Thursday, December 31, 2009

CERV ends 2009 successfully; has high hopes for 2010


TO ROUND UP the year, CERV-Philippines helped in the complete rehabilitation of Batibot Early Learning Center, a school completely submerged and destroyed during the Ondoy (Ketsana) calamity.

Volunteers Erik Johnson (USA) and Paul Olney (GB) worked hard in repainting the school’s educational blocks and help in the delivery of books, water purifier, electric fan and medicines.

 CERV also bought paints and painting supplies which the school’s parents used in repairing the destroyed structure.

 Batibot is located in the city of Marikina, one of the most devastated localities during Ondoy’s wrath. For more of the story go here.

 CERV also participated in delivering relief goods to 17 communities within Metro Manila and Northern Luzon, particularly in the cities of Quezon and Pasig, and the towns of San Mateo in Rizal Province, Guimba in Nueva Ecija and Bambang in Pangasinan.

 These relief operations were participated in by volunteers Yusuke Nakata (Japan) and  Shafaq Varghese (USA).

 Financial donations from the GVN Foundation of New Zealand and USA and former volunteers made these projects possible.  It also enabled CERV to implement repairs to the CERV offices and dormitory in Quezon City, which was damaged by the succession of destructive storms.  Part of the donation was also used to buy additional carpentry tools for CERV’s school building repair and maintenance program.

 Meanwhile, Global Volunteer Network  decided to continue its partnership with CERV—a decision that reversed its earlier plan to abrogate the partnership that was originally scheduled to end on August of 2010.

 “I am pleased to advise you that our management team have completed the review and are happy to continue with our partnership,” GVN founder and CEO Colin Salisbury said.

 GVN is the world’s biggest volunteering network with more than 11,500 volunteers deployed in six continents since 2002.

 The year 2009 proved to be another successful, albeit challenging, year for CERV.   There was a slight increase in the number of volunteers across all months of the year while CERV’s programs benefited from several improvements introduced through its collaboration with Meaningful Volunteer.

 CERV looks forward to the New Year with renewed hope, buoyed by recent successes in its response to the “Ketsana” and “Pempe” calamities.  Together with its current and future international volunteers it promises to help more Filipino communities and social service institutions in need of the world’s kindness.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Flood relief and rehabilitation projects go full-blast


CERV and its volunteers participated in relief missions to 17 flooded communities around Luzon Island after the twin devastations of Typhoons Ondoy and Pepeng that killed more than a thousand people and destroyed properties and livelihood worth billions of pesos.

 Volunteers Shafaq Varghese (Pakistan/USA) and Yusuke Nakata (Japan) helped distribute thousands of relief bags containing rice, other food items, medicine and used clothing to flooding victims.

 Former volunteers came through with immediate cash donations for the relief missions as well.  Magan Savant (with wife Nitu and daughter Urvi of India and Hong Kong), Richard Kastenschmidt (with wife Renee of the USA) sent cash donations immediately after learning of the devastations.

 The GVN Foundation immediately set up an emergency relief fund drive where several GVN/CERV volunteers also sent donations.  The fund raising drive is still ongoing through this link.

CERV has committed to the rehabilitation of the Batibot Early Learning Center, a community school that was completely flooded at the height of the storm.  It serves 50 schoolchildren in an urban poor community run by a local women’s organization.

The school rehabilitation project will be funded by donations through the GVN Foundation.  Paints, books, medicines and equipment shall be donated to the school and volunteers shall work repainting and rehabilitating the school.

Relief and rehabilitation efforts are ongoing as floodwaters still refuse to subside in some parts of Metro Manila.  Millions of families still have to recover from losing their rice and vegetable crops.

Meanwhile, repeat volunteer Alan Fry (Australia) donated a netbook to serve as temporary replacement to the desktop computer lost when the CERV dorm was flooded during Typhoon Ondoy.

The following have kindly donated to the relief and rehabilitation fund.  (Names preceded by an asterisk are former or current volunteers.)

