Pastoral Message on the Natural Calamities Happening in the Country

FIRE AND HEAT, LIGHTNINGS AND CLOUDS BLESS THE LORD! (Dan 3:66, 73)

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ:

This is not the first time the scenic Taal volcano erupts. It will most certainly not be the last. And throughout its fiery and violent history, it has always taken a toll on human lives and on human well-being.

But coming in the heels of other natural disasters like the destructive typhoons that hit the country, the devastating floods that left many of our countrymen homeless and prostrate, earthquakes that have wrecked buildings, lives and the basic sense of security without which we cannot live in tranquility, sicknesses and infections never heard before threatening us — our people ask themselves what they might have done to deserve chastisement from God. And not only us, the plants and trees and animals suffer and moan too but unlike us, unable to speak.

Lord Help Us We are Perishing! (Mt 8:25)

It has always been the witness of the Scriptures that God’s mercy overlooks our sins and that he does not deal with us as our failings deserve.“If you, Oh Lord, marked iniquities, Lord, who would endure?” (Ps 130:3)

We miss our steps and fall. A bus that loses traction on a mountain track plunges into a ravine. What is at work is not God’s wrath but the law of gravity– the very same law that keeps our feet, our homes and the objects with which we deal firmly rooted on the ground, the same gravity that makes life easier to live on earth.

Typhoons are not the scourges of a vengeful God.

“While it is true that suffering has a meaning as punishment, when it is connected with a fault, it is not true that all suffering is a consequence of a fault and has the nature of a punishment. The figure of the just man Job is a special proof of this in the Old Testament. Revelation, which is the word of God himself, with complete frankness presents the problem of the suffering of an innocent man: suffering without guilt. (St. John Paul, Salvifici Doloris, 11)

The point is that our world – the very same world that nurtures and nourishes us – is made up of processes: the very processes by which the wonderful miracle of evolution has taken place and continues to take place.

If we are grateful for the earth and its resources, then we must be grateful for the very same processes that bring them about.  Unfortunately, persons who live close to volcanoes, or who build their homes along waterways, or who live along the corridor of typhoons and hurricanes are the victims of destruction and the hapless sufferers, not because God punishes them. It is not because God hates them, but because that is just the nature of this imperfect world.  It is a world where the activities of humankind and the processes of nature do not always coincide with each other.

One who takes to the seas in search of its resources must be prepared to face the risks of wave and wind. The very same sea that yields a trove of sea-life is also the very same sea that can serve as the watery grave of some.  There is nothing about God’s anger or punishment or vengeance in all this. 

This is just how our world is.

All Creation is Groaning in Labor Pains (Rom 8:29)

Earthquakes and typhoons and ash falls are signs that we are still living in an imperfect natural world. They are natural disasters.

Indeed it is not the unpredictable processes of the earth that militate against God’s existence and his goodness.  It is rather the resolve that we will rise from where we fall, that we will extend helping hands to those who can no longer rise. It likewise involves putting our scientific acumen and our human intelligence into understanding volcanoes and earthquakes and typhoons and draughts and floods better so that we can plan our lives relying less on chance and more on human providence. It is all this that allow us to utter the Holy Name of God in the midst of earth’s birth pangs that await the dawning of God’s Eternal Day.

God accompanies us in the earthquakes and volcanic eruptions and floods and storms not as a Great Punisher but as the Great Loving Emmanuel, One to whom we can turn assured that He will never forsake the people who call on His name. These calamities can be opportunities for grace and blessings. We know that in everything God works for good with those who love him. (Rom 8:28).”

The Greatest of These is Love (1Cor 13:13)

Many can go to Taal to view the spectacle.  While there is nothing intrinsically wrong about observing an eruption, to do so without empathy for those who suffer is certainly not Christian. To be a spectator and to make of the misery of our brothers and sisters a mere object of curiosity is certainly to be like the priest and the Levite who passed by, even as the wounded man was bleeding to death by the roadside (cfr. Lk 29:30-37). Certainly he was not the victim of either, but the sin of these “holy men” consisted precisely in passing by without heeding the ethical demand that the situation made on them.

