eat only 92 grams of vegetables a day, whereas the daily amount recommended by the World Health Organization is 400 grams.

Eating fewer fruits and vegetables may result in hidden hunger or deficiency of micronutrients such as vitamin A, zinc, and iron. Harvest Plus reported that hidden hunger can cause blindness, stunting, lower IQ and resistance to diseases, and can increase the risks for both mother and infant during childbirth.

After the children had colored their parents’ sketches, a simple gallery of the drawings was mounted on the wall for a brief presentation, as well as for the judges to pick up the winners. Three winners were picked from each of the five Goducate Literacy Center sites (Tranca, Maitim, Sitio Ulik, Sitio 74, and Talahiban).

We hope that teaming up parents with their children in the drawing contest will inculcate in parents, especially the mothers, the value of fruits and vegetables in the daily diet, and thus the health, of their family.

Mother helping child color picture
Mother helping child color picture
Completed works on wall for viewing
Completed works on wall for viewing

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