Pamela M Hackett

*DCB Dunne

*Eliza M Raymond

Sheena Lad

Amanda R Walsh

Ariel K Turner

Cayce E Chalk

*Catherine Douglass

Jonathan H Lester

K C Austin

Ruthanne Gartland

*Erik S Johnson

Tsang M Man Heem

Mhairi McAlpine

Anna Ware

*Richard and Renee Kastenschmidt

Carol G Voorhees

Pamela Tan

*Peter H Smyth

Carol Thomas

Thomas Chisholm

Johanna Lindberg

Kozlowicz Dorota

NG Every

Jeff Doyle

*Marit Hovhaugholen

Christopher A DiMarco

S Travers

Traudel Arend

Jill S Castillo

Sujay Pathak

M Harding Lee Cranford

*Carolyn J German

Lisa Brooten

Kate Davies

Rochelle T Nieuwenhuis

SA Avison

*Sophie Hamada

Barry Helfanbein

Nicole Jame Jatarra

Apetrei Sebastian

James L Mundell

Alan Hastings

Claire Walker

Wendy Brissenden

Fatma Khan

*Rachel Allitt

*Magan, Nitu and Urvi Savant

Friday, October 9, 2009

A volunteer’s impression of the flood calamity in the Philippines


Following is Shafaq Varghese’s note of the effects of the floods that hit Metro Manila and nearby provinces.  Shafaq is a Pakistan-born American and is an IT consultant in Texas.

 Visiting the areas affected by the flooding was a heart-wrenching experience. The devastation was limitless. In one of the   hardest hit areas, numerous houses, which had originally been built alongside a major river, had been flattened and the homeless victims were scattered on the streets living in temporary spaces made up of plastic sheets tied together with thread.  Garbage, which was basically household items destroyed by the flooding, was piled up on every street corner and outside every house. It was obvious that anything these residents owned, in an already poverty-stricken area, had been washed away or spoiled by the flood.

In one street corner hundreds of people were standing in the sweltering heat, in lines that stretched around several blocks, to receive aid from their local community leadership.  I was skeptical on whether enough aid would be available for the hordes of people waiting.

The family we visited to provide aid to had lost everything they owned in the flood. Their house had been submerged in water and they had survived by taking shelter in their neighbor’s two-story house. Every single piece of clothing and furniture this family owned was covered with thick mud. They had no food, no drinking water or clean clothes. And even though they had started the cleaning process, it was obvious that in the absence of proper nourishment and basic amenities, it would be weeks or even months before they would be able to have a normal life again.

The same story was repeated in the hundreds of other houses that we passed by. From the families scavenging through their destroyed goods for items they could still make use of, to the one living inside a truck because they had lost everything, to the group of people holding a vigil on a bridge for a drowned child, everywhere I looked, the only thing  visible was utter destruction and  suffering.

In the three and a half hours that we surveyed the area, we saw just two aid operations in progress, one through a UN agency and the other through Red Cross. From the size of the trucks and the number of victims standing in line to receive aid, it was clear that the rations provided by these aid operations would be inadequate.  Worst still, there wasn’t a single medical program in progress to provide temporary medical care or check-ups to the victims. With millions of dollars worth of aid coming into the Philippines just for the sole purpose of providing food, water, shelter and medical care to the victims of the flooding, I wondered where the money was being spent if not in the area with the highest number of casualties.

Clearly, the government and other aid agencies need to take additional steps to reduce the suffering of the people affected by the flooding, most of whom are now living on the streets and are highly susceptible to diseases, mal-nutrition and probable death.  This includes, first and foremost, providing additional food, clean water and medical help, in order to prevent further fatalities and the spread of diseases. Rebuilding the houses and cleaning the streets of the loads of garbage scattered everywhere would be the next significant step.  These must then be followed by providing safer and more stable housing in the areas more prone to rain and flood damage, in order to prevent such widespread disaster and loss of life in the future.

CERV is asking everyone to repost and donate to this link.

For more pictures of the victims of the flooding, please look here.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

CERV mobilizes for flood victims


CERV mobilized volunteers and participated in relief operations for the victims of the latest calamity to hit the Philippines.

While asking and collecting relief donations for victims of Typhoon ‘Ondoy’ (international name: Ketsana) CERV was approached by British tourist Simon Wood (Newcastle) and Filipina nursing student Hart Odorna offering to help in repacking relief items.

Simon and Hart immediately started work sorting clothing and repacking food items at a disaster response center in Quezon City.  The next day they distributed items at two of the hardest hit areas in Pasig and Marikina cities.

Facebook and other internet sites also proved useful when former volunteers started checking in and promising to help.  Rachel Groen (Canada) was the first to pledge financial aid.

CERV itself was not spared from the effects of the deluge as its Quezon City office and dormitory was flooded.  Photos, files and some furniture were damaged as floodwaters entered the ground floor.

