Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Ebun Ibon Candaba, Pampanga





Ebun means EGG in the Kapampangan tounge while Ibon means BIRD in the Tagalog tongue. There was Joke between the borders Pampanga which are Pampango speaking people and Bulacan which are Tagalog speaking people. The joke is Q: What is the fastest way to hatched an egg? the answer is A: Bring an egg from Pampanga then cross the bridge going to Bulacan :P.




The Ebun Ibon festival is a celebration about the coming of various migratory birds to Candaba Swamp. Long ago people used to capture and eat the migratory birds but through awareness they are now conserve and turn to a tourist spot. ^^,

Journal #1 : Slum Poverty

I had slept maybe for about 1 hour, I think that is enough for the activity to today. I dream crazy, somehow I miss my house in Pampanga. I miss my kid brother most especially. It has been a while since I go home. Maybe this is the prize of getting old, I mean maturing, you seems to move out from the nurture of the family you were reared to.

Last time I chatted with my friend. He lives in China. Same as me we are both office workers. Same as me we lived in the countryside. I mentioned to him I became a volunteer for a Non Profit Organization here in the Philippines. We go to the poor place in Manila. My friend asked me how can you help them. I came out with a hurried reply which to give them advise.

Visiting them and giving them advise are enough he asked again. It made me think, so what I am really contributing to the people.

Yesterday a good friend of mine arrived in the Philippines. He will introduced his hobby to the people living in the slums. His hobby will become his business in the future.  His idea is great because he is correct. Labor cost in Philippines is cheap. I find the idea great not because of the cheap labor cost but to what it might contribute to the people of the slums. Those people people who labored on the mountainous garbage for money which can give them additional income.

I have been to those slums for a couple of times. In truth I am not overwhelm at all by the site of the village. I had lived in that kind of village before well minus the garbage heap and the food they sometimes ate which is called Pagpag. Pagpag are sold in that slum. Pagpag are variety of leaf over foods. I found it weird that they are sold not cheap. I am comparing the cost to what I eat in my stay in manila. I can eat a whole fresh cooked meal with those prices. P15 I can buy a Pancit, P25 Pesos I can buy Ulam P35 I can eat rice with Ulam.

People will stay on the ground unless they decided to stand on their own. Well given the right opportunity may boost them.  I hope my friend enthusiasm will bear fruits.  He keep talking about Peter the disciple of Jesus. He heard the rooster crowed three times then he realized he betrayed the Lord, yet right at that moment he realized that the Lord was telling the truth. What happen to Peter I will check again the Bible. One thing I am sure upon Peter he became the rock and he is sometimes depict as the keeper of the Gates of Heaven.



Philippine Taxi Driver Dorobo (Thieves)?

After landing in the the Philippine Airports, the second thing passengers from the airplane might end up fetching a taxi. Unlike some other countries like Singapore, Hongkong, Macau, and Japan and maybe some other counties were you can ride  buses and trains going in  and out of the airport terminals, in the Philippines sad to say, your mode of transportation  is limited to riding taxis.

You can also ride a bus that is if you know the way or a Jeepney in some other Philippine Airports, this time I am referring to NAIA's 3 Terminals. Going out from the Arrival gates the first thing you will see are the Yellow Taxis. Some people tried to avoid the Yellow Taxis because their flag down rate is very big about 70 pesos. So what other people do, just like me I go at the Departure Gate Entrance area to look for ordinary Taxi. Simple reason  people ride going taxi going to the airport and ordinary taxis are more cheaper, flag down is 30 pesos now 40 pesos. So you are looking for a cheap way to go to your destinations.

You were able to call a taxi that you can ride on, then suddenly the taxi driver might do the following.

1. Ask for additional tip,, usually 50 pesos + the taxi's meter rate.

2. Tries to bargain with you, especially foreigners and pinoys who comes out of the international airports. No meter but you have to pay some certain fixed amount.

3. Refuse you because of, 

A. Your place is famous for traffic like Rosario, Pasig
B. Your place is famous for danger like Tondo.
C. It is simply out of the way and they suppose to be going home already.

What a shock it may be, being ripped off by Philippine Local Taxi drivers.
But it can't be helped you need to go to your destination.
So the Taxi Drivers in the Philippines got the very bad image, people do not do service the way it should be instead they are always in for the Money. This impression is also passed to the rest of the Philippines.

Maybe some of you who reads this journal of mine agrees with me, that Philippine Taxi Driver's are indeed like thieves.

Not all Taxi Drivers are like that though, there are some who simply let you in, and then ask you where to go and they start their meter and move on to bring you safe to your house or hotel. Sad to say these good guys are being overshadowed by the greedy types.

In every thing there is always a two sides of the coin. I got curios, I ended up talking to some taxi drivers. I got all the same answer, why there are bad  greedy taxi drivers.

There are two types of taxi Drivers in the Philippines, one that drives a taxi for an alternating 24 hours and one who drives a taxi every day for 12 hours. They have things in common, the taxi is not theirs and they have to pay for the boundary, like a rental fee for using the taxi.