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Cardinal Tagle bids farewell to Manila faithful

LiCAS.news reporter, Philippines | January 28, 2020

Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle bids farewell to the faithful of the Archdiocese of Manila during a Thanksgiving Mass attended by hundreds of people, priests, and bishops on Jan. 27. (Photo by Angie de Silva)

Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle bid farewell to the faithful in the Archdiocese of Manila on Jan. 27, before his expected transfer to Rome in the coming weeks.

He thanked the bishops, priests, religious men and women, and lay people for attending the Thanksgiving Mass that he celebrated at the Manila Cathedral.

In his homily, he asked the faithful to always be thankful to God. “We may not always understand, but in faith we know God is good,” he said.

“God’s design are not our design. Sometimes, God’s design disrupts our plans, but we say I believe God is good,” said the outgoing prelate of Manila.

“We fall, we falter. We are disappointed … but we know God is good and his mercy endures forever,” he added.

Pope Francis has named Cardinal Tagle prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, also known as Propaganda Fide.

The congregation oversees the Church’s work in most of the dioceses in Africa, Asia and Oceania, which is around one-third of the world’s 4,000 dioceses.

Cardinal Tagle is only the second Asian to be the prefect of Propaganda Fide, with the other being Indian Cardinal Ivan Dias who served from 2006 to 2011.

Members of the clergy in the Archdiocese of Manila pose with Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle at the end of a Thanksgiving Mass at the Manila Cathedral on Jan. 27. (Photo by Angie de Silva)

Manila Auxiliary Bishop Broderick Pabillo, meanwhile, assured the outgoing Manila prelate that he is always in Manila.

“In case you feel tired of the work on that part of the world, be assured that you have a home among us here in Manila,” said Bishop Pabillo during the Thanksgiving Mass.

“Every departure, every separation brings pain. But if we look at it on the other side, we in the Archdiocese of Manila have been very much privileged in the eight years you have been with us,” he told Cardinal Tagle.

“We have been privileged that you have been our shepherd,” added Bishop Pabillo. “We appreciate very much your ministry among us,” he said.

Bishop Pabillo later led everyone in praying for the Manila prelate.

“Thank you for his heart conformed to the likeness of the Good Shepherd, your Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,” prayed the bishop.

“Protect him with your loving embrace. Hold him by the hand and keep him close to your heart as he embarks on his new mission,” he added.

The Eucharistic celebration was Cardinal Tagle’s last Mass with members of the Manila clergy.

Cardinal Tagle was ordained a priest in 1982 for the Diocese of Imus where he was made bishop of in 2001 at the age of 44. He was given the cardinal’s hat in late 2012.

Cardinal Tagle is also president of Caritas Internationalis and the Catholic Biblical Federation.

He is the second Filipino to become prefect of a dicastery, following the late Cardinal Jose Tomas Sanchez, who was prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy from 1991 to 1996.

The 62-year-old Cardinal Tagle is popular at home and around the Catholic world and has been mentioned in the past as a potential candidate for the papacy.

Invitation to Deep Journey Into Laudato Sí

January 20, 2020

Dear FRIENDS and PARTNERS,

Greetings of peace and love exuberantly flowing from our Triune God deeply manifested in all

Creation.

We move forward in our mission to the care of our common home by accompanying Filipino communities in responding to Laudato Si’. The Global Catholic Climate Movement-Pilipinas (GCCM- Pilipinas), in partnership with Our Lady of Remedies Parish (Malate Church), continues to offer a bi- monthly schedule of the Deep Journey into Laudato Si’ Symposium. Since May 2019, four symposia had already been conducted which were participated by over two hundred seventy (270) individuals from fifty-seven (57) groups/organizations/institutions.