CERV trustee Karen Villanueva, a public high school teacher, and her students escaped rampaging waters last Saturday by scaling walls and crossing roofs to reach a nearby three-storey house.  Together with about a hundred victims, they were trapped for two days and nights, subsisting on the kindness of their accidental host and neighbors who shared everything they had until the waters subsided.

Director Raymund Villanueva later participated in one of the earliest relief operations in a CERV beneficiary community called Sitio Veterans in Quezon City.

‘Ondoy’ dumped 410 inches of rain in merely nine hours last September 27.  In comparison, Hurricane Katrina dumped “only” 380 inches over a longer period in Louisiana.

To date, more than 80 have been reported killed while dozens are still missing.  More than a hundred thousand victims are staying in evacuation centers in Manila and neighboring areas.

CERV accepts cash donations for victims of ‘Ondoy’.  Please email us at cerv_philippines@yahoo.com.ph for details.

WE LOST EVERYTHING IN A DAY

Nerve Macaspac


 We lost everything in a day.


We have lost the warmth
Of our homes
Of our kid’s laughter
Of our parent’s embrace.


We lost the fiesta of the sunset
The anticipation of the rush hour
The joy of coming home
The aroma of home-cooked dinner.


In that fearful long day,
Our tired clenched soul
Waded through the river of sadness.
There were no rocks to hold onto
Only our loved ones’ names
That we kept reciting
Between our gasps and strokes.


The flood rose higher
With more and more people
Plunging to look for their shores
Reciting names, ages, schools, offices,
Illnesses, highways, rooftops, buses.


With each word as heavy as the gravity of the rain.
With each word as heavy as the gravity of our tears.

= = = = =

The poet is a colleague of CERV director Raymund Villanueva.  He and his family were victims of ‘Ondoy’.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

"CERV celebrates fourth year; is optimistic about the future of volunteering in the Philippines"


CERV-Philippines is four years old this month. Despite ever-present challenges its volunteers continue to bring goodwill from around the globe to marginalized Filipino communities.

About two hundred fifty international volunteers, sponsors and donors have helped various communities and institutions in Metro Manila and the provinces of Romblon, Iloilo, Camarines Sur, Batangas and Rizal provinces.

Our volunteers build, repair and enhance public schools; conduct medical missions and dispense medical services; donate relief goods; school and medical supplies; nurture and plant thousands of mangrove seedlings; among many other humanitarian services.

Some volunteers even sponsor life-saving medical operations for beneficiary persons as well as support the education of several deserving Filipino students.

Established to be the Philippine partner of the New Zealand-based Global Volunteer Network CERV is now a partner of the newly-founded international placement organization Meaningful Volunteer, also based in New Zealand.  It is also in the process of studying some partnership applications from other similar global organizations.

CERV’s four-year journey is not without pains, however.  Barely a year into its operations it had to transfer from its original placement area in Iloilo to Romblon Province due mainly to communication glitches with the local government unit.  Its main placement site is now the town of San Agustin in Romblon where it has been operating the past three years.  Romblomanons still warmly welcome each new batch of volunteers who bring much-needed assistance.

 CERV is also suffering the negative effects of the current global financial crisis with several withdrawals by volunteers.  Still, we persevere by trying to introduce better programs in the hope that a good word-of-mouth would be an effective promotion strategy to counter the consequent decline of volunteer applications worldwide.

 We also hope that CERV not only maintains its current partners but forge tie-ups with more global volunteer recruitment networks to ensure the program’s continuity for the benefit of more communities in need.

 Come. Volunteer.  Donate.  Sponsor.  Help uplift more lives and, in the process, enhance yours.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Volunteer launches sponsorship program for 30 poor children


Former GVN volunteer Kathryn Nicholas (New Zealand) launched a new education sponsorship program to benefit 30 poor schoolchildren in San Agustin, RomblonPhilippines.
 Kathryn served as a school building repair volunteer in the Philippines from November 2008 to February of this year through GVN’s Philippines partner, the Center for Volunteerism in the Philippines (CERV-Philippines). 
 After her program, Kathryn immediately started a fund raising campaign with friends and family.  (I am) “talking to friends and family about the sponsorship program… and I'll talk to you soon when I've got more people committed to sponsoring a child” she wrote CERV-Philippines on Valentine’s Day.

