MAITUM, Sarangani (August 30, 2012) - Tboli pupils of Victoria Tañedo Garcia (VTG) Elementary School happily unpack their school supplies after distribution at barangay Zion Wednesday, August 29. The distribution of bags and school supplies is an annual project of Mayor Elsie Perrett under the program "Angat Batang Maitum" in support to children's education. For more news and updates, please visit the< a href= http://www.sarangani.gov.ph/ > Province of Sarangani
. (Joylyn Ty/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Tubad is a Blaan word that means "new generation or descendant of a tribe".Blaan is one of the indigenous peoples group of southern Mindanao, Philippines specifically in South Cotabato, Sarangani Province, General Santos City, and Davao Del Sur.Features on cultural appreciation and development of the different indigenous peoples groups of Mindanao are very welcome to be posted in this blog.
Showing posts with label Maitum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maitum. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Sarangani village kids yearn for education
MAITUM, Sarangani (October 13, 2012) - Quality Education for Sarangani Today (QUEST) staff April May Domingo listens to the kids of Kipalkuda Elementary School as they suggest things they need during their workshop on how to develop and pursue their dreams of education for their barangay during the education summit at barangay New La Union Thursday, October 11. The event which focused on the education revolution is dubbed Karunungan Kontra Kahirapan (KKK) or literacy against poverty espoused by Governor Migs Dominguez. KKK aims to unite the barangay council, parents, students and the provincial government to work hand in hand to bring out quality education to every Sarangan. The summit gathered over 70 pupils, parents, teachers, the barangay council, local government unit of Maitum staff, and QUEST staff. For more news and updates, please visit the< a href= http://www.sarangani.gov.ph/ > Province of Sarangani
. (Joylyn Ty/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Outstanding IP teachers honored in Sarangani
ALABEL, Sarangani (October 29, 2012) - Governor Migs Dominguez presents the seven outstanding IP (Indigenous People) teachers representing each of the seven municipalities of the province during the provincial celebration of National Indigenous Peoples Thanksgiving Day Monday, October 29, at the Capitol gymnasium. The awardees are (from left) Ginalyn Barcena from Malapatan, Karen Ruth Kusin from Maitum, Noemi Suga from Kiamba, Diosdado Sol Sichon from Alabel, Ricardo Unda from Glan, Mateo Gulac from Maasim and Avelina Sarominez from Malungon. The governor has invited all IP professionals and employees at Capitol to join the event to deepen awareness, appreciation and celebrate the richness of our culture. For more news and updates, please visit the http://www.sarangani.gov.ph/> Province of Sarangani
. Come and enjoy the MunaTo Festival and 20th Foundation Anniversary of Sarangani Province on November 28-30, 2012. (Cocoy Sexcion/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)
Parents help kids pursue quality education
MAITUM, Sarangani (November 9, 2012) - Parents and Teachers Association (PTA) members of Victoria Tañedo Garcia Elementary School participate in a workshop on how to develop and help children pursue their dreams through quality education at barangay Zion Monday, November 5. The event was an education summit implemented by the Quality Education for Sarangani Today (QUEST) program which is dubbed KKK (Karunungan Kontra Kahirapan). The summit which gathered over 100 participants aims to unite barangay council, parents, teachers, students, and the local government unit to work hand-in-hand in bringing about quality education to Sarangani kids. For more news and updates, please visit the http://www.sarangani.gov.ph/ > Province of Sarangani
. Come and enjoy the MunaTo Festival and 20th Foundation Anniversary of Sarangani Province on November 28-30, 2012. (Joylyn Ty/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Kids and mother chase education dreams
MAITUM, Sarangani (November 9, 2012) – A mother and her kids listen from a window sill in a small classroom filled with participants holding an education summit at barangay Batian Tuesday, November 6. Barangay Batian is the town’s poorest village with the lowest number of children entering school. The education summit which is dubbed Karunungan Kontra Kahirapan (KKK) is a program implemented by the Quality Education for Sarangani Today (QUEST) under the office of Governor Migs Dominguez. The program aims to unite barangay council, parents, students, teachers, and the local government unit of Maitum to strengthen the ability of the children by providing quality education. The summit was participated in by over 90 pupils, parents, barangay council members, sitio leaders, and LGU staff. For more news and updates, please visit the http://www.sarangani.gov.ph/ > Province of Sarangani