Inspired by the positive feedback and affirmations, we are encouraged to continue this program and reach out to more people from different sectors. For this reason, we would like to invite your organization/institution/group/parish/community to join the first schedule of Deep Journey into Laudato Si Symposium which will be held in Malate Church, Our Lady of Remedies Parish, M.H. Del Pilar Street, Malate Manila on February 15, 2020, Saturday, 8:00AM-3:30 PM at the Audio Visual Room, 2nd Floor, RJMC Building, Malate Church Compound. Please note that this is a “No Registration Fee’ activity.

The purpose of the Deep Journey into Laudato Si Symposium is to raise awareness on the urgency to respond to Pope Francis’ encyclical letter Laudato Si’, to care for our common home. In paragraph 14, our Pope appeals that:

“Everyone’s talents and involvement are needed to redress the damage caused by human abuse of God’s creation. All of us can cooperate as instruments of God for the care of creation, each according to his or her own culture, experience, involvements and talents.”

Enclosed is the event poster. Likewise, the video ad link is sent to your email. We highly appreciate if this invitation will be announced, shared in your circle and posted on your bulletin boards, website and/or FB accounts.

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Pope Francis’ Prayer Intention for the Month of January 2020

‘In this month of January, we can take up the prayer of Saint Francis: Lord, make us instruments of your peace, that it may give a new light to our whole year’

January 02, 2020
by Fr. Daniel Regent, SJ

In January 2020, Pope Francis invites Catholics to pray “so that Jesus’ disciples, believers and persons of good will may foster together peace and justice in the world.”

Here is a translation of Father Daniel Regent’s editorial on the subject.

Together, Let’s Restore Peace!

“Let us pray so that Jesus’ disciples, believers and persons of good will may foster together peace and justice in the world.”

To celebrate the New Year is not to add another weight to the previous ones; it’s to come to drink at the source of Life and receive in depth a creative energy that changes one’s outlook. Moreover, to pray for justice and peace is not to dream about a better world, while amassing arms to preserve one’s tranquillity and private preserve. War is already lodged there. Justice and peace are in need of being built every day. It is necessary for us to work every day to come out of war, which interferes in us and between us. Attention, this work is not done with any weapon. The word given by the Pope for his intention is “together.” Jesus’ disciples, believers and persons of good will. Each person is called to come out of himself and his own interests and go to encounter the other. This work begins with oneself.

Humanly, this might seem pure folly. It’s the folly of Jesus’ Gospel, in part of Gandhi or of Lanza del Vasto, disciple of Jesus. Therefore, prayer begins by asking for oneself the grace go let oneself be taken by this movement that can lead to the cross.

Can religions, businesses, States engage on such a path? A unilateral disarmament doesn’t honor the invitation to work together. To hold out for balance out of fear is already to consent to defeat. It’s necessary to go further and that passes by men. Saint Francis went to encounter the Sultan at the height of the crusade. Gandhi was a man of State. The Franco-German reconciliation happened thanks to the courage of a few. Those that take up the path of justice and peace are the first to be transformed.

In this month of January, we can take up the prayer of Saint Francis: Lord, make us instruments of your peace, that it may give a new light to our whole year. Happy New Year to each one!

January 02, 2020

Tampakan Mining 12-Year Extension, a “sweet deal” made of deceit

A tarpaulin demands for the cancellation of FTAA renewal of SMI in Tampakan, South Cotabato. Photo from PMPI.

Quezon City, Philippines – The Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc. demands from DENR Sec. Roy Cimatu an immediate investigation on the 12-Year Extension granted to Sagittarius Mines, Incorporated (SMI) and the Tampakan Mining Group for its Tampakan Copper and Gold Project as executed by Leo Jasareno, former Director of the Mines and Geosciences Bureau.

 According to the MGB Order, the 12-year extension was due to “Force Majeure” or “acts or circumstances beyond the reasonable control of contractor,” underscoring the following circumstances in the SMI case: rebellion, insurrection, civil disturbance, blockade, sabotage, any dispute with surface owners, and adverse action…  

For PMPI, the said extension order reeks of deceit, as the group points out that any contract entered into by any agency of the government, or in this case the Financial/Technical Assistance Agreement between the Office of the President and the Sagittarius Mining Incorporated, should be made public.