I heard that they have to remit to the taxi owners 800 ~ 1200 peso every time they go out drive the taxi plus they have to return the park the taxi in the compound of the owner full tank if they got it full tank.  Just compute for 24 hours driving if the taxi driver will remit 1200 peso, how many passengers he have to let in?

How to make an equation?

For flag down of  just 30 peso , it will take 40 people to ride the taxi, in order to make 1200 peso within 24 hours.  That 1200 peso is the amount to remit the taxi operator.

There are times when there are lots of passengers to ride on a taxi, but there are also times the taxi driver will wait or drive around and round in search of a passenger. There are times when the taxi driver get unlucky and find a passenger who turns out to be a hold upper.
As you see no matter the reason,  with or without any passenger, in the end the poor taxi driver will have to remit the 1200 peso to the taxi operator, or else some operator takes the poor taxi drivers' license.

I asked one taxi driver how much he can earn in a day, in average,,, he said 400 peso. It can get higher or lower, the lowest is zero if he got held up, but there are times for 24 hour driving minus the gasoline and the remittance for the operator the poor taxi driver can only take home a meager 150 peso.

To those who had experience a taxi driver who turned you down because

1. The route of it is out of the way & he needs to park it or bring it back to the operator's compound, do not be angry because if they bring the taxi late the poor taxi drivers are also fine with a fee.

2. Your place is known for hold uppers. The reason you already know, they  are just being cautious.  If you happen to be on those places, please lock all your doors.

So next time you ride a taxi in Philippines, please try to talk to them. Now the flag rate is 40 peso, I wonder who made that rule? I think it is better that there be a law, like the one I saw in a Singaporean Movie about a taxi driver. The rule is simple, if your locations is on the business district, automatically there will be an additional amount to the meter if you ask to be drop there. This is ideal but then again, some operators tends to be greedy, they might take advantage of this and just increase their boundaries ( rental fee).

FYI the taxi driver's do not have SSS, 13th month and some other benefits :(.

Don't you think that the taxi driver's in the Philippines are being oppressed too?





























The 40 Year Gap

Some Japanese says that when they go here in the Philippines it is like Japan long ago. The stage when it was developing.

I found this article again from the old Reader's Digest.  This is a commercial page for a certain oil company.
The page describe Japan in the Golden 60's.

Retyping what was written.

Here it goes.

Japan in the golden sixties.

Take four small mountainous islands, barely 1/6th of the land growing food, with poor coal, little iron, and few resources except  for its 95 million people. How very hard to live in Nippon you might think.

1. Yet in the last ten years, the Japanese have doubled their real income, and banked a surprising amount of personal savings.

A nation of technicians

2. The Japanese themselves, have no easy explanation for their prosperity. Labour is no longer cheap. Steel workers, for example, the average about US $112 a month.

3. The answer is probably technical expertise. For the past 10 years Japan's 239 universities have poured out a flood of technicians. Today Japan claims more engineers than any other country, except the USA and Russia.

Ten years of frenzied inventiveness

4. Short of land, the Japanese, farmed the sea
intensively, became the world's greatest exporters of seafood.

5. Short of resources, the Japanese complemented their traditional heavy industries with light manufacture. The electric appliance industry multiplied itself by 22 in 10 years, now exports radios, washing machines, and miniature colour television sets even to the USA.

Energy: the big switch to oil

6. Growing 17% a year, industry soon outstripped energy resources of the country.

7. So Japan turned to oil. As an oil-consuming nation, she jumped from 7th place in the 1953 to 3rd in 1963 ( in this effort all companies invested heavily).

A new way of life

8. Today the Japanese have no more leisure than they ever had, but they certainly have more means. They crowd ski-slopes and pack hot-springs resorts. And all year round,  thousands of executives join in the new golf craze.

New frontiers

9. Japan wants to double her living standards again by 1970. Will she do it? For more than any other nation she lives on the knife-edge of the balance of trade.

10. The people believe she will. They know the difficulties. And they have the cheerful persistence that surmounts mountains. Already Tokyo is preparing feverishly for the 1964 Olympic Games.

Today Japan achieved that goal she is now  one of the riches nation.
Comparing it with the Philippines. We have all the resources both natural and man power. The Philippines is also one of the people who can speak  English. In that we are in advantage so it is so  unbelievable  that we are still in the list of the poorest countries.

The flaw maybe is in the leadership that lead the Philippines through years.
One of the father of a friend of mine once went to Singapore.
He overheard the word Philippines one day in a  meeting held in Singapore. So out of curiosity
He asked what it was all about, he found out that the leader is praising the Philippines for having a big natural resources, comparing it with the menial resources of Singapore, but the Philippines is mismanaged and for  the Philippines to improve leadership style should be change.

Philippine politicians are strange. Sometimes I think they mismanaged the public funds. Passing along the C5 road, I saw some projects which are not well think of. For example, They created a  beautiful garden under the bridge. So what is wrong with the garden.
If you are going to observe they planted some plants even to the places where the sun can't reached, so in the end those plants ended dying. I also have observed a certain side walk. Long ago tress were planted there, they were cut to improve the sidewalk, cemented it so it became a beautiful  not rugged path then all of a sudden someone drilled the side walk they flattened then planted trees again with spacing so little, not even  thinking of the future  when they grow into their full size then again I am betting when the tree grows they will be cut again to improve the side walk. 

