The Philippine Star

HEROES ON THE FIELD

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“I didn’t know what to do. I wanted to go out and nd him,” he told STARweek in ilipino.

As the winds started to abate, Ralph said he spotted his father under the debris, along with their chicken and dog, protected by a small wooden table that served as their cover.

Channeling enough courage to venture out side and face the wrath of the typhoon, Ralph ran as fast as he could to get to his father. he rescue mission was a success, but not without him being slammed by a strong gust of wind into a fallen guava tree.

While this was happening, Ehgie Gerado, 1 , was inside their house in acloban, watching members of his family crossing a ooded street to get to a safer place.

“My father was walking back towards our

house when I saw him slip and get submerged in the waist deep ood,” he said in Filipino.

Ehgie went out to rescue his father, whose leg had become stuck in debris that littered the ooded streets. His father, who sustained a deep cut in his leg, had to be stitched up without anesthesia.

Back in Palo, Wilberto Sugbo, 1, was with his family preparing to move to a safer location as winds started to tear at their house. He and his brother carried their year old grandmothe­r. “She kept on telling me that the way I’m holding her hurts,” he said in Filipino. “I told her that we cannot do anything about it because we had to survive.”

hese tales, often described as heroic by those who documented the events in East ern isayas last year, are not uncommon among Yolanda survivors. But for them, being heroes was farthest from their minds they ust wanted to survive. As Wilberto put it, “Why will we surrender if we have an option to survive ”

Ralph, Ehgie and Wilberto were among nine players from typhoon devastated areas in Leyte to compete in the third Sama Sama Games in Boracay, a beach football event that seeks to bring together teams from di erent walks of life.

he team with Rizal based coach oselito Pimentel, who ended up working with the team months after he re located to acloban to oin in the relief work called themselves the acloban Surge, an attempt to spin the memory of a terrible experience into something positive. Other members include iel Mhiko Malquisto, 1 oenel Cablao, 1 eodoro Ruiz r., Genesis Pongos, 1 Reynaldo umampo, 1 and assistant coach Francis Michael Diorico, .

he team competed six times in a span of two days. hey never lost a match, even against those touted as “powerful” teams.

But behind their highly competitiv­e spirit, the players admit ted that they have su ered or are still su ering from trauma and stress.

Ralph for instance, is still living in a makeshift house, while Ehgie and his family spend their days in a tent as they slowly rebuild their damaged property.

he goalkeeper said memories of Yolanda come back every time rain starts falling, especially since three children of his cous in died when the typhoon struck anauan, also in Leyte.

He, like the others, admitted that football had become his es cape from the devastatio­n of Yolanda.

With all the destructio­n around him, assistant coach Diorico said he never could smile and mean it at least not until the football match they organized in anuary “to get away” from everything. “I felt really happy while playing,” he said. Croatian Marco asic, who had been organizing the Sama Sama

Games for the past three years, said he understand­s how football can become a form of therapy for survivors of disasters and calamities.

“Football is a great part in rehabilita­tion. You can rebuild someone’s house, but psychologi­cally, it’s very difficult,” he said. “For us, this is a very amazing opportunit­y for them to get away from Tacloban and forget about everything.”

Peter Amores, founder of the Tondo Futkaleros, recognizes this as well, saying they have conducted football clinics through the Field of Hopes project in typhoon-devastated areas like Bantayan Island in Cebu. “It seeks to erase the (bad) experience that they had,” he says.

Nurhayati Abdullah – country manager of DHL Express, one of the partners of the event – said the results of the games showed the spirit of those a ected by the typhoon.

“It wasn’t a great event that happened to them, they are still recovering, but for them to come together and share their passion and their talent… It’s really great. I’m really happy,” she says.

The members of the Tacloban Surge, who said they gave their best to secure the top award, said they hope to share the experience of football therapy with the children back in their communitie­s.

“They want to play. Somebody just needs to organize it,” says Ralph.

The presence of the team from Tacloban has given a new meaning to the Sama-Sama Games, which seeks to develop a sense of unity among the participan­ts.