The said extension order was made during the term of Leo Jasareno and former DENR Sec. Ramon Paje in 2016 through a so called “sweet deals” but was not made known to the public until last 2019.

Environmental groups describe the extension of the Tampakan Copper and Gold Project’s Financial/Technical Assistance Agreement as ill-natured because of the many controversies surrounding the project. The group cites its tremendous impact to the water sources and irrigation of South Cotabato and nearby Provinces, and biodiversity and territorial integrity of the Blaans’ Ancestral Domain that may lead to the demise of its of culture and Indigenous way of life, if TCGP operates.

According to Rene Pamplona, Advocacy Officer of the Convergence of Initiatives for Environmental Justice (CIEJ), an environmental group in South Cotabato, issues such as the questionable   Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) conducted by NCIP, the issue on the integrity of the project as it sits above an active fault line, as well as the human rights violations against the Blaans, and the cancelled Environmental Compliance Certificate, are strong  enough reasons why the extension should not have been granted. He added that the manner by which it was granted is foul and deceitful.

The Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc. (PMPI) National Coordinator, Yolly Esguera further said extension and the FTAA itself is crazy, in a time when half of the world is declaring Climate Emergency in recognition of the potential threats to life, biodiversity, and livelihood, to a further increase in greenhouse gas emissions and global temperature. She continued that South Cotabato and nearby Provinces will not be spared from a catastrophe driven by climate change. Food and water security for Mindanao is achievable given a climate crisis if Marbel-Buluan Watershed is spared from the Tampakan Copper and Gold Project and declared as critical and locally conserved.

PMPI extends its full support to the Blaans, the Communal Irrigators’ Association, the Provincial- , Municipal- , and Barangay-level Local Government Units of South Cotabato and nearby Provinces, and the Civil Society Organizations for standing up for 25 years for the protection the Marbel-Buluan Watershed, thereby securing Mindanao’s water and food sources, against the SMI and the Tampakan Group of Companies.

A Call for Vigilance and Prayer

C     I     R     C     U     L    A     R

No. 1, Series of 2020

To    :  The Clergy, Religious and Lay Faithful of the Archdiocese of Lipa
Re          :    A Call for Vigilance and Prayer Amid the Threat from Taal Volcano


By this present letter, we wish to alert our faithful – priests, religious and lay – of the escalating eruptive activity of the Taal Volcano.

As per DOST-PHIVOLCS, the alert status of Taal Volcano was raised from Level 3 (magmatic unrest) to Level 4 (hazardous eruption imminent). With this, it strongly recommends evacuation of Taal Volcano Island and other areas at high-risk to pyroclastic density currents and volcanic tsunami within a 14-kilometer radius from the main crater.

As an immediate precautionary response, I have instructed Fr. Jayson T. Siapco, the head of the Ministry on Social Services, to monitor the Taal Volcano in coordination with DOST-PHIVOLCS, provide support to local government units in the event of evacuation of affected communities, and mobilize our Social Action Team and Volunteers for possible relief operation.

With the threat posed by the Taal Volcano before us, I urge our faithful – priests, religious and lay – to stay calm, watch through Internet and broadcast media for additional safety precautions specially those areas closely affected and join us in praying the Oratio Imperata, a prayer for deliverance from the looming violent eruption of the Taal Volcano.

Attached is the Oratio Imperata in English and Filipino.

I am also appealing to our faithful for donations for our affected fellow Batangueños. You may bring your donations to any parish office or to the office of the Ministry on Social Services/LASAC, Inc. located at LAFORCE Building, J. P. Laurel Hi-way, Marawoy, Lipa City. For inquiry, you may contact LASAC through (043) 404 8057 or 0925 559 5968 and Fr. Jayson T. Siapco through 0917 508 9701 or 0917 704 5064.   

Let us entrust the whole province of Batangas to the maternal protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary that we may be spared from the threat of Taal Volcano’s eruption. 