Sorry if I went out of the topic.




Behind Japanese Lines by Ray C. Hunt

I read this book. I typed some of the highlights I wanted to remember. Although this book is about WW2, my point is not about the war but  my wishes to like to share the good and bad points of us Filipinos and the Philippines from the observation of a foreigner,  which I think still exist up to the present. -- ninoChapter 1 The War Begins

Page 3

The bulk of the Philippine army was still virtually untrained, badly armed, and almost impossible to command since the men spoke something like seventy different dialects.

Page 5

Once ashore, I found nothing that seemed to have anything to do with imminent war. Downtown Manila seems a typical modern big city. Sunsets over Manila Bay and the Zambales Mountains on Bataan Peninsula were the most gaudily brilliant spectacles I had ever seen, like the canvases of an impressionistic painter gone berserk.

A second lieutenant with a heavy red beard startled me momentarily, but I was told that American soldiers thereabouts often grew such beards to impress Filipinos, who have little facial hair.

The jai alai building seemed particularly modern since it had air conditioning and gambling apparatus similar to parimutuel machines at U.S. racetracks. Equally memorable, if less happily so, was the pungent smell of native villages (barrios) without the facilities to dispose sewage.

Most striking of all were the women.

Now small, dainty Spanish-Filipina girls with incomparable complexions seemed inexpressibly beautiful.

Even the straggly-haired lavenderas ( washerwomen), sitting on their haunches and pounding their dirty clothes with large wooden paddles, would have looked at least moderately enticing if only their lips and teeth had not been stained a ghastly, almost neon, red from chewing betel nut.


Page 8

In an effort to save civilian  lives and prevent the needless destruction of Manila. General MacArthur declare the metropolis an open city. In a response typical of their conduct throughout the war, the Japanese ignored the gesture and  bombed the city freely. Soon its streets were filled with rubble of every sort, and the air hung heavy with the stench of countless human and animal corpses.

Chapter 2 The Struggle for Bataan

Page 14

Our immediate problem was not the enemy at all but the sheer density of the jungle. Gigantic trees towered up to two hundred feet in the air, grew close together, and were crested with luxuriant intertwining branches. Far below, dense masses of vines and bushes took up most of the space between the trees. The growth was so thick that on the ground it was never really daylight, and there were about six hours of the day that could even be called twilight. By the end of the afternoon one could avoid getting lost only by  hanging onto the belt of the man in front of him.

Pages 16-17

I soon learned that Japanese infantry men were not merely savage and treacherous but also remarkably brave, tough, tenacious, and disciplined. Physically, maybe 80 percent of them could have come from a mold. They were about 5'2" and weighed about 125 pounds. Most were in their early twenties and had only elementary education. Perhaps a third came from farms. Most had been in uniform a couple of years, and all had passed through the world's harshest military  training regime. Because of the brutality of their training and the thoroughness with which they had been indoctrinated to make any sacrifice for their emperor and their country, they were capable of incredible feats of endurance, not to speak of conduct that seemed insane to Occidentals. In desperate circumstances the Japanese would kill their wounded, even burn wounded men to death in buildings, to prevent the disabled from slowing the pace of military operations.

This grim approach to war did possess a certain macabre "efficiency," but it was also counterproductive. All the support services in the Japanese army, medical included, mere meager because Japanese troops were supposed to fight rather than engage in peripheral activities or go on sick call. This meant that many Nipponese soldiers threw away their lives in displays of brainless bravado, while many other sickened and died because they seldom received the medical treatment they needed and deserved. In our army, by contrast, for every man who was actually in combat there were as many as twelve others in training, maintenance, liaison, planning, special services or above all generating mountains of paper .


Page 17


Japanese infantrymen were armed with .25-caliber Arisaka bolt-action rifles and weighed about ten pounds with bayonets attached. Both commissioned officers and noncoms carried pistols modeled on the German   Luger, and commissioned officers sported fancy samurai swords, which some of them delighted to use for beheading. It is possible that this particular penchant indicated a desire to humiliate the enemy since ordinary Japanese soldiers has a superstitious fear of having their own heads and bodied buried in separate places.

Page 19

The trees were so close together, and the brush and the vines so thick, that a tank wallowed as helplessly as a rhinoceros in quicksand.

Another of their unsettling tricks was to send snipers up tress where they tied themselves fast and covered themselves with camouflage. Then, as we advanced against their comrades on the ground and the sound of ground gunfire would hide their own, they would shoot us in the back. This happened to often that we took to spraying trees with bullets indiscriminately during each advance. Even when a sniper was hit, as happened occasionally, he would seldom move or cry out. We would become aware of his presence only if we happened to encounter drops of blood spattering the thick undergrowth.

In these grim surroundings one quickly learned iron self control or he did not live.

Page 25


Another such story was related to me by an old-timer. God, he said, had seen fti to create two kinds of mosquitoes for the Philippines: large daytime mosquitoes that caused dengue fever, and small nighttime mosquitoes that carried malaria. Unhappily he wasn't joking: I soon contracted both maladies.