. Come and enjoy the MunaTo Festival and 20th Foundation Anniversary of Sarangani Province on November 28-30, 2012. (Joylyn Ty/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Medical mission in IP village
MAITUM, Sarangani (February 7, 2013) - Governor Migs Dominguez and Dr. Ruel Cagape, one of the awardees in last year's “Gawad Geny Lopez, Jr. Bayaning Pilipino” take a break after the medical mission Wednesday, February 6, at barangay Tuanadatu, a remote village of indigenous people (IP). For more news and updates, please visit the http://www.sarangani.gov.ph/ > Province of Sarangani
(Joylyn Ty/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Tboli handicraft and crops in Binuyugan Festival
MAITUM, Sarangani (May 5, 2012) – Tbolis in their traditional dress welcome visitors to their cultural showcase and farm products display at the Agro-Trade Fair of the Binuyugan Festival which opened May 3 and culminate on May 7 marking the 53rd Foundation Anniversary of Maitum. The Agro-Trade Fair is a showcase of the tri-peoples' (Christian, Muslims, and Tboli) rich art, culture, and produce. For more news and updates, please visit the Province of Sarangani . Come and enjoy Sarangani Bay Festival on May 18-19, 2012. (Afren de Guzman/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Trekkers reach 70-foot high waterfalls
MAITUM, Sarangani (September 8, 2011) – Mountaineers reach Dakeol Falls (1st tier) over the weekend. It is estimated to be 70 feet high. The mountaineers were not able to reach the 2nd and 3rd tiers because of time constraints but discovered many breathtaking sceneries in sitio Angko, barangay Batian. (Beth Ramos/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Maitum mountaineers explore town’s jungle
MAITUM, Sarangani (September 8, 2011) – Municipal employees and local mountaineers take time to pose while on their way to sitio Angko in barangay Batian which is the starting point of their mountain expedition over the weekend. The trekkers, looking for more sites that would fit the “Sarangani your adventure” tourism brand of the province, explored caves and immersed with the Tboli indigenous people who served them local food. (Beth Ramos/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Giant staircase awes trekkers
MAITUM, Sarangani (September 8, 2011) – A part of the natural giant staircase made of rock is one of the passageways leading to numerous waterfalls found in sitio Angko, barangay Batian. Mountaineers followed the source of the water in order to find Dakeol Falls, a three-tiered waterfalls still untouched by tourists. (Beth Ramos/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Above the mist in Maitum
MAITUM, Sarangani (September 8, 2011) – A trekker surveys one of the breath-taking sceneries of sitio Angko in barangay Batian where you can feel Mother Nature’s soothing embrace above the mist, warming the truly human heart. Municipal employees and local mountaineers hiked to sitio Angko in barangay Batian over the weekend, looking for more sites that would fit the “Sarangani your adventure” tourism brand of the province. The trekkers explored caves and immersed with the Tboli indigenous people who served them local food. (Beth Ramos/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
This T'boli woman demonstrates how she chews a certain bark (instead of a betel nut), ikmo, and other herbal plants. What's interesting about it is that she is chewing tree barks. The tree bark has a flavor and the juice in the bark releases the red pigmenu in the saliva. According to those who have tried it, it's refreshing!
Photos and information courtesy of Beth Ramos of LGU-Maitum
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Rosalito Labi, a leader of his tribe
MAITUM, Sarangani (October 21, 2010) - Rosalito Labi’s parents were born in Angko village. In the late 60’s, his family moved to barangay Baningo, now barangay Ned of Lake Sebu, South Cotabato.
In Ned, he became a Tboli chieftain and supervisor of the Alternative Learning Center. In 2005, Labi, now with a family of his own, returned to his roots in sitio Angko.
In sitio Angko, he found the houses of his relatives far from each other. He encouraged them to transfer their houses near to each other so that they will be recognized as a sitio. Soon after, the two original houses mushroomed into 30, thus sitio Angko was born.
There is no sign of progress in this sitio – no electricity, no potable water, help from the government is nil because of the distance and the difficulty in going there.
Mulling over their pitiful situation, Labi, a father of 9 children, called for a meeting with his tribe and told them, “Nothing will happen to us if we just resign to our fate. We must think of positive things that could possibly change our destiny. Your problem is my problem too. The problem of your children is the problem of my children too. Why can we not unite and plan for our future?” Labi told them. They all agreed.