The sponsorship succeeded in raising 900 Philippine pesos for each child, which will be spent for enrolment fees, uniforms, bags and school supplies.   The funds arrived in time for the start of the new academic year on June 1.
 The beneficiary children are:
 Barangay (Village) Cabolutan:
  1. Rose Gangga Manligas
  2. Blazy Joy Manligas
  3. Mary Ann Kalaw Manligas
 Barangay Sugod:
  1. John Paul Muleta
  2. Rachel Joy Muleta
  3. Patrick Muleta
  4. Jerich Muleta
  5. Mylene Muleta
  6. Aljon Ramon
  7. Lysa Ramon
  8. Grace Ramon
 Barangay Long Beach:
  1. Gerich Mores
  2. Jerin Mores
  3. Queena Mores
  4. Janilla Mores
  5. Janrey Palonpon
 Barangay Cawayan:
  1. Mary Joy Fabito Fruelda
  2. Jomerey Fabito
  3. Maria Fabito
  4. Jeremias Fabito
  5. Jomer Fabito
  6. Anthony Riano
  7. Gerald Riano
  8. Alvin Riano
  9. Aldrin Riano
  10. Royalyn Mindoro
  11. Argie Mindoro
  12. Marialyn Mindoro
  13. May Mindoro
  14. Marvin Mindoro
 Kathryn wrote that this is her way of expressing her gratitude.  “I had an awesome experience and am very grateful for all the help,” she wrote.
 Interested donors who wish to assist poor Filipino may donate through this links:
 http://www.gvnfoundation.org/programs/projects/philippines/ (tax-deductible in the United States) and
 or email CERV directly at cerv_philippines@yahoo.com.ph

Saturday, April 4, 2009

CERV distributes school supplies


Siblings Claudine and Loren Falcutila belong to a brood of nine.  The two are the only  ones in school while the rest have dropped out.  Both have to scale a hill on a muddy path and walk for hours everyday before they reach school and back.  Their father is a subsistence farmer but is ailing with hernia; their mother is a housewife.

 As the new Philippine academic year opened last month Claudine and Loren as well as 28 other school kids received new uniforms, shoes, bags and school supplies from former volunteer Kathryn Nicholas (New Zealand).  Kathryn and family are sponsoring 30 children on their schooling (read related story below).

 But several members of the original list of 30 have dropped out of school due to extreme poverty.  Kathryn and CERV then decided to look for other kids from impoverished families to sponsor.

 According to the National Statistic Office of the Philippines, four out of ten Filipino children do not finish elementary school due to poverty and inaccessibility of public schools in poor areas of the country.

 CERV accepts teaching volunteers to assist public school teachers and contribute to the education of 45 million school-age children.

 It also accepts donations through these links:

 http://www.gvnfoundation.org/programs/projects/philippines/ (tax-deductible in the United States) and

 https://www.fundraiseonline.co.nz/fundraise/makedonation.aspx?c=152

 or email CERV directly at cerv_philippines@yahoo.com.ph

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Sponsored child receives Best Pupil award


Late last year, Beth Marinelle “Bechay” P. Pacaldo received a very nice Christmas gift from one of CERV’s former volunteers.  Australian Rebecca “Bec” Snell offered to support her studies with some financial assistance—specifically, to help her with the fare and lunch money as well as some school supplies like books, bags, uniforms and shoes.

 The girl just made it all worthwhile for her benefactor.

 Bechay finishes the current school year at the top of her class.  She was awarded a certificate and a gold medal for being the “Best Pupil” in her class.  She is a grade four pupil of Camarin Elementary, a public school in Caloocan City-North.  In June of this year, she enters as an intermediate Grade 5 student in the same school.

 Bechay is just one of the several bright Filipino students who are being supported by former CERV volunteers in Iloilo, Romblon and Manila.

If you are interested in helping poor but deserving students in their education, contact us at cerv_philippines@yahoo.com.ph or visit http://www.gvnfoundation.org/programs/projects/philippines/.

Friday, March 27, 2009

One hot summer for volunteers


It’s been a very busy three months for CERV-Philippines in March, April and May.  Taking advantage of the country’s school summer break, volunteers rehabilitated two school buildings—one in Quezon City and another in San Agustin, Romblon.

CERV registered its biggest batch of volunteers with 28 MBA students from University of Chicago—Booth School of Business who practically rebuilt Area V Yakap Day Care Center in Barrio Commonwealth in Quezon City last March 21 and 22.