Given this 12th of January on the Feast of the Baptism of Jesus in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty at our Chancery, Cathedral Site, Lipa City.

(sgd)✠ Gilbert A. GARCERA, D.D.
Archbishop of Lipa

(sgd) Rev. Fr. Jayson N. ALCARAZ
Chancellor


ORATIO IMPERATA (Filipino)

Ama naming makapangyarihan, itinataas namin sa iyo ang aming buong sarili kalakip ang aming taos pusong pasasalamat sa mga kahanga hangang bagay na iyong nilikha kung saan ang bawat isa sa amin ay bahagi nito, gayundin sa iyong patuloy na paggabay at sa iyong karunungan na gumagabay sa pag-inog ng mundo.

Kinikilala namin ang aming mga kasalanan laban sa iyo at sa buong sangnilikha. Hindi kami naging karapatdapat  na tagapangalaga ng kalikasan. Hindi namin ganap na naisabuhay ang pangangalaga ng mundo.

Lumilingon kami sa iyo, mapagmahal na Ama, at humihingi ng kapatawaran sa aming mga kasalanan.

Hinihiling namin na kami, ang aming mga mahal sa buhay at ang kapwa naming Batangueño na naninirahan malapit sa Bulkang Taal ay maging ligtas sa pagsabog ng bulkan, sa lindol at tsunami.

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Forum on Land, Justice, and Peace

Dear friends and colleagues,

Greetings of Peace and Solidarity!

In commemoration of the 33rd year of the Mendiola Massacre, the Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP), Tanggol Magsasaka, and Rural Missionaries of the Philippines in cooperation with PATRIA and CLAMOR and the Movement Against Tyranny will hold a Forum on LAND, JUSTIC, and PEACE on January 22, 2020 from 1:00 – 4:00pm at the KKFI Gym, Paredes St. Sampaloc, Manila and will be followed by a protest march and torch and candle lighting at Mendiola. Attached is the concept note of the forum.

January 22, 1987, the heinous Mendiola Massacre in which 13 farmers calling for genuine agrarian refrom were killed and scores were injured.

More than three decades after the massacre, farmers are still fighting for genuine land reform, free land distribution, and seeking for the elusive peace and justice that they have long fought and died for.

We are seeing a slight glimmer of hope despite the many adversities besetting the Filipino people. The previous year ended with the possibility of the resumption of the peace negotiations. It is in the interest of the peasant masses and the Filipino people if the peace talks would eventually resume to significantly conclude substantive discussions and approve major documents including the Comprehensive Agreement on Social and Economic Reforms (CASER) and an Interim Peace Agreement.

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Taal affected farmers, fisherfolk need aid, not loans — group

Taken from Agoncillo town, Batangas (Photo courtesy of Bro. CIriaco Santiago III)

John Aaron Mark Macaraeg
January 14, 2020

Out of the 4.1 trillion recently signed budget, P 16 B was appropriated for National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council or Calamity fund which is 20 percent lower from the P20 B last year.

By JOHN AARON MARK MACARAEG | Bulatlat.com

MANILA — As Taal Volcano continues its ash eruptions and volcanic earthquakes, farmers group Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas called on the Philippine government to provide due assistance to affected farmers and fisherfolk in the vicinity.

“Those in affected areas are in desperate need of urgent assistance, especially as farmers still reel from the effects of rice liberalization, chronic government neglect, and climate change,” said Danilo Ramos of KMP.

The Taal began spewing ashes last Sunday, destroying at least P74.55 million in agriculture and affecting at least 752 hectares of lands, mostly coffee farms, according to the Department of Agriculture.

Agriculture secretary William Dar announced yesterday that farmers and fisherfolk victims may avail of a P25,000-loan with zero interest and payable in three years.

In a released statement, however, Ramos called out the loan as “mere alms or palimos meant to save face.”

Fisherfolk group Pamalakaya, for its part, referred to the loan as “callous.”

Citing government data, they said the province of Batangas has produced more than 16,400 metric tons of bangus, which is four percent of the country’s total production in 2018.

