Philippine Daily Inquirer

Mosque rebuilding buoys Marawi hope

- —SPECIAL REPORT BY THE INQUIRER STAFF ANDMINDANA­O BUREAU

As the people of Marawi struggle to make sense of the devastatio­n a year after the siege, rebuilding the mosques has been identified as a priority, giving the city hope for recovery. But the Ranaw Multi-Sectoral Movement says the government may be spared trouble if the residents themselves are allowed to rebuild the city on their own.

( Last of three parts)

MARAWI CITY— Lawyer Jamil Cayamodin remembers the collective sound of calls to prayer from hundreds of mosques in his native Marawi during the holy month of Ramadan.

“You can hear the whole city calls, all at the same time,” said Cayamodin, college secretary of the University of the Philippine­s’ Institute of Islamic Studies.

“I have memories of those calls to prayer ... They were so nice, I miss them,” he added.

But this was before the Philippine­s’ only Islamic city was reduced to rubble by government air strikes as state security forces fought Islamic State-inspired terrorists who seized the city on May 23 last year.

After the war that raged for five months, not a single mosque was left standing in the main battle area.

Hope for recovery

As the people of Marawi struggle to make sense of the devastatio­n a year after the siege, rebuilding the mosques has been identified as a priority, giving the war-torn city hope for recovery.

“A mosque is a place of worship for the Bangsamoro. It is a sacred place, a place of hope and mercy,” said Fatima Pir Allian, a Tausug and program director of Nisa Ul Haqq Fi Bangsamoro, a group helping displaced residents.

Foundation of faith

“It is our foundation of faith and our identity, the trademark of what we believe in and what we are fighting for. The mosque is our home and when our home is a shambles, it causes imbalance,” Allian said.

Lanao del Sur Vice Gov. Mamintal Adiong said the local government was seeking help, especially from the Middle East, to rebuild the mosques.

The government has also proposed building a military camp in the middle of the city, which worries Muslim scholars like Cayamodin because of its impact on the culture and religiosit­y of the residents.

Unwritten rule

Cayamodin said he could not imagine a military camp inside an Islamic city like Marawi because it would bring in vices unacceptab­le to Muslims.

Drieza Lininding, chair of the Moro Consensus Group in Marawi, said the freedom that the residents used to enjoy had always been tempered by an unwritten rule they all followed.

“We were always free to protest, to air our grievances, but there should be no selling of pork here, no liquor, no videoke,” Lininding said.

Disintegra­ted

“But the war had turned us into a silent and disintegra­ted people. We are afraid to speak our minds now because we fear being accused and tagged as terrorists,” he said.

Another place of worship that needs to be rebuilt for the city’s Catholic residents is St. Mary’s Cathedral.

Bishop Edwin de la Peña said the cathedral, which was put up in 1934, would have to be rebuilt only after Marawi’s full rehabilita­tion.

Interrelig­ious harmony

“In the meantime, we focus our energies on rebuilding communitie­s,” De la Peña said in a post on the website of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s.

Rebuilding the cathedral is important, he said, because “Marawi has always been the showcase of interrelig­ious harmony in the Philippine­s.”

Government records showed that as of April 1, 37,276 families, or 95,820 people, had returned to 42 villages in Marawi. Another 1,423 families (7,721 people) were awaiting word to return to six more villages.

Clearing operations at 24 villages in the main battle zone are expected to be finished by next month. Most of the roughly 9,191 families (52,802 people) from these villages are still languishin­g in evacuation centers or staying with relatives.

Temporary shelters

The government has built temporary shelters for the evacuees, the biggest of which is at Barangay Sagonsonga­n. But only 700 units of the more than 6,000 shelters planned to be built there have so far been completed. As of April, 624 units had been occupied.

Temporary shelters will also be built at Barangay Papandayan, where the National Housing Authority plans to set up permanent houses for 2,747 families, and at Barangay Dansalan, where an apartment block will rise for residents.

Rebuilding cost

Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana earlier estimated the cost of rebuilding Marawi to run up to P50 billion, but Housing Secretary Eduardo del Rosario, head of Task Force Bangon Marawi, set a higher figure of P80 billion for rehabilita­tion and reconstruc­tion.

The rehabilita­tion of areas outside the main battle zone will entail funding of P26.2 billion during the first year of reconstruc­tion, according to the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority.

President Duterte, during his visit to Marawi on May 11, asked the residents to be more patient.

“We are rebuilding Marawi. The money is slowly coming in. It can’t be done overnight,” he said.

But the Ranaw Multi-Sectoral Movement suggested that the government instead allow the residents to rebuild the city on their own.

“Let the people rebuild Marawi one house at a time, one mosque at a time, one village at a time,” the group said in a statement.

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 ?? SOURCES: DSWD DREAMB and UNCHR ??
SOURCES: DSWD DREAMB and UNCHR
 ?? —RICHEL V. UMEL ?? RECONSTRUC­TION Residents salvage materials from their destroyed houses for reconstruc­tion a year after government forces clashed with Islamic State-inspired terrorists in Marawi City.
—RICHEL V. UMEL RECONSTRUC­TION Residents salvage materials from their destroyed houses for reconstruc­tion a year after government forces clashed with Islamic State-inspired terrorists in Marawi City.
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