The Philippine Star

Cemetery trash to be made into thermal blankets, jackets

- By REY GALUPO and RHODINA VILLANUEVA

At least 12 truckloads of garbage were collected inside the Manila North Cemetery following the observance of the All Saints’ and All Souls’ Day holidays, but not all of it will end up as trash.

Plastic items in the garbage will be converted by a Buddhist organizati­on into jackets and blankets.

Volunteers from different non-government organizati­ons yesterday said they recovered plastic bottles, soft drink bottles and other types of waste inside the 50-hectare cemetery, despite repeated public reminders to dispose of trash properly.

The local government of Manila assigned 50 sweepers inside the cemetery but the enormity of the task was overwhelmi­ng, according to a volunteer.

Members of the Tzu Chi Foundation said the plastic bottles they collected would be converted to thermal blankets and jackets, which they will distribute to typhoon victims all over the country.

Angelito Isidro, Tzu Chi Foundation spokesman, said they have already

collected more than five tons of bottles from different cemeteries starting Oct. 20.

They have also collected old newspapers, which Isidro said will be sold and the proceeds given to sick persons for medicine.

The EcoWaste Coalition, a zero waste advocacy group, expressed dismay over the unabated violation of the national ban on littering as millions crowded cemeteries on Thursday.

Various sectors, including the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources and some members of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s, had appealed to the public not to turn cemeteries into dumpsites.

“Our cemeteries again teemed with garbage. We lament the brazen disregard of Republic Act 9003, which explicitly bans and penalizes littering – the most common and visible environmen­tal offense committed during the observance of Undas and other popular festivitie­s,” Daniel Alejandre of the coalition said, citing field reports received from the group’s Basura Patrollers in 22 public and private cemeteries in Metro Manila.

RA 9003 or the Ecological Solid Waste Management Act prohibits the “littering, throwing, dumping of waste matters in public places, such as roads, sidewalks, canals, esteros or parks, and establishm­ent, or causing or permitting the same.”

“Littering, which is also forbidden under local government ordinances, has regrettabl­y become an ugly feature of our beautiful tradition of rememberin­g family members who have gone before us,” Alejandre said.

“Littering is totally disrespect­ful for the dead and for Mother Nature too, and goes against the very purpose of going to the cemetery to pay respects to lost loved ones. There is no reason for visitors to leave their trash behind and expect others to clean up after them,” he added.

The group noted that littering was most widespread at the Bagbag Public Cemetery in Quezon City, Sangandaan Cemetery in Caloocan City, Manila North Cemetery and, most notably, Manila South Cemetery.

Among the discards found in cemetery streets and alleys, and even in between tombs, were food paper and plastic packaging, food leftovers, plastic bags, bottles and cups, flower plastic wrappings, soiled diapers and improvised resting materials such as newspapers and corrugated boxes.

“The extent of the massive littering at the Bagbag Public Cemetery became more apparent as 17 sweepers deployed by the Quezon City government cleaned up the area yesterday morning. The street gutters and the alleys of ‘apartment tombs’ were strewn with rubbish made worse by the food offerings left by visitors. Also, some visitors were seen puffing cigarettes despite the ban on smoking in public places,” Alejandre said.

 ?? EPA ?? A woman prays in front of food offerings for the dead in the town of Paoay, Ilocos Norte on Thursday. Ilocano families believe the spirits of the dead return to the world of the living on Nov. 1, All Saints’ Day, and go back to the spirit world on All Souls’ Day, Nov. 2. During the visit, relatives offer ‘atang’ to welcome their dearly departed.
EPA A woman prays in front of food offerings for the dead in the town of Paoay, Ilocos Norte on Thursday. Ilocano families believe the spirits of the dead return to the world of the living on Nov. 1, All Saints’ Day, and go back to the spirit world on All Souls’ Day, Nov. 2. During the visit, relatives offer ‘atang’ to welcome their dearly departed.

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