In that meeting, Labi asked the villagers their concerns and identify the most urgent ones. The villagers unanimously agreed that they need to build a trail that would connect them to the dirt road. If they built a trail, there is a big chance for them to bring down their crops for selling in the town.
On May 27, 2006, they started building a trail. They used “buyo-buyo” or sharpened wood. They did this during Saturdays and Sundays. Labi tearfully recalled how they worked even with empty stomach as long as they can build the trail. Every able-bodied villager contributed to the construction of the trail. Each was given equal portion of the trail to work on. “We proved to ourselves that walang imposible kung magkaisa kami,” Labi said.
In 2007, with prodding from the residents in sitio Angko, he ran as barangay kagawad for Bati-an and handily won.
He continued leading his people. With the “bayanihan spirit” as their best weapon, they built a waiting shed beside the dirt road so that when it rains, their farm produce will not get wet while waiting for a motorcycle to bring them to town. Later on the waiting shed became a resting place for travelers from Tuanadatu and Ned.
To boost their farm production, Labi led the construction of a nursery makeshift building where they propagated coffee, banana, and other seedlings which were later on distributed to the residents. This helped increase their income.
Labi was also concerned about the future of the children. So he requested his married daughter, a high school graduate, to teach children how to read and write. A vacant space in their house was used as classroom to more than 30 daycare children. But if there are visitors, the children would look for somewhere else where they could continue their learning.
“I bought a blackboard from my honorarium as barangay kagawad, Labi said. I gave half of my honorarium to my married daughter as her honorarium too for teaching the children.” Labi believes that “yung galing sa tao dapat ibalik sa tao.” So he spends most of his honorarium for the villagers. The local government gave paper pads, pencils, and other school supplies, while the Indigenous Peoples Development Program of the provincial government gave teaching materials. Now, it is the local government which pays the honorarium of the volunteer teacher.
“The International Aid (IA) came to sitio Angko. We were told to build a Health and Nutrition Post or HNP. Again, we built an HNP through “bayanihan”. IA gave two weighing scales and BP apparatus for the HNP. We were promised medicines worth P25,000 and we are hoping the medicines would come soon,” Labi said.
Their struggle is far from over. There are still a lot of things to be done. But Labi, an elementary graduate, believes that if they unite, nothing is impossible and that his sitio will rise above poverty.
Today, Labi can look back with nary a trace of bitterness but pride. (Beth Ramos-Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
In Ned, he became a Tboli chieftain and supervisor of the Alternative Learning Center. In 2005, Labi, now with a family of his own, returned to his roots in sitio Angko.
In sitio Angko, he found the houses of his relatives far from each other. He encouraged them to transfer their houses near to each other so that they will be recognized as a sitio. Soon after, the two original houses mushroomed into 30, thus sitio Angko was born.
There is no sign of progress in this sitio – no electricity, no potable water, help from the government is nil because of the distance and the difficulty in going there.
Mulling over their pitiful situation, Labi, a father of 9 children, called for a meeting with his tribe and told them, “Nothing will happen to us if we just resign to our fate. We must think of positive things that could possibly change our destiny. Your problem is my problem too. The problem of your children is the problem of my children too. Why can we not unite and plan for our future?” Labi told them. They all agreed.
In that meeting, Labi asked the villagers their concerns and identify the most urgent ones. The villagers unanimously agreed that they need to build a trail that would connect them to the dirt road. If they built a trail, there is a big chance for them to bring down their crops for selling in the town.
On May 27, 2006, they started building a trail. They used “buyo-buyo” or sharpened wood. They did this during Saturdays and Sundays. Labi tearfully recalled how they worked even with empty stomach as long as they can build the trail. Every able-bodied villager contributed to the construction of the trail. Each was given equal portion of the trail to work on. “We proved to ourselves that walang imposible kung magkaisa kami,” Labi said.
In 2007, with prodding from the residents in sitio Angko, he ran as barangay kagawad for Bati-an and handily won.
He continued leading his people. With the “bayanihan spirit” as their best weapon, they built a waiting shed beside the dirt road so that when it rains, their farm produce will not get wet while waiting for a motorcycle to bring them to town. Later on the waiting shed became a resting place for travelers from Tuanadatu and Ned.
To boost their farm production, Labi led the construction of a nursery makeshift building where they propagated coffee, banana, and other seedlings which were later on distributed to the residents. This helped increase their income.