Page 28


We tried eating carabao, the huge water buffalo Filipinos use as draft animals, though carabao meat is better suited for making saddles than for steak.

An animal I did try hard to kill was the iguana, a large lizard with a forked tongue and a hide like a crocodile. Though the iguana are ugly, repulsive creatures, their meat is sweet and tasty, much like the white meat of the chicken.   


Page 29


Ed Dyess called in several of us sergeants, explained the situation to us, and asked us how the men would respond to such an agreement. We replied that they would accept it. Dyess later wrote in his book that he had never been more proud to be an American. No doubt that was the way it seemed to him; and I will say for us that we did understand the necessity of the action, but inwardly we were resentful. The pilots were officers and we were enlisted men. They had decent quarters while we slept in the outdoors on the ground amid mosquitoes so thick that by dawn our eyes were often swollen shut from their bites.Now, when we were all half starved, the officers were to get extra food as well.


Chapter 3 The Bataan Death March


Pages 33 - 34


The travail of some 75,000 - 80, 000 beaten, bewildered, sick, and hungry Americans and Filipinos who were bullied, badgered, taunted, stabbed, starved, and shot by their Japanese captors on a hellish march some eighty miles in stifling tropical heat has long since passed into history as one of the most spectacular and revolting atrocities of World War II.  It was also one of the most important events of the Pacific war, for the shared sufferings of Americans and Filipinos strengthened the bond between the two peoples and heightened the animosity of both toward their brutal conquerors.

Nobody among either captors or captives attempted to keep records. Thousands of Filipinos and much smaller number of Americans managed to escape during the march, but nobody knows how many of them died alone in the mountains and jungle, or how many of the Filipinos made it hoe and quietly became civilians again. Thousands of both people died in O'Donnell and Cabanatuan prison camps after the war was over, but it is impossible to distinguish between those who expired from the belated effects of the Death March and those who perished from the cruel regimen in the camps themselves.

Page 37

Another time I was removed from the road and forced to help a Japanese company prepare a bivouac. Here one of the guards spoke to me in English. I asked him where he had learned the language. He said he had been trained in Yokohama to be a teacher in English. I then asked him which side he thought would win the war. He replied thoughtfully, without the customary Japanese menace or boasting, that he believed Japan would. He added that the training he had undergone in Japan was tougher than anything he had experienced so far in combat, so rough in fact that some of his fellow trainees has committed suicide rather than endure it. He said he hated the British, but about Americans he was silent. From this manner I guessed that he was opposed to the war and not sanguine about its ultimate outcome.
 

Page 39

All of us would have died had not the general disorganization that prevailed for three or four days enabled us to scrounge a little food in various ways. When the guards were few and otherwise occupied, we would sometimes dig up a few camotes ( Philippine sweet potatoes) in fields. Now and then a friendly Filipino would furtively hand or toss us something from along the roadside. 

It is possible that an individual Japanese guard might have handed me a rice ball on an occasion or two, though I don't remember it.

Page 41

All along the road I had seen brave and compassionate Filipinos of both sexes and all ages risk their lives to slip food to prisoners. Surely some Filipinos would help me if only  I could get away.

Page 43


I wanted to leave our adobe, but my companions did not. At length I arose and began to call out. Across the stream some Filipino farmers heard me, and one started toward us. He walked up onto a log that lay across the ditch, with his eyes turned downward. I asked him if there were Japanese around. Fortunately, he understood some English. He told me to stay down, and slipped into the underbrush. A few minutes later he returned and motioned for us to follow him.

Chapter 4 In and Out of the Fassoth Camps

Pages 44-45

As always throughout the war the Filipinos here treated us warmly and generously, at dire risk to themselves. Various of them brought us rice, water, and crude sugar several times a day. One boy begged me to let him hide me amid fishponds in Manila Bay, promising that he would make me well again and would keep me safe until the Americans returned in perhaps three months. Little did he or I realize that it would be three years.

Page 48


The new camp consisted of one large building about fifty by a hundred feet  and several smaller ones, all made of entirely of bamboo and without nails. Filipinos are geniuses with bamboo. They make everything out of it: cooking utensils, drinking cups, woven baskets, animal snares, fish traps, scabbards for bolo knives, bridges - anything from tweezers to houses.

Nobody has seen rain until he has seen it in the Philippines. Many downpours would have been called cloudburst in the United States, yet they went on for hours, day after day.

Page 49


One incident during this era of semi-starvation. I will never forget. Vicente managed to get us a considerable quantity of navy beans, the sort universally reviled in World War I but now regarded as manna from heaven by those of us who had eaten little but rice for months. Mrs. Cataina Dimacal Fassoth, William's Filipina wife, who gave unselfishly of her time cooking and trying to care for us, prepared the feast. We lined up with our bamboo tableware in ardent anticipation. With my first bite I was astounded. Judging from the looks on the faces of the others, so were they. Filipinos like sugar ans prepare many of their foods with it. Mrs. Fassoth, knowing nothing about navy beans, had thrown a lot of sugar into the water when she boiled them. But we ate them.
    

