Showing posts with label ONE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ONE. Show all posts

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Gawad Kalinga reshaping the global development landscape


Hope and expectations are high among supporters of Gawad Kalinga (GK) that GK is the way to a kinder, gentler, and more loving world. Conflict and violence, even for a good cause, will not lead to peace and prosperity in the long run. The hurts, suffering, and pains must be overcome. A new way must be forged, one founded on forgiveness and the heroic and sacrificial love, service, and leadership of Jesus Christ. This is the model that Gawad Kalinga espouses and is showing to be viable.

A week since the GK1World activities, I continue to marvel at how organizers and Gawad Kalinga workers were able to gather some of the best and brightest to strategize on how to make this vision a reality. Neither the cold, windy, and unpredictable weather nor the long-hours failed in dampening the spirits and energy of the participants to the Highway of Hope caravan, the ONE Celebration at Kimball Park, National City, and the two-day GK Builders Summit at the Marriot Del Mar. This GK1World celebration is a preview of what Gawad Kalinga aims to initiate and accomplish in the coming years.

Fil-Am supporters in San Diego, led by uber-businessmen Tony Olaes and Robert Sanchez, smitten by the Gawad Kalinga bug, organized and help fund the GK1World celebration, which sought to help ramp up Gawad Kalinga’s capacities. This they did by laying the groundwork for tapping into the compassion, generosity, skills, talents, and resources- the padugo- of both the Fil-Am and mainstream American communities.

The ONE caravan, led by NAFFAA officer JoAnn Fields, sought to highlight the important socio-economic-political presence of Fil-Ams in San Diego with a motorcade through the Fil-Am Highway along CA-54. The motorcade also capped the epic three-month, 22,000 plus miles, 80-city Highway of Hope caravan of Dylan Wilk and Nathan Mari with their families, which raised awareness of Gawad Kalinga in the United States. The response of Fil-Am communities through out the country has been awesome and inspiring. According to the dynamic duo, they expect up to 150 new Gawad Kalinga chapters in the United States committed to supporting Gawad Kalinga in various ways. Quite a number publicly pledged to do so during the GK Builders Summit.

The day-long ONE celebration at Kimball Park, National City was equally impressive. Occupying practically the whole park, the literal Fiesta had a gigantic slide for kids, games, food and vendor booths, as well as a GK model home, informational kiosks, and products from GK communities. The ONE variety show lasted a marathon seven hours and featured at least 21 performances and Fil-Am talents, some of whom were quite good. Hosted by Apo Hiking Society’s Danny Javier and celebrity KC Montero, notable performers included Q-York, Passion, Pasacat Folk Dancers, Jessica Sanchez, Soulutions Band (watch out for this talented group), Samahan Folk Dancers, Honare, Noly, Mabuhay Rondalla, Freda Simone, Agos (whose CD sales allot a percentage to GK), Chidren of Mother Earth, Marlone Dane, Rising Star, Kuh Ledesma, and capped by Black Eyed Peas’ Taboo and apl.de.ap.

Arizona had its star in Jessica Cox, a U. of Arizona psychology graduate, who gave a short inspirational talk, after being interviewed by Danny Javier on stage. Jessica is the first person without arms to fly solo. She is also a blackbelt in taekwondo and is a motivational speaker (see www.rightfooted.com). Her brother Jason Cox will be organizing the first GK Builders Assembly in Tucson this summer.

The ONE Celebration had extensive private sector support. Seafood City Supermaket is an active GK supporter and is calling for applications to its one-year, funded-Seafood City/GK Builders Corps. Kuh Ledesma’s Hacienda Isabela, a complete spa, wellness, and nature-resort in Indang, Cavite, will contribute one GK home for each Hacienda Lifetime membership bought. Tony Olaes has agreed to market/distribute the health drink Mona Vie with all profits to go to GK. He has also committed to raising $5M by 2009 for GK to use in its global scale up. Other partners for ONE included the RCBC remit center, Southwest Airlines, and, Mabuhay Alliance.