America’s future managers proved they could tackle backbreaking manual labor as they climbed roofs and crawled on all fours to get the job done.  What was once a run down school was given a new roof, ceiling, fans, paint job, fence, wash basins, plant boxes and school supplies.

The structure services 80 students everyday.  On weekdays and holidays, it also serves as a community health clinic, a community center, a feeding area and other purposes.  With repairs and enhancements expected to extend its serviceable life to another ten years, hundreds of children and thousands of poor residents are expected to benefit from the Illinois students’ gift.

In Romblon, a state college school building was totally rehabilitated by a succession of CERV volunteers.  Romblon State College is one of the poorest public colleges in an already poor country.  It wasn’t surprising that it hardly had money to spend on periodic paint jobs.

But thanks to Maria Cecilla Pereira (Brazil), Dagmar Gaber (Germany), Chelsea Tu (USA), Amber Marcinkoski (Canada), Lucas Frenz (Germany), Vittoria Offeddu (Italy), and Andrew Weiss (USA), the students would be greeted with a new painted school building with a new roof to boot.

It has been a hot summer in the Philippines the past months, but it was equalled by the warm feelings the volunteers get after completing a job meant to help communities in need.

Volunteer with and/or donate to CERV-Philippines for life-enriching programs and projects.  Send us a mail through cerv_philippines@yahoo.com.ph

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Top international school sends teacher, students to work as volunteers


Eleven students of Li Po Chun (LPC)-United World College (UWC) of Hong Kong served as the first batch of volunteers in CERV’s latest program—nurturing and planting native trees to rehabilitate Philippine biodiversity last March 7 to 13.

 Accompanied by their Physics teacher Magan Savant (India), David Kingman (Hong Kong/USA), Mathilda Destiny Shivute (Namibia), Jimmy Hu (Hong Kong), Diana Ainembabazi (Uganda), Nicholas Chow (Trinidad & Tobago), Ted Weber Gola (Brazil), Anu Noel (Estonia), Daniel Holy (Czech Republic), Michal Varga (Slovak Republic), Kayla Tam (Hong Kong), team leader Sara Estevez Cores (Spain) spent four days re-potting, watering and pruning thousands of native tree seedlings in Rodriguez, Rizal.  They also constructed additional sheds for the nursery and donated gardening to the facility operated by CERV’s environment partner Hortica Filipina Foundation, Inc.

 They also painted wooden play blocks and further enhanced the Busilak Day Care Center and Multi-Purpose Hall of Sitio Veterans in Quezon City.

 The students’ seven-day trip is a school-sanctioned activity in furtherance of UWC’s objective of exposing its international scholars to cultural diversity and giving them a chance to contribute to development programs.

 LPC is reputedly one of the top high schools in the world.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Formal Partnership formed between CERV Philippines and Meaningful Volunteer


Meaningful Volunteer and CERV Philippines are delighted to announce a formal partnership between the two organizations.  Raymund Villanueva signed on behalf of CERV and Malcolm Trevena signed on behalf of Meaningful Volunteer.

CERV Philippines has been placing volunteers in the Philippines since 2005 and has taken an active role in a wide range of educational, environmental and medicinal projects.

Meaningful Volunteer - formed in 2008 - will bring volunteers from all over the world to assist developing communities in the Philippines.

Meaningful Volunteer and CERV Philippines will work together on a number of projects including:


  1. The RYE School
    The RYE School will be a solar powered school initially offering English and Computer Science courses.  Children attending the school will participate in community cleanups to pay for their school fees.
  2. Project Lifecycle
    Project Lifecycle makes use of simple necklaces as a form of family planning.  The project attempts to reduce the average family size on the islands of Romblon.
  3. Project Mangrove
    Project Mangrove will replant mangrove trees around Tablas Island in the Romblon province.  Mangroves are a vital part of the eco-system, provides a place for fish to lay their eggs and forms a natural barrier against tsunamis and other environmental hazards.
  4. School Building
    Much of the infrastructure on Romblon was destroyed when Typhoon Frank hit.  The School Building project helps the community to rebuild.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

New tree-planting program


Starting this month, CERV will be accepting environmental volunteers interested in tree nursery work, tree planting and nurturing them to full maturity.

The project entails the re-potting, trimming and nurturing seedlings in nurseries. Starting in July of this year, the seedlings will be planted along the North Luzon and the Subic-Clark-Tarlac expressways (NLEX and SCTEX) north of the capital Manila.