Page 53


Filipinos had a lot of intriguing medical beliefs and practices. Their effects varied from bizarre to lethal. Henry Clay Conner, who like me owed his life to friendly Filipinos, relates that early in 1942 a Negrito tribesman once brewed an herb called dita and gave it to him for his malaria. In two days the chills and fever abated and Conner felt vastly better. When he tried to secure more dita on his own, however, he was warned by an educated Filipino, the brother of a doctor, that while dita did not harm Negritos, it often caused people less tough to end up deaf, dumb, blind, or dead.

Pages 53-54

In my case, one day a Filipino around the camp commiserated with me and told me that if I wished to recover I should drink the blood of a black dog. The thought was sickening, especially since blood was to be secured by cutting the dog's throat, but numerous Filipinos regarded it as a sure-fire universal remedy. I was so desperate to recover that I had become willing to try anything, so I agreed. When some of the repulsive stuff was actually brought to me in a coconut shell, I could down only one swallow. Nothing beneficial happened. Maybe my faith wasn't strong enough.

Page 55

Six other Americans indoors were caught in bed. Like me they survived by a fluke. The Japanese, finding them unarmed, spared their lives. Three Filipino and a baby were not so lucky. The invaders butchered the men with bayonets. When the baby began to cry, one of them seized it by the feet and struck off its head with one slash of a sword. Then the visitors  set fire to the camp and burned it to the ground.
   

Page 57

Mac walking and I staggering, until we came to an inviting mountain stream full of suso. A suso is something like a freshwater oyster, a creature that lives in a shell stuck to a rock. We pried some off  rocks in the stream, built a fire, put some water in a bamboo joint, and boiled them. When cooked, suso can be popped out of their shells with a sharp rap of the heel of one hand against the other, or by banging them against a rock. We ate our relish, but inadvisedly topped off our dinner with some green papayas, which promptly produced diarrhea.

Page 58

Mackenzie and I were awakened at dawn by the crowing of a rooster. This meant that there had to be some people around, so we headed in the general direction of the sound. Soon we came to a house occupied by an old Filipino man and a young girl. Once more, as was to be the case so many more times during the war, I was the beneficiary of the friendliness and generosity of ordinary Filipinos. Though these two had never seen us in their lives and could communicate with us only in sign language, they fed us rice and venison and then, for reasons unknown to us, probably far of the Japanese, quietly packed up and left. Long afterward I cannot help but wonder if we Americans would have taken comparable risks and shown equivalent kindness to Filipinos.

Page 59

After a time I came to a village inhabited by Baluga pygmies, a mountain people dressed chiefly in G-strings but whose men were armed with American rifles.

Though the Balugas were frightened momentarily at this apparition appearing suddenly in their midst, they soon recovered and fed me some camotes and green papaya soup. By now an ulcer had indeed developed in the wound on my foot, and had eaten a deep hole in it. The Balugas treated my malady by grinding a red rock into powder, pouring this into the wound, and then covering it with  white paste produced by chewing some leaf. Then they took me to a trail that lead downward into the lowlands and  left me.

That evening I came to a house nestled against a hillside where foothills disappeared into lowlands. Here I was greeted hospitably by two Filipino couples and offered a choice of food or cigarettes. Incredible though it must seem to a reader, my addiction to tobacco then was so great that I opted for cigarettes and smoked three or four of them.  Later my host fed me anyway and let me take a bath, after which I felt refreshed and restored, save only for my throbbing foot.

Pages 59 - 60

By now it was in bad shape. The ulcer had eaten a hole an inch across right down to the bone. Little beads of decaying flesh honeycombed its sides and stank atrociously. In fact , as soon as I sat in the house the family dog picked up the smell and kept coming towards the foot, sniffing inquisitively. I kept driving him away. At length one of the Filipino women, who spoke English, noticed what was taking place and urge me to let the dog lick the wound clean. The mere thought disgusted me, but there were nothing to lose by trying. The dog eagerly worked its tongue into the festering cavity and began to lick away the rotting flesh. The pain was excruciating, so bad that I had to stand and hold my foot down to endure it; but when the dog had finished its loathsome task the foot felt better.  I stayed there for week. The dog continued its treatments every day, and my foot began to heal. How easily civilization cause us to forget simple things, that from time immemorial animals have healed themselves by licking their wounds.
      
Chapter 5 Daily Life with Filipinos

  
Page 61

Receiving unorthodox medical treatment from a Philippine dog began a process that came close to making me a Filipino.

I was inherited by Mr. and Mrs. Louis Franco, who lived in the village of Tibuc-Tibuc near Gutad at the extreme western edge of Pampanga province.

The Francos did not know a word of English, but they treated me splendidly all the same.

Page 62

Sun, swimming, rest, and ample food gradually healed my foot and restored my health.  In the process I turned brown as the Filipinos themselves. Save for my beard , which I could shave, and my Occidental nose, about which I could do nothing, a casual observer could hardly have distinguished me from a Filipino.

The Francos brought me what books they could. Most of them were elementary school text,  but since they were all I had  I read and reread them many times. From them I learned much about history, government, religion, and customs of the Philippines. With some amazement I discovered that more than seven thousand islands comprise the Philippines, that atleast eighty-seven dialects are spoken by their inhabitants, that Spanish was still the official language of the Islands, that Americans had made English compulsory for school children, and that Tagalog, a smooth, flowing tongue that is pleasurable both to speak and to hear, would probably replace both Western languages eventually.