The next day, ANCOP USA hosted the GK Builders Summit 2008 at the Marriot Del Mar. At least 300 attended from all over the United States. Gawad Kalinga leaders including GK Executive Director Luis Onquiñena, GK Program Head Mari Oquiñena, GK father figure Tony Meloto, GK finance honcho Mike Goco, GK intellectual Boy Montelibano and GKom head Maria Montelibano led the Manila team. Couples for Christ, parent of GK, had its Director and GK Chair Joe Tale (also a member of the CFC International Council) along with fellow elder Dr. Joe Yamamoto. ANCOP had all their top guns there from Chairman Ricky Cuenca, Executive Director Rose Cabrera to its National Management Committee and Regional Coordinators.

The schedule was packed and involved talks, videos showings, updates and reports, and interactive workshops. The Summit’s goal was to understand, plan, strategize, and hopefully implement activities that will capture the evolving nature of Gawad Kalinga. This is especially significant for GK/ANCOP USA because, as GK notes, Fil-Ams in the United States and Filipinos in the Philippines and all over the world, are becoming an Army of Builders. Like Jesus’ message of love and sacrifice, “every single person who hears the message of GK spoken becomes a BUILDER of the GK movement” (Gawad Kalinga 2008). The evolution is one of a donor to a partner, then a builder. In the United States, there are from 2.5 to 4.5 million Fil-Ams. Gawad Kalinga aims to reach them and spread the message of HOPE that, through padugo, the Philippines can overcome poverty, inequality, and (social) exclusion.

Consider the following developments. Fil-Ams and Fil-Canadians have funded at least 320 GK communities, which are now entering their education, health, environment, and productivity phases. These communities still need maintenance help and capacity building in order for them to become more self-reliant and themselves become partners in developing and helping other GK communities.

Ricky Cuenca and Rose Cabrera reported that Gawad Kalinga is entering the African continent, where generations have been lost to AIDS, poverty, war, and environmental destruction. Africa needs HOPE and Gawad Kalinga seeks to provide it. Kenya, South Africa, and Nigeria will host the first GK pilot sites.

Gawad Kalinga seeks to establish 2,000 new GK communities this year to exponentially ramp up the number of communities. With God’s and everyone’s help, the goal of 7,000 communities by the year 2010 is becoming feasible. In order to achieve this, Gawad Kalinga needs to recruit a million volunteers worldwide, inspire members of Couples for Christ to become more active in GK, prepare GK beneficiaries to become GK partners themselves, and transform supporters from the academic, private, and governmental sectors into key partners. It is a grounds-up, nation-building model in the works.

Recently, Tony Meloto reported that the Philippine Department of Agriculture offered to fund the entire 300 demonstration farms that GK was planning on rolling out. The offer jumpstarts the GK food productivity and abundance program. He also noted that the City of Taguig aims to supplant Makati as the country’s financial and business center. With Fort Bonifacio as the anchor and with GK as an active partner, Taguig aims to be squatter free (10,000-15,000 squatter families), its wet markets lining C5 upgraded, a new international airport proposed, and the area fronting Laguna de Bay transformed into a visitor and resident-friendly recreation center. Already, news is out that the Philippine Stock Exchange will be unified in Taguig.

Alaminos, Pangasinan Mayor Nani Braganza shares the same thinking. In his talk, he reported that Alaminos is jueteng-free. They’ve been able to reduce malnutrition from 22% to 7%. He is partnering up with GK to assist 1,000 squatter families and build 30 GK villages in his town. The future also thus lies in dynamic and innovative local leaders. Around 350 mayors are tapping GK in solving their twin problems of squatting and poverty. The work cut out for GK is massive, hence the call for heroism and padugo to fellow Filipinos and kindred spirits worldwide.

Help is coming in other unconventional ways. Luis Onquiñena reported that all campuses of Rizal University covering its 17,000 students are and will do service in GK sites. About 100 universities in the Philippines have various forms of cooperative agreements with GK. The retiring heads of Wyeth Philippines and AIG/PhilAm Life will be working full-time voluntarily for GK. They will bring with them personal resources, time, talents, and their network. Former Dept. of Agriculture Secretary Cito Lorenzo and his wife, Malen are using their expertise in business and the social sciences, as well as their network to tap in to philanthropic sources in the Washington D.C. area.

