Goducate’s goal to go and educate all 42,000 barangays (villages) in the Philippines. One of the new barangays reached is Manguna in the municipality of Cabatuan, in Iloilo province. Goducate reached this community with our Health Information Drive (HID) for senior citizens.
First, Goducate community development trainers (CDTs) trained 7 barangay health workers how to conduct a HID. Then on June 29, barangay health workers, together with Goducate CDTs, shared what they had learnt to 132 senior citizens in Manguna. The elderly were taught, for free, about the risks, causes, symptoms, and treatment of diabetes and hypertension — the country’s top killer diseases. They were also taught the benefits of Moringa loifera (malunggay) and how to make malunggay powder.
Senior Citizens During the HID
Since then, the Goducate CDTs, with the barangay health workers, have been going house-to-house to do weekly follow-up visits and measuring blood pressures in Manguna’s seven zones.
A BHW conduct lecture to Senior Citizen
Barangay Manguna is the biggest village in the municipality of Cabatuan, with a population of over 2000 residents in 500 households. It will be under the care of Goducate Iloilo’s 10th batch of CDTs from July to September. This plan is in keeping with Goducate’s aim to train trainers who can raise up leaders in the community, so that the communities can be self-sustaining.
*Our guest writer is Queenie Guibao, batch 10 trainee.
In 2014, Goducate started its community development work in Lemery through the Goducate Tent School Project. The tent-schools were erected as substitutes for classrooms damaged by Typhoon Yolanda (see blogs Jan 17 and 29, 2014).
Lemery is a fourth-class municipality in the province of Iloilo, Philippines. The tent-school project was followed by Jr. CDW (Community Development Workers) Club for elementary students, and Basketball Clinics for young men. This year, local leaders trained and mentored by Goducate are running the community-development programmes.
The Jr. CDW Club in Benjamin Aguilar Elementary School (BAES) is already in its fourth year. The regular club meeting held in July to kick off a progam to build future leaders was flooded by 48 active and excited pupils.
Junnel Palma, 22 years old, was one of the beneficiaries of the sports clinic held in Lemery. He has also been on several leadership-training programs at the Goducate Training Center in Iloilo, where he has taken part in the center’s other activities. He is now the coach and the leader of Goducate basketball teams in Lemery, overseeing weekly basketball clinics in two barangays (villages), and training young people there to be competitive and well-rounded players.
Jr. CDW Club in Lemery
In May this year, Junnel was one of the community youth who helped out in teaching children through Goducate’s Vacation Barangay School Program.
Junnel (3rd from left) together with new set of basketball paleyrs after basketball clinic
One of the communities that benefited from the Vacation Barangay School was Barangay Batiti, Concepcion Iloilo. The weeklong child-friendly program was held at the home of Mrs. Cheryll Obillos, a mother of 4. Nanay Cheryll, as she is called, has been blind since she was 4 years old. Yet Nanay Cheryll manages her home efficiently, and her positive outlook and deep sense of family spirit have made her respected by her community. Nevertheless, she and her husband do not earn enough for their children’s school supplies.
Junnel told his basketball players about the needs of Nanay Cheryll’s family. The players responded immediately and cheerfully by donating groceries and school supplies. They also approached their classmates to donate clothing and toys. The players personally handed the items to the family in June. The players’ sense of fulfillment was expressed by Junnel, who said, “The most satisfying work is helping others.”
Junnel in Red Shirt, together with basketball players, community youth and Nanay Cheryll’s Family
Goducate’s motto of helping others to help themselves, and getting people to help others after they have been helped, has clearly rubbed off on this group of young people.
*Our guest writer is Joanna De Leon, a community development worker
The Goducate team in Laguna has been cultivating vermicompost as a means of generating income to help cover some expenses — for example, the maintenance and registration of vehicles. About a year ago, we were delighted to get an order for about 100 sacks of the compost from Batangas, the province next to Laguna. However, since then there was no such large order. Yet we were not discouraged. We continued producing the compost for sale locally.
Loading sacks of vermicompost sold
Early last month we began to market the vermicompost online, and were pleasantly surprised to get an inquiry from a farm owner in Batangas. This man visited us and was impressed by the quality of product, saying that it is better than that of other vermifarms in Laguna and Batangas. He ordered 30 sacks.
We have also been trying out a new machine, a vermiseparator, for harvesting the compost. We borrowed this machine, and found that harvesting with this machine is faster than harvesting manually.