Labi was also concerned about the future of the children. So he requested his married daughter, a high school graduate, to teach children how to read and write. A vacant space in their house was used as classroom to more than 30 daycare children. But if there are visitors, the children would look for somewhere else where they could continue their learning.
“I bought a blackboard from my honorarium as barangay kagawad, Labi said. I gave half of my honorarium to my married daughter as her honorarium too for teaching the children.” Labi believes that “yung galing sa tao dapat ibalik sa tao.” So he spends most of his honorarium for the villagers. The local government gave paper pads, pencils, and other school supplies, while the Indigenous Peoples Development Program of the provincial government gave teaching materials. Now, it is the local government which pays the honorarium of the volunteer teacher.
“The International Aid (IA) came to sitio Angko. We were told to build a Health and Nutrition Post or HNP. Again, we built an HNP through “bayanihan”. IA gave two weighing scales and BP apparatus for the HNP. We were promised medicines worth P25,000 and we are hoping the medicines would come soon,” Labi said.
Their struggle is far from over. There are still a lot of things to be done. But Labi, an elementary graduate, believes that if they unite, nothing is impossible and that his sitio will rise above poverty.
Today, Labi can look back with nary a trace of bitterness but pride. (Beth Ramos-Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
FEATURE - A people that refuses to die
By Beth Ramos-Palma Gil
MAITUM, Sarangani (October 21, 2010) - “For a time, we thought our fate is sealed with hopelessness,” says Rosalito Labi, a sitio leader and barangay kagawad (village councilor) of sitio Angko, the sitio where we decided to spend our weekend.
This sense of hopelessness emanated from their past experiences. Government aid came few and far between if not none at all.
Sitio Angko is 15 kilometers away from the town proper and can be reached through a dirt road. From the dirt road, one has to walk three to four hours through a three-kilometer narrow trail. If it rains, the narrow trail with uphill and downhill climb becomes a one-foot deep mud ditch which makes walking extremely difficult. But the rich foliage and breathtaking view of the magical forest more than makes up the arduous journey.
This narrow trail was made through “bayanihan” by the villagers on May 2006 and was completed seven months later. They used “buyo-buyo” or sharpened wood to make the trail. Despite the trail they built, villagers still have a hard time transporting their farm produce to the poblacion. They use carabaos and horses to transport their farm produce.
Upon our arrival, we were forced to stay indoors by inclement weather. We took this opportunity to get close with the villagers, telling stories, playing with the kids, while others contented themselves looking at the foggy surroundings.
Securely ensconced on a rolling hill surrounded by rain forest, sitio Angko is home to 120 smiling, gentle, and peaceful Tboli people, who live on the edge of poverty. But villagers can proudly say that they have a zero crime rate. Their main source of livelihood is farming and hunting. Their main crop is corn. Fresh water fish is still abundant in the creeks of sitio Angko.
Angko is the farthest sitio of barangay Batian. It is also the least explored of all the six sitios of Bati-an.
Bati-an (population: 949) is the province’s poorest village according to the Community Based Monitoring System. 99.8% of its households have income below the poverty threshold and below the food threshold. 62.1% of its households have no access to potable water.
In basic education, 94.3% of Bati-an’s children 13-16 years old are not attending high school; 44.3 of children 6-12 years old are not attending elementary school; and 48.2% aged 6-16 years old are not attending school.
Labi confessed there were instances when they stopped dreaming and hoping for a bright future. “The barangay captain never visited us,” he said. Intervention from the government was hard to come by because of its distance and the difficulty in reaching the place.
Until February 2008 when the Mindanao Rural Development Program (MRDP), through the initiative of the provincial and municipal governments, started its projects in this sitio. Through their newly-formed people’s organization, the Tboli Farmers’ Association, MRDP projects were implemented but not after they were given skills training to prepare them for the projects. Rolando Delcano, an employee from the municipal agriculturist office, and the designated municipal facilitator of MRDP projects, patiently and conscientiously attended to the implementation of the projects. He goes to the area twice a month, live, sleep, and eat with them. Villagers sincerely involve themselves in the projects and in the process found themselves empowered.
“At first, people here were aloof. They just stay silent and stare at visitors. But now, they have learned to interact with other people. They learned to smile and talk to us,” says Delcano. “They also earned confidence and sense of pride from what they did for their sitio. Before, people here plant so that they have something to eat, but now, they also plant so they have something to sell,” Delcano disclosed.
