Philippine Daily Inquirer

Legazpi Sunday Market is losing its space—will it move to BGC?

Urban residents have taken to organic food, and farmers found their city weekend market, thanks to Mara Pardo de Tavera’s pioneering efforts

- By Marge C. Enriquez

Legazpi Park, one of the few pockets of greenery in Makati, will be turned into a multistory parking lot, and the main casualty of the move is Mara’s Organic Market (MOM), better known as the Legazpi Sunday Market.

Green, open spaces that provide ecological and health benefits to a dense Makati are giving way to real estate developmen­ts.

Mara Pardo de Tavera, organizer and pioneer of the organic markets in the Philippine­s, recalled that last December, Barangay San Lorenzo Business Associatio­n sent a circular to the vendors about the new developmen­t. February is the last month to do businesses at the park. Makati Commercial Estates Associatio­n offered Pardo de

Tavera an alternativ­e space: the parking lot behind Corinthian Plaza.

“It will be half the size of Legazpi’s, so we have to reduce the number of vendors in March,” lamented Pardo de Tavera.

Commercial­ization

“The real story here is that most parks are going the way of commercial­ization. If Makati is the premier city, why can’t it be like New York? Central Park consists of nearly 6 percent of the borough’s land area. It’s been the lungs of the city. The community can visit the park since they have no gardens at home. There are smaller parks in New York, which amount to some 15 percent of green spaces.”

She added: “The diminishin­g green spaces in Makati are alarming. With the new buildings in the Central Business District, the Ayala Triangle Gardens has been reduced to a promenade.”

Pardo de Tavera explained that the concept of an organic market under the trees was to remind city folks about the wellness benefits of nature.

She has spoken with Butch Campos, chair of Fort Bonifacio Developmen­t Corp. (FBDC), who offered her alternativ­e spaces in Bonifacio Global City (BGC). They are still doing negotiatio­ns.

Plans are afoot to hold the full-scale Mara’s Organic Market on Saturdays in BGC.

“I’d like to hold it on Saturdays so the farmers can earn more on weekends. They have been coming all the way from Kalinga every Sunday just to sell vegetables,” she said.

Organic lifestyle

Pardo de Tavera was exposed to the organic lifestyle in Europe and in New York in the late ’80s.

“I wanted to fix the Filipino diet when I came back. Our major diseases—coronary, cancer, diabetes—can be controlled by eating the right foods,” she said.

She organized the country’s first organic farming confer- ence at the Philippine Internatio­nal Convention Center to convince farmers about using natural methods to cultivate and protect their crops.

In 1994, she establishe­d MOM in the then tree-lined Greenbelt Park, made picturesqu­e by the lagoon, the aviary and the Ayala Museum.

She used tribal rice from the Cordillera­s and made them into suman and lugaw. She also introduced talbos ng kamote and kangkong to the Makati crowd by using the stems for relish and making iced tea from boiled root crop leaves.

She convinced the affluent shoppers that kamote leaves gave the blood alkaline—a deterrent against mosquito bites. The farmers were pleased by the brisk sales.

“It changed the perception that kamote tops and kangkong were poor man’s foods,” she said.

MOM’s reputation spread after its tie-up with the Hotel and Restaurant Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (HRAP). Her suppliers provided the organic ingredient­s for HRAP’s dinner “Cuisine Naturelle.”

Pardo de Tavera organized the Organic Producers and Trade Associatio­n of the Philippine­s. Last year, the group encouraged 100 mayors to promote organic farming in their municipali­ties.

MOM flourished in Greenbelt for 10 years until Ayala Land informed her of the redevelopm­ent of the commercial center in 2004. Pardo de Tavera filed a petition for the organic market to remain at Greenbelt, but it failed.

Food from soil

“Makati’s original plan was to have an oasis from Makati Avenue to Paseo de Roxas, thus the name, Greenbelt,” she said. The market was transferre­d to smaller pocket spaces in Greenbelt until it gave way to the constructi­on of Greenbelt 5.

Fortunatel­y, Ernie Moya, chair of Barangay San Lorenzo and a regular customer, offered to include MOM in the market plan. He negotiated a space at the Legazpi Park.

MOM has been holding its Sunday markets for the past 13 years. The sections include organic produce from farmers from Luzon and Mindanao, a vegan/vegetarian section, homemade local and internatio­nal foods that don’t use processed ingredient­s, natural personal care products and artisan crafts.

The sense of community is enhanced by the performanc­e of live music provided by leather goods maker/musician Django Valmores, and Pardo de Tavera’s table where she meets up with friends.

“I want Filipinos to eat foods that come from the soil—not from plastics or cans,” said Pardo de Tavera.

 ??  ?? Mara Pardo de Tavera (far right) entertains friends at her table during the market day.
Mara Pardo de Tavera (far right) entertains friends at her table during the market day.
 ??  ?? Bag made from banana leaves from Legazpi Sunday Market
Bag made from banana leaves from Legazpi Sunday Market

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