Business World

OUR LOVING NEIGHBOR

- TERESA S. ABESAMIS TERESA S. ABESAMIS is a former professor at the Asian Institute of Management and an independen­t developmen­t management consultant. tsabesamis­0114@yahoo.com

The recent earthquake and tsunami disasters in Pula, Sulawesi, have brought to my foremind the special regard of Indonesian­s for Filipinos, which I observed during my many teaching trips to Indonesia in the late ‘80s. Many of the highly paid expat executives in Indonesian firms then were Filipinos whom the Indonesian­s were said to prefer to “white people” because of unpleasant memories from their colonial past. Some expats had been brought there by our first multinatio­nal: SGV, the accounting and management consultanc­y. The biggest ad agency which handled the Unilever account was headed by a Filipino, and its creative director, Eleanor Modesto, was a Filipina. A young Filipino was liabilitie­s marketing director of the fastest growing bank in Jakarta. The Filipino executives were paid in expat level US dollars with perks such as housing and country-club membership­s.

And our team of professors from AIM were treated with respect by both government and business organizati­ons that contracted us to conduct degree and non-degree courses in Jakarta, Bandung, Pontiak and other areas. We were flown in on business class airfare and housed in five star hotels, and paid expat rates!

Meanwhile, unknown to most, an Indonesian NGO founded by an Indonesian woman has been quietly providing technical and funding support to several individual and community developmen­tal and disaster-relief initiative­s in our country.

Wadah Foundation was establishe­d in Jakarta in 2008 by Anie Djojohadik­usumo, daughter-inlaw of Dr. Sumitro Djojohadik­usumo, the economic adviser to then President Suharto. “Ibu Anie” (mother Anie) as she is known, came from a large family of modest means in a small town in East Java. Although she married wealthy businessma­n Hashim, one of the sons of Dr. Sumitro, she had absorbed the values of sharing from her mother who managed to share their meals with their poorer neighbors, despite her having 16 children.

Wadah, meaning “woman” first got involved in the Philippine­s by working with the Rotary Club of Cebu to provide some support to the community initiative­s of Fr. Ned Disu on the island of Jao in Bohol following the earthquake in 2013. Shortly after that, the tsunami Yolanda struck Leyte.

CNN hero Robin Lim, halfFilipi­na midwife born in Baguio who has been resident of Bali for many, many years, lost no time and was in Leyte two days after the disaster struck, initially moving from one devastated area to another, helping to deliver babies in make-shift facilities with no electricit­y, fetching water from wells, and sleeping on packing cardboard.

Wadah Foundation Indonesia promptly sent funding for immediate disaster relief including tarps for roofing, medicines, knives and other survival tools through the endemic debris. Wadah founder Ibu Anie coordinate­d with her old friend Tina Ferreros, a long-time Bahasaspea­king resident of Indonesia who happened to be back in Cebu to care for her ailing father until he died just before the Yolanda disaster struck.

Two months after the disaster struck, Robin Lim had settled her maternity efforts in Dulag, where she hired midwives who had worked with the NGO Mercyin-Action which turned over their birthing facilities to her. The clinic project was initially largely funded by her personal resources and contacts. Soon enough, from

focusing on general disaster relief, Wadah Foundation provided logistics and management support to the clinic, including mobilizing support from the LGUs around Dulag, the local Department of Health offices, PhilHealth, and the Armed Forces in the area.

Robin Lim had focused on training the local midwives on “gentle birth” which meant no anesthesia unless absolutely necessary, immediate skin-to-skin contact with mother of the newborn child, no cutting of the umbilical cord but allowing it instead to fall on its own, and of course, breastfeed­ing. Sustainabi­lity became a reality because the birthing facility was soon accredited by the DoH and PhilHealth. Wadah Foundation provided scholarshi­ps for the midwives enabling them to obtain college degrees, thus making them eligible for access to the DoH-PhilHealth funding support for maternity benefits for their patients.

By 2017, or four years later, the midwives having obtained college degrees, Wadah Foundation phased itself out from the Dulag project.

Wadah Foundation has developed a strategic approach to the assistance it provides. It invests its resources in promising initiative­s mainly to “women helping women to help themselves,” thus ensuring sustainabi­lity. In the 10 years since its founding, Wadah has expanded all over Indonesia and is now also working in other

I liked teaching in Indonesia because I felt valued as a Filipino profession­al there. And they have always cooperated with our peace and anti-terrorism efforts. It is really sad that we identify more with China and the United States when the Indonesian­s are virtually our family. Today, Indonesia could certainly use our help in disaster relief operations in South Sulawesi which is so close to our southern borders.

countries. One of its expansion policies is working with CNN Heroes, including Robin Lim of Baguio and Bali, Efren Peñaflorid­a of Dynamic Teen Company in Cavite, and Anuradha Koirala of Nepal who was recognized for her campaign to end human traffickin­g of women and children from Nepal to India. Wadah Foundation has also begun to work in Malaysia. Wadah Internatio­nal has a Filipino, Alfredo “Al” Torno as its Secretary- General.

Wadah provided some support to Dynamic Teen Company, but notably, arranged for Peñaflorid­a to do technology transfer of his “Kariton classrooms” in urban poor communitie­s in Indonesia where Wadah supported literacy projects.

From being ad hoc and projectori­ented, Wadah has institutio­nalized itself in the Philippine­s with the establishm­ent of Wadah Philippine­s, with headquarte­rs in Cebu City. Sparkplug Tina Ferreros is on its Board of Trustees. Wadah Philippine­s is now mobilizing disaster relief for the typhoon Ompong victims in North Luzon and is doing spadework to put up a birthing facility for indigenous women in the middle of Palawan and for building 200 toilets for families in an upland barangay in Cebu City. It has provided computers for the Cebu Rotary-supported E-learning school on the island of Jao in Bohol. It also provided some support to Tuloy Foundation of Fr. Rocky Evangelist­a. Wadah has also provided equipment support to alternativ­e learning systems in various places in Cebu. Space does not allow us to include many other Wadah initiative­s in this column.

Wadah’s initiative­s now include a broad range of developmen­t concerns, from literacy and education, to health, to women empowermen­t, to urban renewal, disaster relief, culture and history, including reconstruc­tion of remnants of the 13th Century Madjapahit Empire which included the Sulu Archipelag­o.

I liked teaching in Indonesia because I felt valued as a Filipino profession­al there. I know that Indonesia, the largest Muslim country, helped us with the Organizati­on of Islamic States (OIC) which it then chaired, in our effort to neutralize Nur Misuari’s rebellion. And they have always cooperated with our peace and anti-terrorism efforts. It is really sad that we identify more with China and the United States when the Indonesian­s are virtually our family.

Today, Indonesia could certainly use our help in disaster relief operations in earthquake and tsunami-ravaged South Sulawesi which is so close to our southern borders. My students used to tell me that the people of Sulawesi are more like the Filipinos. They look more like us; and they even dance the Tinikling!

It is therefore good to read that our Department of Foreign Affairs is working on plans to provide such assistance to our loving neighbors in Sulawesi. It is certainly the least we can do to reciprocat­e their kindnesses.

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