The organization was given four carabaos, three horses which became five, and 12 goats which became 20. The carabaos and horses are used to transport their farm produce from the sitio to the dirt road where motorcycles will bring them to the town proper. Ten percent of the earnings in transporting goods go to the association.
Aside from the animals, MRDP also provided them with planting materials for abaca and coffee. Two hectares were planted to coffee, while 10 hectares were planted to abaca.
The coffee is about to bear fruit while they are now starting to harvest the abaca.
Representatives from the International Aid (IA) also visited them. They were promised a P25,000 worth of medicines once they built a health and nutrition post (HNP) which they did through bayanihan and from indigenous materials in the area. The HNP has been built and hopefully the P25,000 promised by the IA would come soon.
In May 2009, a solar power system was given to them by the provincial government. For the first time, villagers saw electric light on a pitch-dark night.
As the night falls in sitio Angko, myriad of fireflies light the growing darkness. The subtle beauty of wilderness at night and the chilling cold that it brings, makes sleep easy to come by. What a great break from a humdrum, busy life in the urban area.
“The biggest success of these people is their empowerment,” Delcano added.
Sitio Angko has the largest land area in Bati-an’s forestland which is 30% of the total area. Villagers are aware of the effects of “kaingin” (slash-and burn farming), illegal fishing (in the river), or illegal cutting of trees that is why these activities are discouraged in order to preserve the healthy environment. Near the proposed water spring development (funding of which is still to be sourced out), we found more or less 20 “red lawaan” trees which trunks are as big as the size of a fuel container drum.
A makeshift daycare center was built by the villagers through the help of the local government by providing materials. The honorarium of the volunteer/teacher is shouldered by the local government also. Labi said “we would be happy if the government or any funding agency or NGO help us build a permanent daycare center.”
Some of the big challenges that the villagers have to face are lack of medicines, basic education, lack of farming techniques and seedlings, and of course improvement of the narrow trail which connects them to the main dirt road.
But their most urgent concern is health and sanitation. The lack of potable water aggravates their situation. Toilet bowls given to them by the local government have to wait until a communal system will be constructed which would take a long time to be realized. More often, children are the ones who suffer from diarrhea and other water-borne diseases because of unclean drinking water. The existing water source which is a kilometer away from the center of the sitio is open and susceptible to contamination.
Sitio Angko is a strategic starting point to the many potential tourist spots in Bati-an. There is the hundred caves. Villagers told us that a cave was used to be a stronghold of the Japanese Imperial Army. Another cave, the El Kiblat Cave, just three kilometers away, has many compartments and with an upward exit. The giant staircase with flowing water, is just a kilometer away. The Dakiol Falls, five kilometers away, has a three-tier drop 50-meters each long. Its sight and sound leaves one catching his or her breath because of the heavy fall of water to the ground. Anybody who visited this place said that it is a perfect place for trekking and mountain climbing.
Villagers in sitio Angko provide a compelling testimony of a people that refuse to give up despite the odds. Labi admitted that in the past, there were times they lose hope and just accept the harsh reality; that nothing can be done to improve their situation. But like their ancestors who took care of this place for their future, they refused to give up and converted crisis as opportunities. They turned their small dreams to a reality. “Na-feel na namo ang presence sa gobyerno,” he said.
We went home refreshed and inspired by an empowered people who refuse to give up. (Beth Ramos-Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
MAITUM, Sarangani (October 21, 2010) - “For a time, we thought our fate is sealed with hopelessness,” says Rosalito Labi, a sitio leader and barangay kagawad (village councilor) of sitio Angko, the sitio where we decided to spend our weekend.
This sense of hopelessness emanated from their past experiences. Government aid came few and far between if not none at all.
Sitio Angko is 15 kilometers away from the town proper and can be reached through a dirt road. From the dirt road, one has to walk three to four hours through a three-kilometer narrow trail. If it rains, the narrow trail with uphill and downhill climb becomes a one-foot deep mud ditch which makes walking extremely difficult. But the rich foliage and breathtaking view of the magical forest more than makes up the arduous journey.
This narrow trail was made through “bayanihan” by the villagers on May 2006 and was completed seven months later. They used “buyo-buyo” or sharpened wood to make the trail. Despite the trail they built, villagers still have a hard time transporting their farm produce to the poblacion. They use carabaos and horses to transport their farm produce.
