Mothers: Amidst ruins of Typhoon Pablo
IT was dark when I and my two little daughters
went out of a mall in Panabo City, Davao del Norte on a December weekend. I bought them dress and gifts for their
Christmas Party. Crescent moon appeared
shining behind dark clouds partly lit by few stars.
I clutched
my daughters as I looked at the moon which brought memories of typhoon Pablo displaced
mothers and their children in badly hit towns in Davao Oriental and in Compostela
Valley. Poignant thoughts crossed my mind.
My fellow
mothers in the typhoon-struck areas
could also be looking at the same moon, with their children
beside them. We could be thinking the
same for our children: shield them from harm. However, we’re on different
places, going through different situation.
My place was spared from the tragic blow of typhoon Pablo. My children were saved from a horrible
experience.
My mind flashed back the faces of women and
children at evacuation centers, in relief distribution areas, and along the
streets in severely typhoon-hit areas. I saw them face to face during the media visit organized by Philippine
Information Agency XI and Radyo ng Bayan.
We went to Davao Oriental east coast towns of
Baganga and Cateel, a week after super Typhoon Pablo made a landfall.
She wore
melancholic face the night before embarking on that trip with with PIA Regional
Director Efren Elbanbuena. She tried to keep her feelings from the media
visitors. However, on the day Tyhoon Pablo struck her province (Dec. 04), she confided feeling “frustrated”, “devastated” and totally
saddened especially when she learned
that the Manurigao bridge which she hoped to lead her, right on that day, to
Baganga, Cateel and Boston, had collapsed.
Indeed,
there was no way she could cross it as 80 percent of the bridge was swept
away by the strong surge of floodwaters.
The destruction could still be evidently
seen during the media visit. The remaining portion of the Manurigao Bridge was partly buried under debris of uprooted
trees and logs.
With no
other means of crossing the river, the
media visitors, few of whom were women,
took a boat ride to get to Baganga from a boundary in Caraga. They took the
same route that everyone had to pass through
without exemption just to get to the severely affected east coast towns of Baganga and Cateel. (Boston can be
accessed through Lingig, Surigao del Sur).
At the first stop of the media visit
in Barangay Baculin, Baganga, a young mother was seen carrying a neo-natal baby,
queuing for food relief. She told her story
about how she and her husband with their child hid amidst ruins of collapsed
houses, but still survived the raging storm.
Another
scene showed elderly women joining the file of men, and of young and middle
aged women lining up for food assistance. One of them said she had witnessed how
Typhoon Pablo’s twirling wind struck a coconut tree with its fiery blow released
in such a force she had never before seen in her lifetime.
“May
dalang kalayo ang bagyo. Nagliyok nga dulum nga may kalayo sa tunga. (The
typhoon brought fire. It was twirling in
gloom with fire at its center). Tan-awa
ang dahon sa lubi. Dili na dayon mamatay pero nangalaya nga murag sunog. (Look at the leaves of the coconut trees.
Usually, they would not easily wither but they do; they’re seemingly burned.),”
one said.
“Pagkusog
sa hangin, nanghigda mi sa yuta para dili mi mapalid. (When the wind blew hard, we lay on the
ground so we won’t get swept away.) Nagliyok
ang dulum, murag may baga sa
tunga. (It was twirling in gloom, seemingly with a smoldering ember), she said.
A mother and her husband together with their six little children (the
youngest was four months old) ran fast
to an open ground after their house
collapsed under Typhoon Pablo’s heavy blow. They ducked, tightly clutching their
children, to evade the heavy whip and deafening gust of Typhoon Pablo.
“Sakit
sa panit ang iyang hangin kay may dalang gagmayng bato, dahon, abog. Nabungol ko sa kakusog sa iyang huyop. (Its blow was hurting because it brought
along pieces of pebbles, leaves, dusts. I got deaf of its gustiness.),” said
one woman .
When we finally reached Cateel, women stood out in number of typhoon victims
waiting for relief distribution and for
release of cash assistance from Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Programan (4Ps).
They sat under tarpaulin tents set up at
the town plaza which was in a mess of
debris tossed by the typhoon.
Some were with their fellow women from their neighborhood. Others were tugging along their children
while there were those carrying their babies.
Each had a tale about the horrible experience and each coughed out a complaint of not enough share
of food and non-food assistance.
“Unsaon
na lang namo ni pag-uli nga dili pa man diay i-release ang kwarta. Namaylo lang
ko pamasahe. (How can I possibly go back home; the money is yet to be
released. I borrowed my fare in getting
here),” one woman said of her 4Ps conditional cash assistance.
“Wala
gipanghatag ang tarpaulin sa among lugar
kay kulang pa daw; dili daw maapod. (The tarps were not distributed in our
place because there aren’t not enough
for everyone), “ another one said.
“Dili
mi hatagan ug food packs here kay
sa barangay ra daw ipanghatag. (We’re not given food packs here ; were told
to get our share at the barangay),” said another.
Their complaints are
common elsewhere in severely affected towns. They are ubiquitous during distribution of food
relief and of Noche Buena packs, whether in public places or in small church
communities. They are at the backdrop of
every shattered house; the hovering spirit of
every typhoon-displaced families.
They continuously look for means to sustain food for their children. They are the mothers. (Jeanevive Duron-Abangan, PIA XI)