Page 63

I also began in earnest to learn Pampangano, the dialect of the area.

Page 64

The favorite weapon of most Filipino men was the bolo, a long, curved knife carried in a bamboo scabbard and used for a variety of purposes.

Filipinos love to gamble, particularly on cockfights.

Page 66

Because few Filipinos had firearms before the war, carabao, deer, pigs and chickens were plentiful.

Page 67

Filipinos also esteemed large rats that lived in sugarcane fields, though I must add in their defense that they did not eat rats if the sort that infest garbage dumps. I don't know whether I ever ate "sugar rats" or not. Sometimes one was served stews and soups that were best consumed without asking a lot of questions.

Rice was the staple food of the Philippine diet. Because of its starch one could easily gain weight on it.

"Coffee" was made from rice and corn roasted together, then served with much sugar.

Cassava, the root of a common tropical plant, was cut, fried, and made into something like potato chips.

Small fish called bagong were often mashed and left to ferment, a process that turned them into a sharp-flavored, smelly seasoning.

Cattle intestines were carefully cleaned and much prized.

One's craving for sweets was satisfied most easily by chewing sugar cane, though the Filipinos did make a crude brown sugar by pouring boiled cane juice into coconut shells to harden.

Sometimes they make candy by boiling sugar and freshly gated coconut together.

Pages 67- 68

Most Filipino food was either boiled or roasted, and it run heavily on soup

Pages 68

Silverware was unheard of. Everything but soup was put on banana leaves spread on the floor and eaten with the fingers.

There were times, though when I drew the line. I never became reconciled to the delicacy called balot, a fertilized egg that had been buried in manure of some time, and I never developed a taste for the Philippine jerky after watching clouds of flies blow it while it was being dried in the sun.

But the worst was dog. The first time I ate it, I did not know what it was. When I was told, I promptly vomited my entire dinner. It was not that the flavor was repellent; it was just that I had always liked dogs and the thought of having eaten one gagged me.

The usual procedure was to tie the poor beast to a tree, starve it for several days, then stuff it with all it can eat and batter it to death with a club.


Pages 74-75


A religious service was held in the place almost as soon as we arrived. The sermon was given in Pampangano and then, with unfailing Philippine courtesy, repeated in English for my benefit.

Page 75


Now, near Porac, we met an old man. I told Jose Balekow, the Filipino who would soon become my bodyguard to ask if there were any Japanese in the vicinity. The two carried a long, animated conversation during which Jose was barefooted, shifted repeatedly from one foot to the other on the hot noonday sand. Eventually I lost patience and asked Jose what the old man had said. "Nothing," he replied. The truth of the matter was that there are so many dialects in the Philippines that understanding can easily vanish within twenty miles. Jose had no idea what the old man had said, but was ashamed to admit it.

Page 76


In the tropics people must pace themselves when working to avoid exhaustion. Filipinos did this in a delightful fashion, by having a guitar player set a tempo.

After the rainy season the rice fields dried, the grain ripened, and the farmers harvested it with sharp hand sickles.

Evenings women   put rice grains into hallowed logs and pounded them methodically until the husks came off. The sound is as rhythmic as that of railroad men alternating hammer blows when driving spikes.

The rice was laid on broad, hand-woven, nearly flat, circular discs and tossed into the air. The wind blew away the husks, and the rice grains, being heavier fell back onto the discs.

Eventually the rice was packed into sacks on large bamboo baskets. The whole procedure was accompanied by much guitar playing and light-hearted talk.  Thus the Filipinos make rice harvesting one of the lesser fine arts. Alas! they were never able to make it an exact science. No matter how much hand picking went on along the way, harvested  rice always contained a few tiny rocks.

One soon learned to eat rice cautiously; the alternative was jangled nerves and chipped teeth.

Page 78

The faithful Filipino sometimes went to incredible lengths to protect me. It would be hard to imagine a more heartening demonstration of loyalty that that displayed by Mr. Dolfin L. Dizon, the village leader of Matatalaib, a suburb of San Jose, east of Tarlac City, in Tarlac Province.
Mr. Dizon assembled all the people of his barrio, finger printed in their own blood, ordered them to swear never to reveal my presence among them. He told them they were to die , if necessary, rather than provide any information about me to the Japanese.

Jose soon grew restless for other reason aswell, the main one being that he longed to go back north to his family and fellow Igorot tribesmen.

Chapter 6 Early Guerrillas of Luzon

Page 111


The enemy might have been forgettable, but the booze was not. There were many different liquids one could drink in the Philippines. They ranged from puzzling to lethal.  In some places trucks and cars an on coconut alcohol. This was drinkable if it passed through copper tuning; but there were instances of men drinking it after it had run through galvanized pipe, in which cases the thirsty topers went blind.

Pages 111-112

Another common drink was tuba, which was made from palm buds. I drank some of it on occasion and found it not too bad. What our local Filipinos had, though, was two different kinds of wine: basi, made from sugarcane, and miding, concocted from some portion of the nipa palm. The former destroyed one's stomach, the latter one's mind. We drank both and suffered fearsome hangover next morning.