Upon our arrival, we were forced to stay indoors by inclement weather. We took this opportunity to get close with the villagers, telling stories, playing with the kids, while others contented themselves looking at the foggy surroundings.
Securely ensconced on a rolling hill surrounded by rain forest, sitio Angko is home to 120 smiling, gentle, and peaceful Tboli people, who live on the edge of poverty. But villagers can proudly say that they have a zero crime rate. Their main source of livelihood is farming and hunting. Their main crop is corn. Fresh water fish is still abundant in the creeks of sitio Angko.
Angko is the farthest sitio of barangay Batian. It is also the least explored of all the six sitios of Bati-an.
Bati-an (population: 949) is the province’s poorest village according to the Community Based Monitoring System. 99.8% of its households have income below the poverty threshold and below the food threshold. 62.1% of its households have no access to potable water.
In basic education, 94.3% of Bati-an’s children 13-16 years old are not attending high school; 44.3 of children 6-12 years old are not attending elementary school; and 48.2% aged 6-16 years old are not attending school.
Labi confessed there were instances when they stopped dreaming and hoping for a bright future. “The barangay captain never visited us,” he said. Intervention from the government was hard to come by because of its distance and the difficulty in reaching the place.
Until February 2008 when the Mindanao Rural Development Program (MRDP), through the initiative of the provincial and municipal governments, started its projects in this sitio. Through their newly-formed people’s organization, the Tboli Farmers’ Association, MRDP projects were implemented but not after they were given skills training to prepare them for the projects. Rolando Delcano, an employee from the municipal agriculturist office, and the designated municipal facilitator of MRDP projects, patiently and conscientiously attended to the implementation of the projects. He goes to the area twice a month, live, sleep, and eat with them. Villagers sincerely involve themselves in the projects and in the process found themselves empowered.
“At first, people here were aloof. They just stay silent and stare at visitors. But now, they have learned to interact with other people. They learned to smile and talk to us,” says Delcano. “They also earned confidence and sense of pride from what they did for their sitio. Before, people here plant so that they have something to eat, but now, they also plant so they have something to sell,” Delcano disclosed.
The organization was given four carabaos, three horses which became five, and 12 goats which became 20. The carabaos and horses are used to transport their farm produce from the sitio to the dirt road where motorcycles will bring them to the town proper. Ten percent of the earnings in transporting goods go to the association.
Aside from the animals, MRDP also provided them with planting materials for abaca and coffee. Two hectares were planted to coffee, while 10 hectares were planted to abaca.
The coffee is about to bear fruit while they are now starting to harvest the abaca.
Representatives from the International Aid (IA) also visited them. They were promised a P25,000 worth of medicines once they built a health and nutrition post (HNP) which they did through bayanihan and from indigenous materials in the area. The HNP has been built and hopefully the P25,000 promised by the IA would come soon.
In May 2009, a solar power system was given to them by the provincial government. For the first time, villagers saw electric light on a pitch-dark night.
As the night falls in sitio Angko, myriad of fireflies light the growing darkness. The subtle beauty of wilderness at night and the chilling cold that it brings, makes sleep easy to come by. What a great break from a humdrum, busy life in the urban area.
“The biggest success of these people is their empowerment,” Delcano added.
Sitio Angko has the largest land area in Bati-an’s forestland which is 30% of the total area. Villagers are aware of the effects of “kaingin” (slash-and burn farming), illegal fishing (in the river), or illegal cutting of trees that is why these activities are discouraged in order to preserve the healthy environment. Near the proposed water spring development (funding of which is still to be sourced out), we found more or less 20 “red lawaan” trees which trunks are as big as the size of a fuel container drum.
A makeshift daycare center was built by the villagers through the help of the local government by providing materials. The honorarium of the volunteer/teacher is shouldered by the local government also. Labi said “we would be happy if the government or any funding agency or NGO help us build a permanent daycare center.”
Some of the big challenges that the villagers have to face are lack of medicines, basic education, lack of farming techniques and seedlings, and of course improvement of the narrow trail which connects them to the main dirt road.
But their most urgent concern is health and sanitation. The lack of potable water aggravates their situation. Toilet bowls given to them by the local government have to wait until a communal system will be constructed which would take a long time to be realized. More often, children are the ones who suffer from diarrhea and other water-borne diseases because of unclean drinking water. The existing water source which is a kilometer away from the center of the sitio is open and susceptible to contamination.