Tony Meloto observed that partnering with GK makes good sense. GK is becoming the Armani and Gucci of community development. The Philippine Star reported a 100% positive support in a survey it conducted on GK. Next year the GK Builders Summit will be held either in Harvard or MIT as GK seeks to establish its presence in Philippine and American universities in the hope of melding the “Science, System, and Spirit” of GK. On October 10, 2010 or 10-10-10, there will be a massive gathering in the Philippines to celebrate what GK has achieved and what it will be doing in the coming years.

The future is unfolding for GK.

Nathan Mari calls it G(od’s) K(ingdom).

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

ONE a Filipino Celebration: Fil-Ams’ coming out party



This coming Memorial Day Weekend, May 24, 2008, the busiest highway in the United States will be the Filipino-American Highway (CA 54-CA 125). Thousands of Fil-Ams and Filipinos are joining a huge motorcade to launch the Gawad Kalinga ONE celebration at Kimball Park, National City, Metro San Diego, starting at 10 a.m.

ONE a Filipino Celebration seeks to honor and celebrate the Filipino dream for solidarity and pride in our culture. Now is a good time to do so, and San Diego is the ideal site to celebrate the best in the Filipino.

Afterall, Fil-Ams comprise the largest Asian/Pacific Islander population in San Diego County with a population of over 145,000 as of 2005. San Diego City alone has 75,000 Fil-Ams. Fil-Ams have been present in San Diego since 1903 when a handful of Filipino students attended State Normal Street, now known as San Diego Sate University. Fil-Ams since then have been an integral part of the socio-economic and political life of San Diego.

Fil-Ams in San Diego have an estimated median household income of $56,264, a per capita income of $17,835 and a disposable income of $1.97 billion as of 2006. Over half of Fil-Am occupations are white collar with 32% in management or professional positions and another 29% in sales and office work. Another 18% are in the services sector (Sources: Asian Pacific Legal Center 2005, U.S. Census 2000, Filipino American Development Initiatives 2006, www.gk777sd.com).

Nationally, about four million Filipinos live in the United States and have a median annual income of $65,700 second only to East Indians (U.S. Dept. of State Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs 2007, U.S. Census Bureau 2004). In the U.S. Census Bureau of 2002, Fil-Americans owned over 125,000 businesses, employed close to 132,000 people, and generated nearly $14.4 billion in revenue. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) estimated that at least 65% of the remittances to the Philippines in the year 2000 came from the United States.

Clearly, Fil-Ams are significant economic group in the United States and the Philippines.

Victoria P. Garchitorena (2007), President of Ayala Foundation Inc. noted that this “culture of migration” of Filipinos not only has influenced development in the Philippines; two sets of phenomena have also emerged. The first is the development of an Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) middle class with “aspirations, ambitions, and ideas” for a better future for their children that includes education and demands for better services and governance. The second is that overseas Filipinos are major contributors of “time, talent, treasures”.

The reasons for this philanthropic spirit include a desire to give back and help the mother country, the Filipino culture of compassion to the poor, underprivileged relatives and town mates, a wish to maintain ties with the homeland, and a concrete expression of their faith and values of sharing and caring.

Garchitorena and the Institute for Migration and Development Issues’ (IMDI 2006) Jeremiah Opiniano note that about 3,000 Filipino associations exist in the United States alone. Many of these associations are conduits for donations and assistance to the Philippines. These associations vary in type such as hometown associations, professional groups, alumni associations, community organizations, faith-based groups, student associations, cultural associations, national associations, and dedicated and public charities. Recipients of their aid include churches and other faith-based institutions, universities and colleges, hospitals, NGOs and foundations, government, direct to individuals, and special projects and initiatives.

This diasporan philanthropy is no clearer in the work of Gawad Kalinga supporters and volunteers in the United States. Of the 1,700 Gawad Kalinga communities established in the Philippines since 2003, 311 were sponsored by Fil-Americans and their friends and relatives. Two successful San Diego businessmen alone, Tony Olaes of ODMart and Robert Sanchez of GlobalTel Media, have committed to funding 20 GK villages and at least 4,000 GK homes respectively. Both are incidentally, the key movers and organizers behind this ONE celebration.

