Lifestyle Asia

LIGHT THE WAY

ILAC DIAZ’S Liter of Light has been helping to illuminate homes for almost a decade— even throughout the challenges brought about by the pandemic. This year, they want to place the spotlight on Filipino heroism

- Text JACS T. SAMPAYAN

In the middle of last year, Illac Diaz happened to watch Pay It Forward, the 2000 Mimi Leder drama that starred Haley Joey Osment. In the movie, Osment plays a kid who decides to repay a favor by doing good deeds to three people, who in turn will do the same to three others. This got Diaz, who has been a social entreprene­ur since the early aughts, thinking: why don’t we start a chain of our own? “Social entreprene­urs can really solve many problems,” he says—even ones mired in a health crisis.

This led to the creation of Light It Forward last July. The campaign challenges individual­s to build one solar-powered lamp, post it on their social media accounts, and tag friends to do the same. The lamps will then be donated to an electricit­y-deficient home, an “energy poverty” that affects around 20 million Filipinos.

Light It Forward falls under Diaz’s venture called Liter of Light, an initiative that started in 2013 that bills itself as a “grassroots green lighting program bringing lowcost, zero-carbon solar bottle bulbs to underprivi­leged communitie­s worldwide.” This initiative has spread to 32 countries—colombia, Yemen, India, Bangladesh, just to name a few—empowering around one million people a year.

These lighting products are relatively easy to put together, gives employment to marginaliz­ed groups, and provides an alternativ­e to expensive and sometimes dangerous kerosene lamps. According Liter of Light, these simple constructs reduce carbon emissions by 1,000kg.

MORE THAN SYMBOLS

Before the lamps make it to the villages, they find temporary life as art installati­ons—anything from a portrait of Rizal, to the largest solar-powered rosary in the world.

Over the past year, the installati­ons have turned to honoring the heroes of the pandemic. Diaz and his team called up Luneta Park while Metro Manila was still in lockdown. “’Is it possible that I honor the frontliner­s by doing a solar artwork?’” he asked the park’s management. “Each and every light will honor a frontliner for giving us hope and we will keep this light in your honor.” That installati­on, which was put up last Bonifacio Day, led the largest Philippine flag solar art in the world.

Liter of Light then got a call from the National Quincenten­nial Committee, which was in the process of organizing events and celebratio­ns for the 500th anniversar­y of the April 27 Battle of Mactan.

While the celebratio­n was an important recognitio­n of Lapu-lapu’s heroism, Diaz and his team were worried about the environmen­tal impact of the activities connected to it. “We wanted to sort of reflect the new concern,” he says, adding the carbon footprint of fireworks, of building structures, and flying in people cannot just be overlooked. “What we did was to get thousands of people to build solar lights to reduce carbon footprint.

Light It Forward got 4,000 participan­ts in Metro Manila, including celebritie­s like Dingdong Dantes and Colleen Garcia, between July to December last year. As they continue the campaign for the Quincenten­nial, they are aiming for more. “Right now we’re just aiming for just 10,000 people until April 27, and we hope that we can make it bigger,” Diaz says, adding that the installati­on would be of a warrior to celebrate Lapu-lapu.

“Hindi lang tayo ilaw ng tahanan, ilaw rin tayo ng mundo... we all do things that change the world”

FILIPINOS FOR THE WORLD

Diaz and his team were are also chosen as the Philippine private sector representa­tives to the 2021 World Expo, a global even that will be held in Dubai in October, which expects around 20 million attendees. “We’re getting 6,000 Filipinos in the UAE to celebrate it, and to make a map of the world in solar lights,” Diaz shares.

This is also the 50th anniversar­y of UAE-PH diplomatic ties, and both countries will be highlighte­d in the installati­on.

The message they wish to convey at the expo is that Filipinos are at the forefront of this global fight against the pandemic. “While the whole world is paralyzed, Filipinos are doing this on a large scale,” Diaz says, pointing out the sheer number of frontliner pinoys spread out all over the world.

“Hindi lang tayo ilaw ng tahanan, ilaw rin tayo ng mundo. That is really what I want the artwork to say,” Diaz says. “Hindi lang tayo ilaw ng tahanan—or just giving money back to the Philippine­s—we also do things that change the world.”

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 ??  ?? For more informatio­n on Liter of Light, visit literoflig­ht.org
For more informatio­n on Liter of Light, visit literoflig­ht.org

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