Sitio Angko is a strategic starting point to the many potential tourist spots in Bati-an. There is the hundred caves. Villagers told us that a cave was used to be a stronghold of the Japanese Imperial Army. Another cave, the El Kiblat Cave, just three kilometers away, has many compartments and with an upward exit. The giant staircase with flowing water, is just a kilometer away. The Dakiol Falls, five kilometers away, has a three-tier drop 50-meters each long. Its sight and sound leaves one catching his or her breath because of the heavy fall of water to the ground. Anybody who visited this place said that it is a perfect place for trekking and mountain climbing.
Villagers in sitio Angko provide a compelling testimony of a people that refuse to give up despite the odds. Labi admitted that in the past, there were times they lose hope and just accept the harsh reality; that nothing can be done to improve their situation. But like their ancestors who took care of this place for their future, they refused to give up and converted crisis as opportunities. They turned their small dreams to a reality. “Na-feel na namo ang presence sa gobyerno,” he said.
We went home refreshed and inspired by an empowered people who refuse to give up. (Beth Ramos-Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Village teacher

MAITUM, Sarangani (October 21, 2010) - Jabela Reyes, daycare teacher, patiently teaches sitio Angko children how to read. She started as a volunteer. Later, Rosalito Labi, a barangay kagawad, shared his honorarium with her. Now, it is the local government that pays her honorarium. (Beth Ramos-Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Day care pupils

MAITUM, Sarangani (October 21, 2010) - More or less 40 children go to the makeshift daycare center of sitio Angko in barangay Bati-an daily. Bati-an (population: 949) is the province’s poorest village with 99.8% of its households having income below the poverty threshold and below the food threshold. 62.1% of its households have no access to potable water. In basic education, 94.3% of Bati-an’s children 13-16 years old are not attending high school; 44.3 of children 6-12 years old are not attending elementary school; and 48.2% aged 6-16 years old are not attending school. (Beth Ramos-Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Best-dressed carabao contest

MAITUM, Sarangani (May 7, 2009) – This carabao named Boi S’adaf (Princess of the West) is the entry of barangay Upo’s Upo Valley Multi-purpose Cooperative in the best-dressed carabao contest during the second day of the town’s 50th Foundation Anniversary and 10th Binuyugan Festival Wednesday, May 6. (Cocoy Sexcion/SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE)
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Check for emergency resettlement

MAITUM, Sarangani (March 5, 2009) – A Tboli mother in Kipalkuda (now barangay New La Union) receives a P10,000 check Thursday, March 5, from Mayor Elsie Perrett assisted by barangay captain Digs Movilla as Vice Governor Steve Chiongbian Solon looks on. The fund comes from the provincial government for calamity-stricken households in the barangay. Kipalkuda is a native term which means “horse crossing the river” since the village has many small rivers and horses as their means of transportation. (SARANGANI INFORMATION OFFICE/Cocoy Sexcion)
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Comfort room donation

MAITUM, Sarangani (February 5, 2009) – American missionary Dan Evans (right) turns over keys of the donated comfort room (CR) to head teacher Aura Mirayo of Kipalkuda Elementary School. The new CR will provide greater sanitation and hygiene for the school property, students, and teachers. The school with 350 students in grades 1-6 is located in barangay New La Union. The construction project was initiated and funded by the Datu Wali Mission of Maitum, with planning assistance by the Maitum municipal engineering department, and hands-on supervision by engineer Gilbert Rocapor. Datu Wali Mission directors, Dan and Aurea Evans, who sponsor other programs to assist the children of Kipalkuda school, raised funds among their foundation supporters in the U.S. for the project. The CR follows a standard Unicef design, with all concrete walls and floor, and a dedicated septic tank. The original design was expanded to include two stalls in the female side of the CR, and a stall and urinal in the male section. Fresh water for flushing is supplied by a spring, and an outdoor faucet was incorporated for hand washing. (Photo courtesy of Datu Wali
Mission/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
L'muog Festival

MAITUM, Sarangani (January 6, 2009) – Tboli children dance and socialize with one another at the L'muog Festival celebrated every year for three years now by the Tbolis in Maitum at the Kalaong River estuary. In the olden days, Tbolis stay in the riverbank for two to three days not only to gather food but also to meditate, pray, and give thanks for the blessings they receive. (Photo by Beth Ramos Palma Gil/MAITUM INFORMATION OFFICE)
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