Thus, there are reasons to celebrate. The Philippines is an emerging economy, despite the corruption and inefficiencies that plague the bureaucracy. We are developing as a nation because of our culture of resilience, of daring and risk-taking, of hard work, competence, and ethical work discipline. Our OFWs are the best reflection of this. As one business professor told me, Filipinos are the best in work that entails nurturing.

We are also tops in the compassion business. Gawad Kalinga, an ambitious Philippine community development cum nation building movement, seeking to build 700,000 homes in 7,000 communities, in seven years, is reshaping the field of community development. The global implications and replicability of GK’s nation-building model on the emergence and development of other forms of social movements and civil society–state governance are compelling. The late Jesuit historian and visionary, Horacio dela Costa (2002) once wrote that for the Philippine nation to develop to the best of its abilities and potential, the Filipino people must do three things, namely: (a) build and strengthen communities; (b) link the communities with common goals-ideally national goals; and, (c) recapture the bureaucracy. Culture trumps all and Gawad Kalinga’s model may be one cultural model for nation building.

In recognition of the success of the Filipino and the potentials yet to unfold, the Fil-Am community and Gawad Kalinga/ANCOP USA are sponsoring ONE a Filipino Celebration. As a coming out party of the Fil-Am community, ONE seeks to show what solidarity in the community can achieve. Activities include:

  • The culmination of the Highway/Caravan of Hope 65-city speaking tour of Gawad Kalinga International Partnerships Coordinator Dylan Wilk and GK1MB USA Coordinator, Nathan Mari along with their spouses. See http://www.ancopusa.org/highwayofhope/;
  • The FILIPINO SOLIDARITY CARAVAN on America's only Fil-Am Highway (http://www.gk777sd.com/caravan.html);
  • ONE Celebration, from 10:00 a.m. -6:00 p.m., Kimball Park, National City
    11:00 am. Hosted by Danny Javier of Apo Hiking Society, the celebration will feature GK officers led by founder Tony Meloto and numerous surprise guest performers. The celebration ends with a Vigil Mass, and;
  • GK Builders Summit (May 25-26, 2008 at the Marriot Del Mar Hotel). This is a two-day workshop on engaging potential and active GK One Million Volunteers or GK1MB. See http://www.ancopusa.org/gksummit/schedule.htm for the schedule and workshop details.

Be part of history unfolding. Join in creating a vision of the Philippines that is fueled by hope and made real by the compassion, love, care, and generosity of Filipinos. Make your business the Philippines. The Ateneo Graduate School of Business did when their 40th anniversary theme was “Our country is our Business.”

As Tony Meloto said, “Truly I am blessed that God made me a Filipino.”

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

ONE, a celebration of Gawad Kalinga in San Diego, May 24, 2008

Poster and text below from:
http://www.gk777sd.com/

ONE is on! The unique Filipino celebration will introduce itself on Saturday May 24, 2008, at Kimball Park, National City.

ONE is a movement standing for solidarity among Filipinos in America, where diversity is acknowledged, appreciated and invited to find unity in common causes seeking the serve the highest interests of Filipino-Americans. Beyond that, ONE also seeks to actively facilitate the fruition of Fil-Am dreams to build a homeland of their dreams. In pursuit of this, ONE links with Gawad Kalinga, the fast-growing nation-building movement that focuses on dismantling a shameful poverty in the homeland that is a blight to all Filipinos wherever they are in this world.

ONE will be from 10 am to 6 pm at Kimball Park, home to major Filipino events in the county. It will be a full day of festivities where the best of the Filipino will be showcased and harnessed to propel a great initiative for solidarity and honor. The day begins with two grand events - a caravan of heroes helping the homeland through Gawad Kalinga which will begin from several points from LA to Las Vegas, and a fun ride organized by the Sikad ng Bayan and joined by other cycling groups. These will converge through the Filipino - American Highway in National City.

ONE then shifts to Kimball Park where different Fil-Am organizations representing all the different provinces will converge. It will be a day of fun, food, music, dance and fellowship where even children will be catered to. Kimball Park will be a landscape of colors that reflect the tropical ambiance of home.

ONE is born!

Let us be ONE People and ONE Unified Nation once and for all.