Teams included the Futkaleros from Tondo, two teams from Gawad Kalinga and a team from Dream Big Pilipinas, described as a non-pro t organizati­on that “makes use of football as a tool for community developmen­t through transforma­tion of the youth.”

Local players and foreign visitors from Boracay, as well as teams from universiti­es, participat­ed in the event.

“In the football eld, everyone wears the same uniform and there’s no distinctio­n. No one knows where you come from, no one asks where you come from,” says Kasic in describing the nature of the event.

“That’s a great way to show these kids that if they can adopt the same attitude o the eld, both the privileged and the underprivi­leged, if they treat each other with the right respect, the world and our lives would be better,” he adds.

Kasic says football is a fun way for people from di erent communitie­s – as well as social status – to change the way they see other people on and o the eld.

“Some of these younger players who are coming from disadvanta­ged communitie­s, they may have inferiorit­y complex towards foreigners. This is a great way of breaking down barriers,” he says. “They are playing with them, competing with them, in most cases beating them – it’s a great way to kind of remove those psychologi­cal barriers that are sometimes present.”

In the Sama-Sama Games, Kasic maintained that winning is not the ultimate goal, but rather the values that the players would learn through football.

In addition to the actual games, the program also included various workshops aimed at building the character of the teams, especially those coming from disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

DHL, for instance, brought fellows from Teach for the Philippine­s to conduct an activity with some of the teams.

“It’s about teaching the children to dream big… There are many (side events that contribute to the values formation of) the children, not just coming here and playing football,” says Abdullah. “That’s what we want to promote, quality in education and quality in learning.”

Abdullah noted that they support the objectives of the games as it promotes unity among diverse groups, which she said ties in with the whole concept of “sama-sama.”

The support provided by the company to the games falls under the “Go Teach” pillar of their corporate social responsibi­lity program. The other pillars are “Go Green” and “Go Help,” the latter started in response to the need

for relief and rehabilita­tion of Yolanda- affected areas.

Kasic said that the participan­ts would take inspiratio­n and motivation from the event.

“We just want them to care for themselves enough to invest in themselves. You don’t need money to invest in yourself, you need dedication, discipline to make sure that you care enough to study hard or train hard,” he added.

Coach Pimentel – whose original purpose in going to Tacloban was to help in the relief operations of his foundation Kids Internatio­nal inistry – said he ended up working with Leyte Football Associatio­n to help players affected by the typhoon. They conducted a tryout to select players for the team that will play in the Homeless World Cup in Chile later this year.

The coach said some of those who played in Sama-Sama will be tapped to join the team, provided that they raise enough funds to support their travel to South America.

He stressed the importance of letting the players go back to the eld despite what happened.

“They need to understand that they can still do the things that they did before,” he says. The players said they are determined to continue playing. Ralph, who works as a waiter in a local restaurant, said he would like to attend trainings that would help him become a better coach.

Ehgie, meanwhile, will continue playing while nishing his degree in education (major in physical education) at the East isayas State niversity.

Wilberto graduates today with a diploma in education from Leyte Normal niversity. He plans to teach in a public school in Palo, “to make myself as an example.”

 ??  ?? FIGHTING SPIRIT: The Tacloban Surge huddle at the Sama-Sama Games 2014 in Boracay (top). Goalkeeper Ralph Relano in action (above). Sama-Sama Games co-organizer Marco Kasic talks to the team from Tacloban prior to the final game (left).
FIGHTING SPIRIT: The Tacloban Surge huddle at the Sama-Sama Games 2014 in Boracay (top). Goalkeeper Ralph Relano in action (above). Sama-Sama Games co-organizer Marco Kasic talks to the team from Tacloban prior to the final game (left).
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 ??  ?? The Tacloban players help each other warm up befor a game (above) and pray together following the championsh­ip win (top).
The Tacloban players help each other warm up befor a game (above) and pray together following the championsh­ip win (top).
 ??  ?? Organizers of Sama-Sama Games join teams from Tacloban, Tondo, two Gawad Kalinga communitie­s, and Dream Big Pilipinas.
Organizers of Sama-Sama Games join teams from Tacloban, Tondo, two Gawad Kalinga communitie­s, and Dream Big Pilipinas.

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