Page 115


In fact, training them at all was difficult since most were civilians who knew nothing of military regularity. Consequently, they relinquished some kinds of training,  hated others, and tended to ignore what they disliked.

Pages 115 - 116


What most of them enjoyed most was competitive drill and repeatedly cleaning their weapons. They especially delighted in contest to see who could most rapidly take apart and then correctly assemble weapons when blindfolded.

Page 117


Blackburn was right about most Filipino guerrillas, though. They got bored easily unless there was some action.

Page 123


it simply work better to pick a Filipino subordinate whom you trusted, tell him general what you wanted done, and then leave him alone.

Page 124

While a few Japanese knew occasional Filipino dialect, most of them knew none, whereas Minang had an excellent command of English and knew several Filipino dialects as well. Soon her guards were asking her why her audiences seemed to laugh at unexpected times during her speeches, which were given in Panpangano. It never seemed to occur to them that she would dare to sabotage them verbally. On the contrary, some of her captors were quite taken with her. One high ranking Japanese officer even offered to take her with him when his countrymen conquered Australia.

Chapter 7 Hukbalahaps and Constabulary


Page 127

Our Operations in Central Luzon were complicated immensely by the presence of a rival and bitterly hostile guerrilla organization, the Hukbalahap.

Generations before the war Spanish entrepreneurs had gained control of much of the good farmland in the Philippines and turned it into great estates for the commercial production of various commodities, notably sugar.

Gradually, and particularly in the twentieth century, many Filipinos had also become large landowners.

Actual work on the estates was done by sharecroppers and hired laborers.Like similar people at other times and places, they scratched out a bare living for themselves, and slowly fell hopelessly into debt to their increasingly wealthy landlords.

Because of this long-standing condition there was much peasant unrest in the Philippines on the eve of the war.  It was most intense in Central Luzon, particularly in the Pampanga province.

(Notes at the Back)
Most of the debts of peasants were incurred not to improve their lands and to increase their income but to finance weddings, funerals, and fiestas, and to bet on cockfights. Spence, For Every Tear a Victory, p. 230



Chapter 8 Guerrilla Life


Page 141

Meanwhile the villagers who hid us went about their customary activities as their ancestors had dowe for generations.

The women squatted on the banks of streams and beat the dirt out of the family clothing with wooden paddles, in the process often chewing betel nut or indulging in the strange practice of smoking cigarettes with the lighted ends inside their mouths.

Now and then they would take a break and undertake a collective assault on the head lice that are commonplace in the Philippines. They would sit in line, one behind the other like a row of monkeys, and each would pick the lice and nits from the head of the woman in front of her. I never did figure out how the last one inline was accommodated. It seems to me that a circle would have been a more logical configuration.

During the rainy season sudden fierce downpours were common, but nobody seemed to mind, or even notice it much.

The men, usually barefooted, dressed in shorts and, armed with bolos in wooden scabbards attached to their belts, went about their business as usual.Women would pack whatever they had to sell and walk off to market quite as readily during a cloudburst as on a sunny day.

Funerals are frequent, rain or shine, and were always joyous occasions; never sad. Wine and
sweet foods would be shared, as at a party. When the deceased was being taken to his final resting place, his cortege was always preceded by a brass band if anyone could find or assemble one.

Page 155
With the heartening bravery I witnessed so many times in the Philippines, the villagers, even with our common enemy in their midst, tried to deliver food to us, in the dark, in our new location.

Page 157


We Americans are notoriously poor judges of the psychology of  other people and maladroit in our dealings with them. In the 1940s the Japanese were incomparably worse. Had they treated the Filipinos with kindness and generosity from the first day of the war, many of the latter would have accepted their fate, and many who remained loyal to America initially would have gradually gone over to the conquerors as months of of Japanese occupation stretched into years.

Japanese field commanders usually acted harshly in an effort to scare civilians into cooperation.

Japanese military administration, by contrast ,gradually began to urge leniency in an effort to win the sympathy of civilians.

The latter might have worked had it been instituted in December 1941, but by 1943 there had been far too many crimes committed by Japanese against Filipinos for such policy to have a chance of success.

Page 158

It is impossible to conceive a more effective tool against Filipinos, whose primary allegiance has always been to their families rather than the nation or state.

Page 160

Most Filipinos are mild, peaceful people, but if aroused or enraged they can become vindictive and capable of frightful cruelties.

Chapter 9 The Flight of the Filipinos


Page 168

The Filipinos were simply caught between Americans and Japan from 1941 to 1945.

The whole position of the Filipinos in the modern world has long been ambiguous.

By geography and skin color they belong to the Orient: by religion and by four centuries of history and social experience, they belong to the Western world.

The latter does not indicate merely a desire to appear "white," as some Caucasians have assumed.

The Philippines never had a well-developed indigenous civilization like those of China, India and Japan.

Thus, when the islands were conquered by Spain in the sixteenth century the victors did not have to displace a deeply rooted alien culture; they had only to impose their own.

Pages 168 -169


Spanish civilization and religion colored the Philippines heavily for more than three centuries, and was then succeeded by American civilization for forty years preceding World War II.

