From Positive News Media
PEACENet volunteers travel miles just to make school kids in far-flung areas happy
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Sep 24, 2008 - 9:23:10 AM
MANILA, Sept. 25 (PNA) -- Trudging the muddy, rocky,
grassy and rough terrains to hunt for an enemy or
conduct combat patrols have already become a way of
life for soldiers, but doing it this time to make a
child happy, is really something new and worth doing.
“We have to make them feel that the government through,
the Philippine Army, cares for them, so that they won’t
fall victims to false promises of leftist groups who
wanted to use them for their own selfish interests,”
expressed Lt. Col. Franco Nemesio Gacal, Commanding
Officer of the Army’s 11th Infantry Battalion, who
headed the troops in assisting at least 30 volunteers
from PEACENet, a non-government organization to bring
more than 600 pairs of slippers, clothing, and food
stuffs to schoolchildren as recipients of their
Tsinelas Campaign.
Starting the trek at about 9 a.m. in Barangay Sikatuna,
Isabela, PEACENet volunteers, along with nursing students
from Riverside College and 11th IB troops traversed
the muddy and slippery road sections and sometimes
rocky and grassy terrain of the Oriental side of
Negros Island and reached the area at past 11 a.m.
Not minding the scattered rainshowers, the volunteers
even encouraged each other to go on the more than
seven kilometers walk to bring the goods to the
schoolchildren.
Anton Meenama, a Sri Lankan community outreach
volunteer and part-time teacher in Bacolod City, who
was also part of the group, already took off his
leather shoes and walked barefoot while carrying a
sack of slippers. For Meenama, who have spent years in
the country for his community volunteer work, said, “It
has always been a fulfillment for me to help. It is
worth doing.”
Lt. Col. Gacal, on the other hand, said that the group was able to generate the slippers and goods by holding a
concert where, instead of tickets, those who want to
watch the concert will donate slippers.
The schoolchildren of Linantuyan were chosen as the
recipients because of the distance of the school from
their houses and the children have to walk miles in
barefoot just to be able to attend their daily
classes.
The
apparent isolated situation of the
barangay was also a consideration. “It is the smiles and hearty
greetings of the schoolchildren bearing flowers that wiped away the
weariness and exhaustion of the volunteers upon arriving at the
Linantuyan Elementary School which is a few kilometers away from the
barangay proper,” added Lt.
Col. Gacal.
For a grade V pupil like Marissa Santos, the slippers
and foodstuffs meant so much to her and her family.
“My parents could hardly buy food for us because of
poverty, much more the slippers. My younger siblings
are given priority,” Marissa said.
Barangay Captain Elpidio Villar who witnessed the
event together with the teachers could not contain his
happiness that visitors from Bacolod and Occidental
side of the island traveled miles to extend assistance
to the children of Linantuyan.
It was half past two in the afternoon when the
volunteers completed their task and prepared for the
walk back. Despite the fact that it would mean
another more than seven kilometers traversing the
rocky, muddy, slippery and grassy terrain, the trek
was on a lighter and jubilant mood for everybody – as
they were more contented and fulfilled with the
thought that Barangay Linantuyan kids could now go to
school with slippers and no longer on barefoot.
Indeed, the walk of the volunteers has served its
cause. (PNA)
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