The objectives of the new project include saving endangered Philippine native tree species and offsetting the carbon emissions of vehicles on these two highways.

The Philippines is a bio-diversity hotspot. Many of its rare dipterocarps have been over-harvested over centuries for their superior timber quality. Many trees have also been victimized by the intrusive alien tree species that crowd them out of their natural habitats.

By planting native tree species along the country’s biggest superhighways, they will also offset the carbon emissions of vehicles. Studies show that a mature tree can absorb the harmful emissions of seven vehicles.

Moreover, by planting them along NLEX and SCTEX, the trees will be secured from being cut down in the future.

Volunteers for this project shall live in Metro Manila or with host families near the nurseries and tree planting sites.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Where volunteering and fun are one


 In early 2005 Global Volunteer Network was looking to expand to more countries and offer wider choices to potential volunteers.  The Philippines has always been a sentimental option for GVN founder and CEO Colin as he spent time in this country as a volunteer himself before establishing the world’s biggest volunteer network.

 Fortuitously, GVN’s Nepal partner’s director was Filipino-born whose sisters are peasants and women’s rights workers.  A brother-in-law was secretary general of the biggest teachers’ federation in the Philippines.  She convinced them to put up a volunteer placement organization which would serve as an extension of their community development advocacies.

 Thus was born the Center for Volunteerism in the Philippines (CERV-Philippines) which took its first batch of volunteers in August 2005.  It was founded by the husband and wife team Raymund and Pom Villanueva and Eden Navia.  Raymund is the teacher leader, Pom is the women’s rights advocate and Eden is the peasants’ rights activist.  CERV has since then taken in three more members into its lean staff machinery to undertake various administrative and project implementation tasks.  Nearly five years hence, CERV remains a Philippine partner with only good prospects ahead.

 The Philippines is, to put it mildly, a very interesting place for volunteers.  Because of its 400+ years of colonial history the locals were initially loathed to allow volunteers to work under the heat of the tropical sun, especially White “guests”, believing that hard and manual labour are only for Filipinos and that members of the “Master Race” must take it easy.  Lavish attention in terms of the best accommodations and food were showered on them.  This led to some excesses on the part of some volunteers who mistook it as a license to do what they wanted, expecting to be readily excused every time.

 But most volunteers were equally determined to show the communities what volunteering was all about.  They worked harder than the locals and open-mindedly immersed themselves into the colourful and complicated Filipino culture.  After early hiccups, CERV volunteers have endeared themselves to the communities they serve.  The communities have grown to be more relaxed with volunteers from all over the world while managing to remain warm and hospitable.  This, without doubt, is the biggest strength of the Philippine volunteer experience.

 In less than five years volunteers have transformed many run-down schools into colourful and more functional learning institutions.  They have rebuilt new ones from the destructions of typhoons and decades of government neglect and corruption.  They have taught tens of thousands of students and provided primary health care to scores of poor patients.  They have delivered babies and took gravely-ill patients to bigger hospitals in the cities.  Volunteers have planted thousands of mangrove seedlings to jumpstart environmental rehabilitations of coastlines.  They have donated hundreds of relief goods in times of disasters and gave even more books, school supplies, medicines, even microscopes to schools that did not have them.  Volunteers have also assisted in providing life-saving and life-altering surgeries to two poor children while even more are being sponsored with their education.

 All these are reciprocated with genuine gratitude and long-lasting friendships.  Some volunteers have been made godparents in Catholic christening and weddings—effectively making them integral parts of the family.  They have been asked to keynote school graduations and serve as judges for school and beauty contests of various genders and age.  They have been invited to attend fiestas and festivals, family picnics, watch local and international soap operas on the telly, or to simply hang-out—an intimate Filipino predilection.

 Volunteering in the Philippines disappoints in terms of the romantic (sometimes misguided) notion that the placement areas should be abjectly destitute, even dangerous, communities.  They are nothing of the kind.  CERV’s  placement areas are—while definitely poor and in need of assistance—beautiful with crystal clear sea and fresh waters, good snorkelling sites, breathtaking views of verdant mountains and limestone cliffs, lots of fresh sea food,  and a very safe environment.  Coupled with the famous Filipino’s hospitality some volunteers may be excused to sometimes think they are vacationing for a substantial part of the time.

