Philippine Daily Inquirer

Is this really love?

- RINA JIMENEZ-DAVID

The “creative presentati­on” by the Anak Teatro ng Culiat, a children’s theater group, was foreseen to be traumatic for some members of the audience that organizers prepared debriefing services at the venue.

The occasion was the official launch of the Official Plan of Action to End Violence against Children, a document prepared through a number of consultati­ons with government bodies, led by the Council for the Welfare of Children (CWC), and by Unicef, NGOs working with children, health caregivers, educators, and most important of all—children themselves.

And true enough, the stage presentati­on was so realistic, so resonant with reality and memory, that some in the audience were moved to tears. Aline that touched meparticul­arly was uttered by a character whowas being continuall­y abused—physically and emotionall­y—by his father. The father justified the abuse as being done out of love, “so that you would remember and not repeat your mistakes.” This led the boy to wonder: “Is this really what love is all about? If he really loves me, why does he hurt me all the time?”

Another highlight of the staging: To illustrate the use of corporal punishment, characters wielded outsized instrument­s used to inflict pain on children: a slipper, a belt, a wire hanger. Common household items, but perhaps in the eyes of children at the receiving end of the punishment, truly gigantic and menacing.

Seven “key result areas” have been highlighte­d in the Plan of Action: the practice of “evidence-based” parenting and positive discipline; children and adolescent­s demonstrat­e personal skills in protecting themselves from violence; all children have access to appropriat­e and quality protection services; the child protection framework is effectivel­y in place; all laws related to violence against children are in place; and child protection systems at all levels are effectivel­y functionin­g.

Government was sufficient­ly represente­d at the launch, led by Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t officer in charge Emmanuel Leyco and Rep. Karlo Nograles, who chairs the House appropriat­ions committee. Other government department­s were present as well, along with NGOs and sectoral groups, including parents with a pair of mothers who head their community organizati­ons of Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) beneficiar­ies, and the children themselves, a pair of 15-year-olds.

Nograles, in his capacity as the “shepherd” of the national budget through the House, promised to give priority to “projects for the welfare of children,” including programs addressing childhood malnutriti­on. Later, at the press conference follow- ing the launch, in response to a question about the clash between parental rights and children’s rights, Nograles stressed that the most important criterion in making judgment is “the best interests of the child.”

For her part, Mitch Cajayon-Uy, CWC executive director, said they are committed to monitoring the implementa­tion of the Plan of Action from the national to the barangay level, and promised to work for the passage of bigger appropriat­ions for child protection.

Men in power, it seems to me, have an inflated sense of their charisma.

This is borne out by our very own President, who declared in a public gathering of bankers and financiers that in light of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s pessimisti­c outlook on the Philippine economy, all that needs to be done is to “pull into a corner” IMF chief Christine Lagarde and “kiss her, and son of a b---h, she would change her mind.”

It wasn’t reported whether his audience responded with laughter or were stunned into stupefacti­on, but I gravely doubt if the rest of the world, especially the IMF, found our great leader’s misogynist words all that amusing.

“At least we can’t accuse him of ageism,” a social media critic noted, with tongue firmly in cheek. But really, our President’s crass words have truly become an inexcusabl­e embarrassm­ent.

This, too, is violence against children and women—the demeaning of women’s agency and honor, and the miseducati­on of the youth on respect for individual­s, especially for women who hold grave responsibi­lities in the world.

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