The Philippine Star

From noble warriors to noble bakers

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Sgt. Eric Ubalde is no ordinary soldier of the Special Operations Command of the Philippine Army. He’s a man of many lives as his fellow soldiers would tell him. He had survived so many gun battles, had endured several gunshot wounds, four to be exact.

The first time he was hit was during the Zamboanga siege. They were attacked by the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and was shot in his left leg. The second gunshot was during an encounter with a group of bandits in Jolo, Sulu where two Australian and Canadian nationals were abducted. He was hit in the shoulder.

On Nov. 29, Ubalde was with the Presidenti­al Security Group as part of the advance party for President Rodrigo Duterte who was set to visit Lanao del Sur the following day, when they were ambushed and an improvised explosive device was detonated. Ubalde was hit in the neck, sustaining his third gunshot wound.

He may have survived Marawi last May but he didn’t leave the war-torn province unscathed. While clearing one of the abandoned houses, the Maute terrorists fired at the soldiers, hitting him in the face. That was the last time he got shot.

To date, three bullets remain inside his body. “I could not just move some part and I could feel something sharp. They said I would be operated on … and there would be a lot of nerves that would be affected,” Ubalde said.

For now he is confined inside Fort Magsaysay while recuperati­ng from the gunshot wounds. He is thankful not only for having survived but also for being given a new lease on life.

He’s been chosen as one of the beneficiar­ies of the Noble Bakers’ Project of the Aboitiz Foundation (AF), the corporate arm of the Aboitiz Group, in partnershi­p with the SOCOM Foundation Inc. (SFI). The Aboitiz Foundation’s mission is to create safe, empowered, and sustainabl­e communitie­s.

Ubalde along with 59 other wounded soldiers underwent a comprehens­ive bakery management training program provided by Pilmico Foods Corp., the food subsidiary of Aboitiz Equity Ventures Inc. They were taught how to cost and develop bakery products, bake bread, cakes, cookies, pizza dough, and a lot more.

Apart from the training, the Aboitiz Foundation also donated heavy-duty baking equipment like oven, mixer and baking utensils. The bakery inside Fort Magsaysay was built by the SOCOM. The Noble Bakers’ Bakery is now operationa­l with a captured market which includes the soldiers and residents inside Fort Magsaysay and the adjacent schools.

According to Col. Rey Aquino, deputy commander of SOCOM, the earnings from the bakery will go to the dependents of the wounded soldiers. “The proceeds will go to SFI, the special operations foundation that supports our wounded personnel while they’re in the hospital, including relatives who watch over them,” Aquino said.

The Aboitiz Foundation is committed to providing assistance to those who need help the most. “It is uplifting to know that the Aboitiz Foundation is able to help empower our soldiers. This project proves that we are able to make our resources more meaningful by using them to fulfill our promise of advancing business and communitie­s by co-creating safe, empowered, and sustainabl­e communitie­s,” Maribeth Marasigan, Aboitiz Foundation first vice president and chief operating officer said.

Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana also expressed his deep gratitude to the Foundation for such innovative endeavor in lending assistance to the wounded soldiers.

“Allow me to take this opportunit­y to congratula­te Aboitiz Foundation for the recent launch of the “Noble Bakers” project in collaborat­ion with the SOCOM. Noble Bakers is a good project that aims to benefit our disabled soldiers. I encourage all other Commands of the military to replicate this project as it is beneficial to the military community, the military dependents, and our disabled soldiers who can still and should lead productive lives,” Delfin said.

For Ubalde, he finds great joy in helping his fellow wounded soldiers not with the use of guns or bullets but rather with the use of baking pans and rolling pins.

 ??  ?? Photo shows (middle row) Maricar Bautista, Aboitiz Equity Ventures assistant vice president for media relations; Danny Cerence, Aboitiz Foundation assistant vice president for operations; Martin Yasay, AEV vice president for government relations;...
Photo shows (middle row) Maricar Bautista, Aboitiz Equity Ventures assistant vice president for media relations; Danny Cerence, Aboitiz Foundation assistant vice president for operations; Martin Yasay, AEV vice president for government relations;...
 ??  ?? Sgt. Eric Ubalde sustained injuries to his face during an encounter with Maute terrorists. The noble bakers (right) with their baked goods during the training at the Pilmico Research and Training Bakery in Paranaque City.
Sgt. Eric Ubalde sustained injuries to his face during an encounter with Maute terrorists. The noble bakers (right) with their baked goods during the training at the Pilmico Research and Training Bakery in Paranaque City.
 ??  ?? Ubalde during the bakery training.
Ubalde during the bakery training.
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