Education includes dancing!

In our Literacy Centers in Sabah for “undocumented alien” children we teach literacy and numeracy. These are basic skills that provide the foundation for other subjects that we will teach. However, we have also added an additional subject that we believe is important, namely, traditional dance.

I realized that the people that we were helping were really marginalized. They lost their identity when they left their ancestral homes in southern Philippines. They lost their dignity when they had to eke out a living doing the lowest menial jobs. Their kids have lost their language. And they’ve all lost hope of everything except surviving!

When we started the literacy centers in their kampongs, a little glimmer of hope was placed in their communities and in their hearts. But I realized that education is a long term investment and it will take years of hard work before visible results are seen. In the meanwhile, I felt that they should be allowed to retain an important part of their identity, namely, their traditions.

Needless to say, they had lost much of their traditions – their traditional kampongs, their traditional means of earning their livelihoods, their family structures, their festivals – in their new environment. But there was one tradition that they could preserve in their new environment – traditional dance.

When we first introduced traditional Tausug dance in the first literacy center, many little girls readily took up the lessons and excelled in it. At school functions when they proudly displayed their skills, I noticed how the parents looked pleased as their children danced their traditional dances. Since then we have made traditional dance a subject for the little girls in our Goducate centers.

Poor students earn income using worms

Many Filipino teenage students who have not been able to finish their high school education because of poverty have enrolled in Goducate’s Alternative Learning System (ALS) courses in Laguna, Philippines. Some of them have also been taught to produce organic fertilizer for sale, using Goducate’s vermiculture system. The income from this provides their transportation fare to school.

Goducate provides the earth-worms (African night-crawlers) and the technical advice to these students. After one month, they are able to harvest first grade organic fertilizer which is readily sold. The income not only provides transportation fares for the students but also some surplus for their families!

This simple livelihood project provides are regular monthly income to these students.

Literacy breeds confidence

Six weeks ago, I visited a swampy kampong in Sabah to discuss the possibility of starting a literacy center with the village “elders.” While I was talking to them, a teenage girl sat quietly in the corner of the little room. As I was about to leave the house, I tried to say a few words to the shy girl but she didn’t really look at me.

Six weeks later I visited that same kampong. This time the little house that we held our discussions had now been enlarged by the community to be its school-house. That little school house now teaches about 300 children!!

But what was even more amazing is that the shy girl that I saw only 6 weeks ago was the confident MC of the impressive show that the students presented to us. She spoke without a script in fluent English. She did not look flustered even when the sound system competed with her with jarring interruptions.

My other friends thought that she was just a naturally confident girl but I was overjoyed to see how a little literacy and hope had changed the life of this 15 year old girl!