 For sure, there are things that could qualify as the “requisite hardship elements” in the volunteering experience.  Travel to and from the main placement area of Romblon is an 18-hour affair involving bus, ferry and tricycle rides.  Internet is grindingly slow—unless you travel on a boat for an hour to commercial broadband internet shops on another island.  There are regular power outages.  Volunteers must get used to eating rice at least three times a day.  And roosters start to crow long before sunrise (so earplugs may be a good idea for your first few nights on the island).  Volunteers must also accept the fact that the Philippines has many holidays that cause schools and clinics to suspend operations.

 But CERV is not making excuses for these.  The Philippines is what it is.  And based on its’ experience with hundreds of volunteers from all over the world this unique combination of work and play, volunteering and ‘vacationing’, being a ‘tourist’ and being a citizen of the world is just the “right mix.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Children Reaching Out


Children from halfway round the globe reached out to poor Filipino kids with a donation for the procurement of additional school supplies.  The 4-H Club, Maple Shade Chapter, of Holmen, Wisconsin, USA donated US$50 to buy crayons, glue, pen and coloring books to a community-operated day care center for urban poor children.

4-H in the United States is a youth organization administered by the Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES) of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) with the mission of "engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development." The four "H"s stand for Head, Heart, Hands, and Health. The organization serves over 6.5 million members in the United States from ages 5 to 19 in approximately 90,000 clubs.  4-H clubs and related organizations now exist in many other countries as well; the organization and administration varies from country to country.

The goal of 4-H is to develop citizenship, leadership, and life skills of youth through mostly experiential learning programs. Though typically thought of as an agriculturally focused organization as a result of its history, 4-H today focuses on citizenship, healthy living, and science, engineering and technology programs.

The Maple Shade Chapter of 4-H decided to make Busilak Day Care Center in Quezon City one of its beneficiaries after hearing a presentation made by former CERV volunteer Richard Kastenschmidt.

Richard is back for a short time in the Philippines, his third in as many years, to visit his beneficiary schools in Quezon City, Philippines.  As a volunteer in January 2007, Richard built cabinets to house multi-media equipment and installed exhaust fans in two day care centers.

In Christmas 2007, Richard and wife Renee decided to forego giving each other gifts to save up for regular annual donations to CERV programs.  In January 2008, Richard visited the Philippines for the second time to make the donations personally, in addition to buying Busilak Day Care Center’s first desktop computer.

This year, Richard donated a laptop computer to be used as a teaching aid to day care, elementary and high school students in poor communities around Metro Manila.  He also donated a mobile internet device to make it easier for the students to conduct research on the internet for school projects and assignments.  He and Renee also made a “Christmas Gift” donation for the second straight year.

Richard saw and was impressed by the great accomplishments of the community organizations that operate Busilak.  From a door and window-less shed of rough concrete, the center is now housed in a three-storey building.  The first floor serves as the classroom; the second floor shall serve as a library and health clinic; and the third floor shall be a small activity center.  This small building is the same structure painted by Australian engineer Scott Dennis.

Richard is a retired teacher while Renee is still teaching.  Aside from their shared passion for motorcycling, they also share in the deep gratitude of many children beneficiaries in poor communities in the Philippines.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

CERV receives grant from Australian company


Australian company BHP Billiton awarded CERV with an AUS$1,800 grant in support of its various projects in Quezon City.

The said donation is part of the company’s Matched Giving Program through Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) Australia.

This program provides an incentive matching the active involvement of its employees in community organizations whether by volunteering, fund-raising or cash donations (including payroll-giving).

CAF, for its part, is an international not-for-profit organization with long-standing experience in the provision, management and administration of programs for Corporate Community Involvement and BHP Billiton has outsourced their administration of this program to CAF-Australia.

CERV was recommended to be a grant recipient by BHP Billiton engineer Scott Dennis who volunteered last December 2008 in the school building maintenance program.  (Scroll down for related story on volunteers Scott Dennis and Jennifer Duncombe.)

CERV is open to other grants and donations to benefit poor Filipino communities in Quezon City and Romblon Province through these links:  Interested donors who wish to assist poor Filipino may donate through this links: http://www.gvnfoundation.org/programs/projects/philippines/ (tax-deductible in the United States) and https://www.fundraiseonline.co.nz/fundraise/makedonation.aspx?c=152.  You may also email CERV directly at cerv_philippines@yahoo.com.ph