Staff from Goducate Training Center visit Indonesia

The number of countries in which Goducate is helping the needy is gradually increasing, and the Goducate Training Center is about to start training its fourth batch of students to be community development workers (CDWs). Circumstances and needs vary from place to place. For our trainers to be able to fine-tune the curriculum and prepare the trainees appropriately for their future postings, it is important and helpful for the staff to visit the places where the CDWs will later be deployed.

I and two other GTC staff members have just spent about 10 days in Indonesia on an exposure trip to Goducate projects in various parts of that country. We did not get to Indonesia on a direct flight so we went through the immigration checkpoints of different countries and learnt to get about on various forms of public transport. We saw that motorbikes were the commonest mode of private transport in Indonesia, and were terrified seeing how Indonesians zip in and out son their bikes.

We were exposed to Indonesian culture—its food, family traditions, arts, dances, and language. We enjoyed our exchanges with the locals in our limited Bahasa Indonesia and they in their limited English. We learnt how important it was to speak slowly when communicating in an unfamiliar language. We had fun learning Indonesia’s traditional dances and songs and appreciated the richness of its culture. We realised how Filipinos might have to adapt to the spicy food, but that should not be difficult for we soon were enjoying eating it, even with our bare hands.

We observed how Goducate workers entered communities and addressed their needs. For example, learning English was quite difficult for most Indonesians but learning it through songs and activities made it more interesting and easy to pick up. It was amazing to see how the locals would open their homes for the CDWs to help in areas of English, agriculture, health, and counselling. It was also fulfilling to see the locals mentored, and to see them mentoring other locals in the areas in which they had been trained.

The spirit of flexibility, hard work, and love are very important for every CDW to possess. We enjoyed the family spirit and hospitality exhibited by the Goducate workers who hosted and accommodated us. Such bonding time created an atmosphere of encouragement and unity.

This short exposure trip will help us in preparing the trainees to enter communities, not just with skills but most importantly with the right character and attitude that could bring love and hope to needy people.

Meeting Goducate Language Center Staff
Meeting Goducate Language Center Staff
Enjoying spicy Indonesian food
Enjoying spicy Indonesian food

 

Goducate helps people earn a living through making garments

At the end of last year, when Goducate in Laguna, the Philippines, started helping people find work making garments, there were only three women in the area who had their own sewing machines, and they could not meet the demand from the factory for school uniforms. Subsequently, we bought four high-speed sewing machines, which were allocated to others who could sew, for them to make uniforms.

Recently we bought two more—a high-speed machine, as well as a “5-threads” machine, which can be used for more elaborate work than school uniforms. This time the beneficiary is a man. He used to work in Saudi Arabia making garments, and now wishes to remain in the Philippines with his family.

We will be buying a few more machines, which will be used for training purposes. We have been helping people who were badly affected by the floods caused last August by the severe monsoons known as “typhoon” Habagat. The plan is to train some of the women affected by these floods to earn a livelihood through sewing.

Mr M at work
Mr M at work
Dresses and basketball uniforms made by Mr M
Dresses and basketball uniforms made by Mr M

Baa Baa Black Sheep at Goducate Training Center

In Jan last year we reported on the arrival of six white bundles at the Goducate Training Center (GTC) in Iloilo, Philippines. These were hair sheep donated by a friend from nearby Negros Island.

The sheep population at GTC has doubled since then. Recently we were stunned to see a newly-born black lamb amidst the all-white herd. We surmised that this has to do with the lamb’s parents both carrying a gene for color. It’s really not uncommon for black lambs to be born in a white herd to white parents. Different genes control the fleece color and pattern, whether it is solid or spotted. A black fleece comes from recessive genes, so when a white ram and a white ewe are each heterozygous for fleece color (having a recessive gene for black and a dominant gene for white), there is a 25% probability that their progeny could be a black lamb.

Since only a few white sheep are heterozygous for black, a black sheep is not common, the idiom “black sheep in the family” denotes a deviant or disreputable member of a group.

GTC is open to paying guests, and conducts educational tours of the premises for various groups. The children find petting, hand feeding, and hugging sheep to be adventurous and thrilling experiences. The black sheep will provide us with an opportunity to teach the older children and adult guests some basic genetics.

The original while bundles of joy
The original while bundles of joy
Black sheep in the family
Black sheep in the family

For booking inquiries, please contact GTC Iloilo at:
Tel 09225506199 Email gtc_iloilo@yahoo.com