In 1940 Filipinos were brown-skinned Asians, but their recent ancestors had spoken Spanish, the educated among them now spoke English rather than Tagalog, and their government was modeled on that of  America.

They were not typical Orients but half-westernized east Asians who occupied a major outpost of the half-Christian, half-secular Occident.

Page 169

Another factor that contributed to the Philippine identity problem was the special character of American imperialism.

The Filipinos were the only Asian colonial people who refused to capitulate to the Japanese without a fight; the only ones who remained loyal  to and friendly with their former rulers; the only ones who called eventful Allied victory " Liberation? rather then "reoccupation."

Page 171

The Japanese had no particular animosity toward Filipinos when the war began. They had attacked the Philippines because American bases were there.

But they always underestimated the desire of the Filipinos for freedom, and they were incredibly inept psychologists.

When they stressed the common oriental heritage of Japanese an Filipinos and went out of their way to humiliate white people, this might have cut some ice with Filipinos who remembered " white only" golf clubs, "Christian" schools from which Filipinos were barred, and other subtler forms of American condescension. 

But the same "fellow Orientals" then killed them, tortured them, raped their women, stole their food, slapped their faces in public, and required them to bow to Japanese privates.

Nothing made ordinary Filipinos so pro-American  as the Japanese occupation.



Page 172

An important element in Filipino psychology is than when one accepts unsolicited favors or gifts from another he thereby incurs an obligation.

Because Americans had done so much to promote democracy, public health, and education in the Philippines, Filipinos felt that they were obligated to help the United States resist the Japanese - who had, of course invaded their homeland too.

But then the Filipinos also assumed that their loyalty would be reciprocated; and they could never understand why the United States was lax at its military preparations before 1941, made its major war time effort in Europe rather than in the Pacific, and did not compel the Japanese to pay war reparations to the Philippines afterward.

Page 174

The Filipinos were trapped, first of all, between the Japanese-sponsored Vargas or Laurel government in their homeland and the Quezon-Osmena government-in-exile in the United States, each backed by a foreign army and each demanding their total allegiance.

If they cooperated with the  guerrillas, the Japanese killed them.

If they worked with the Japanese, the guerrillas killed them.

Pages 174 - 175
If the supported the Huks, they incurred the displeasure of all non-communist guerrillas.

If they helped us USAFFE irregulars against the Huks, there lives were at once in danger from the communists.

Page 175

An all-too-typical illustration of this melancholy state of affairs once took place in Tayabas province.

Guerrillas entered a town, assembled all the people in the village church, read off the names of those deemed pro-Japanese, and shot them.

The Japanese soon heard of what had happened, assembled the survivors, and shot all those they considered pro-American.

Page 176


Historically,  the usual response of the Philippine ruling elite to conquest has been to come to terms with the invader in order to retain their own influence and to spare the islands and their peoples.

So it has been with the Spaniards before 1898 and with the Americans afterward.

In 1941 most Filipinos did not regard the Japanese as a friendly people, or trust them, but they did regard them with respect.

The traditional Filipino elite doubtless would have responded to Japanese conquest and occupation as their forefathers had done to Spaniards and Americans if only Japanese propaganda had been less crude and unconvincing, and Japanese conduct less beastly.

 
















  


        







A Day in Pampanga: San Jose Mitla Elementary School




Our company's Community and Extension Service Committee visited the elementary school in Porac, Pampanga in cooperation of ACCE Philippines. We shared our blessings to them. We became Ate and Kuya,,, I even called our president Kuya and even our manager.汗)

Study Tour: ゴミ山



Together with ACCE we visited Smoky Mountain at Tondo, Manila.
Philippines has many beautiful spots ^^, but also some eye sores(T_T)

So what did I saw on Smoky Mountain?

Naked children running and playing around garbage, not knowing the danger they are encountering.
Wood Debris being change to charcoal then sold for money.
The soot brings health hazards to the lungs of the people there.
Lastly, Philippine people even though they suffer poverty they can still managed to smile to life.

I am grateful for these Japanese persons member of ACCE because they bring light of hope to my fellow Filipinos.
This NPO ( non profit organization) or NGO ( non government organization) as they are called.
They were able to provide a pharmacy which sells medicines for low cost.
By home visit the locals, the homeowners may feel important that they are still part of the community because even in their humble state they can still received visitors from local and foreign lands.
Having someone to listen to you even in the lowest state will still give you pride.
I am glad even though they are poor they still have dreams for their children.
I hope Philippine government will really help them by giving them a security to have a home.
Smoky Mountain lands are private, they have electricity yes, but they are connected illegally.
What surprised me was they should not be paying for those illegal connections but, it turns out that houses with illegal connections pays more than the legal ones. In one of the family we visited and local folks living there, we learned that they pay electric bills 400~800 pesos per month. I was surprised because in the apartment we lived in our averaged electric bill per month was only 200~500 pesos, well we have a tv, 5 electric fans, a flat iron, my laptop, cellphone chargers and lights.
They can't have a legal connections because the land is private, it seems that rich people owning the land seems don't want them to established a decent community there, if that happens it will be hard for them to be kick out from their land.