Thus, the group’s demand for Secretary Dar to “at least temporarily disrobe his neoliberal suit to humanely aid the affected fisherfolk and peasant families” and appeal for the reparation for the loss of potential income.

Redirect intel budget for relief efforts

Interior and Local Government secretary Eduardo Año received backlash from netizens over his statement, appealing to the public to donate drinking water, food and other essentials needed by evacuees.

Ramos called Año’s statement as an “admission of the insufficiency of government supplies and funds, and reveals his shameless lack of sense of responsibility.”

He advised instead for the Duterte administration to make use of the P4.5 billion intel funds of the President’s office to help the Taal victims’ need for food and drinking supplies.

Many have also pointed out in social media the cut in calamity fund under the 2020 approved budget.

Out of the 4.1 trillion recently signed budget, P 16 B was appropriated for National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council or Calamity fund which is 20 percent lower from the P20 B last year.

Critics are only hopeful that the allocated budget and donations would reach peoples needing it and not end up in anyone’s own pocket. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

“Sagip Kanayunan” is KMP’s initiative to directly provide relief for affected farmers and rural communities. Donations can be dropped off at No. 56 K-9 St. West Kamias, Quezon City.

Government ‘labor export program’ led to OFW’s death in Kuwait — Migrante

Bombo Radyo photo

Gaea Katreena Cabico (Philstar.com) – January 2, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — It is the failure of the government to address the country’s labor woes that cost domestic worker Jeanelyn Villavende her life, an overseas workers’ group said Thursday.

Villavende was allegedly killed by her employer’s wife, barely six months after she flew to Kuwait.

 “We weep with rage as the Duterte regime’s labor export program has claimed another casualty on the back of the high unemployment rate and absence of job security in the Philippines,” Migrante International said in a statement.

In his speeches to Filipino communities abroad, Duterte often says the government is trying to spur development in the Philippines so overseas workers can come home.

Government agencies said Villavende’s death is a “clear violation” of the 2018 agreement signed by both Kuwait and the Philippines that seeks to uphold and promote the protection of the rights and welfare of Filipino workers in the Gulf nation.

The Department of Labor and Employment also set a partial deployment ban following the death of another Filipina.

Migrante said that while Kuwait’s action in bringing perpetrators to justice is urgently needed, the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte must also be criticized for “denying permanent justice to Filipino workers in their own country.”

‘Many Filipinos forced to work abroad’

It was her desire to escape poverty and help her father that reportedly compelled Villavende to leave the Philippines for Kuwait.

“It is therefore the Duterte regime’s stubborn refusal to address the long-time demands of workers and farmers that deprived Jeanelyn Villavende of fulfilling her yearning to provide a life of comfort and security for her family,” Migrante said.

It added: “Government agencies may rush to provide short-term aid to her grieving family but that will never be enough to terminate the tragedy of forced migration that has cost an OFW like Jeanelyn her life.”

An estimated 10 million Filipinos—roughly a tenth of the country’s population—work abroad as a way of escaping unemployment, low wages and limited opportunities in the Philippines.

In December, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported there were 2.05 million unemployed persons in the country as of October 2019. The number of underemployed Filipinos, meanwhile, was pegged at 5.62 million.

‘Cycle of homicidal enslavement’

At least two other domestic workers were killed in Kuwait over the last two years.

In February 2018, the body of Joanna Demafelis was discovered inside a freezer. An angry President Duterte said Demafelis’ corpse “bore torture marks and indications that she was strangled to death.”

Her death sparked a diplomatic crisis between the Philippines and Kuwait, which resulted in a labor deal.

In May 2019, Constancia Dayag was killed in the Gulf state. She was allegedly physically and sexually assaulted before she died.

“The death cases of Joanna Demafelis and Constancia Dayag in Kuwait point to the endless cycle of homicidal enslavement that OFWs go through as a result of the government’s constant peddling of Filipino workers as export commodities to salvage an ailing domestic community,” Migrante said.

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