Philippine Daily Inquirer

EDUCATING THE AETA

In Pampanga, tribe members learn new skills at Clark training hub

- By Tonette Orejas

CLARK FREEPORT— Three-yearold Diana Santiago began preschool on Monday. It was the same for 49 more Aeta children and adults, coming either for morning or afternoon classes.

In another room, Diana’s mother, Lani, tried her hands on sanitation and hygiene activities. “Mabiasa ke sa kanyan (We’ll learn in time),” Lani said.

Classes at Clark Skills and Training Center (formerly Clark Polytechni­c compound) are held for the Pagsasaril­i Family Care Center for Indigenous Peoples, a corporate social responsibi­lity program of the stateowned Clark Developmen­t Corp. (CDC).

The center will be transferre­d to Barn House 2092 once reconstruc­tion is finished, according to Rommel Narciso, head of CDC external affairs.

Unpreceden­ted

Vilma Mercado, one of the four Aeta teachers at the center, said the program was unpreceden­ted in several ways.

“Pagsasaril­i readies them for kindergart­en learning. Parents learn practical skills at the same time, too,” said Mercado, a graduate of elementary education at Ramon Magsaysay Technologi­cal University in Zambales province.

“They (children or parents) may emerge as good community leaders in the future,” said Myla Sevilla, who handles the courses for parents.

Teachers Janet Sibal and Joannaliza Vergara, just in their 20s, are enthusiast­ic about Pagsasaril­i.

“The children are going to get good [educationa­l] foundation,” Leilani Cunanan, schools superinten­dent in Angeles City, said at the launch of Pagsasaril­i on Monday.

It is also a step in “developing the human capital to cultivate a sustainabl­e community for [the] Aeta,” said CDC chair Jose “Ping” de Jesus. He is credited for championin­g Aeta education as a centerpiec­e of corporate social responsibi­lity (CSR) projects.

The first batch of young and adult learners comes from tribal communitie­s in Mabalacat City in Pampanga province and Bamban town in Tarlac province, all north of Clark Freeport.

Pushed to peripherie­s

The Aeta people claimed to have been pushed to the peripherie­s when the US military establishe­d Fort Stotsenbur­g in 1903 and Clark Field in 1919.

In the 1980s, religious congregati­ons, including Benedictin­e nuns, taught them how to read, write and negotiate for their farm produce.

Mt. Pinatubo’s eruptions in June 1991 and the rejection by the Senate of the 1947 Military Bases Agreement in September that year led to the closure of US bases and the pullout of most American troops. At present, government and private offices in the base-turned-free port employ not more than 100 Aeta people, a few in white-collar jobs.

Ancestral domain

De Jesus said the physical and economic developmen­t of 10,323 hectares, registered as Certificat­e of Ancestral Domain Claim 025A (CADT 025A) within the Sacobia subzone inside the 31,489-ha Clark Special Economic Zone, would not be possible if the tribespeop­le were not active actors in the process.

Aeta families and CDC agreed to develop the areas covered by CADT 025A under a joint management agreement (JMA) signed in December 2007.

Leadership disputes among five groups of Aeta, a congressio­nal hearing and land speculatio­ns by “unat” (lowlanders), among others, delayed the implementa­tion of the JMA.

“We are getting to the JMA soon,” De Jesus said, referring to talks that have resumed with the ethnic communitie­s.

Pagsasaril­i derived its funds from CDC and not from leases paid by firms with businesses inside CADT 025A, said Noel Manankil, CDC president.

OB Montessori trained the Aeta teachers, developed the modules and provided school supplies. CDC gives meals, vitamins, school uniform and free bus service.

The Department of Education has linked the center to the local government­s of Mabalacat and Bamban so that the students will be absorbed in the K12 program later. Local government­s and CDC pay the salaries of teachers.

Eradicatin­g poverty

Preciosa Soliven, OBMontesso­ri founder, said the group decided to support CDC’s CSR because it was geared toward “eradicatin­g poverty.”

Sara Francesca Soliven-de Guzman, executive vice president of OB Montessori Child and Community Foundation Inc., said “CDC people working with their hearts” helped convince her group to work with the agency.

Aeta leaders have harbored doubts on the sincerity of a new batch of CDC officials or they are keeping an open mind how this new tack by the agency is going to make a difference in the lives of the tribes.

But De Jesus said: “It’s our modest contributi­on to help the Aeta.”

 ??  ??
 ?? —PHOTOS BY TONETTE OREJAS ?? ANCESTRAL LAND Aeta tribe members regard lands near the mighty Sacobia River, which flows through northern Pampanga and southern Tarlac, as their ancestral domain.
—PHOTOS BY TONETTE OREJAS ANCESTRAL LAND Aeta tribe members regard lands near the mighty Sacobia River, which flows through northern Pampanga and southern Tarlac, as their ancestral domain.
 ??  ?? SKILLS Cleaning their personal belongings is one of the skills learned by children in the center.
SKILLS Cleaning their personal belongings is one of the skills learned by children in the center.
 ??  ?? LEARNING Jose “Ping” de Jesus, chair of the Clark Developmen­t Corp., talks with Aeta students and teachers on their first day of school.
LEARNING Jose “Ping” de Jesus, chair of the Clark Developmen­t Corp., talks with Aeta students and teachers on their first day of school.
 ??  ?? HYGIENE Teacher Vilma Mercado shows her ward how to wash her hands.
HYGIENE Teacher Vilma Mercado shows her ward how to wash her hands.
 ??  ?? GEOGRAPHY 101 Aeta children are introduced to geography through maps.
GEOGRAPHY 101 Aeta children are introduced to geography through maps.

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