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	<title>Little Notes &#187; OFW</title>
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	<description>Blog of Susan &#34;Toots&#34; Ople, OFW and Labor Advocate in the Philippines</description>
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		<title>God was in the room</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/god-was-in-the-room/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Jan 2012 01:00:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Panorama Magazine Columns]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Nanay Edith Langamin forwarded a text she got from Atty. Ira Pozon of the Office of the Vice-President to my mobile phone. It said that the Vice-President would like to meet with her regarding the case of her son, Jonard, who is on Saudi Arabia’s death row. The meeting was to be held Wednesday, January [...]]]></description>
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Nanay Edith Langamin forwarded a text she got from Atty. Ira Pozon of the Office of the Vice-President to my mobile phone. It said that the Vice-President would like to meet with her regarding the case of her son, Jonard, who is on Saudi Arabia’s death row. The meeting was to be held Wednesday, January 4 at the Coconut Palace.</p>
<p>“Ma’am Toots, pakisamahan po ako,” Nanay Edith said. The Blas F. Ople Center, a nonprofit organization, which I head, has been helping Nanay Edith follow-up on her son’s case since April 2011. At that time, news reporter Jeff Canoy was doing a documentary on the lives of OFWs. Jeff’’s able researcher, Cherrie Ongtengco, fetched Nanay Edith at her home in Caloocan City for that eventful morning meeting.</p>
<p>It was 10.30 am, Wednesday. We motored from the Ople Center to the spacious Coconut Palace by the bay. Nanay Edith brought along her sister, Rina. At the entrance of the Vice-President’s wooden palace was Atty. Ira Pozon, the person tasked with looking after sensitive OFW cases. His handshake was warm, as was his smile. Nanay Edith’s heart fluttered with anticipation.</p>
<p>We were shown into a room. Already seated were Vice-President Jejomar Binay, his adviser, former Ambassador Jun Lozada, OWWA Administrator Carmelita Dimzon, and Robert Mendoza, the father of Robertson Mendoza, who was killed by Jonard Langamin during an altercation on May 5, 2008. Both the Mendoza and Langamin families were unaware that the meeting would involve both parties. However, Nanay Edith and Ka Bert have met twice before. Ka Bert is a softspoken man with a good heart who had told me once before that he bore no grudge against Jonard.</p>
<p>The entire group moved to the Vice-President’s office where there was a comfortable set of sofas facing each other, and three chairs commanding the front. On those three chairs sat Administrator Dimzon, Ambassador Lozada and with the Vice-President right in the middle. The Mendoza family sat to his left and Nanay Edith, her sister, Rina, DFA’s Ambassador Eric Endaya of the Office of Undersecretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs (OUMWA) and I were seated opposite them.</p>
<p>For three years, Nanay Edith had been following up her son’s case. Blood money has been set at the equivalent of Php5 million. Edith and her husband sell fishball and sweet corn at the Baliuag Bus Terminal in Caloocan City. Prior to that meeting, the Langamins were able to raise just Php 30,000, from money chipped in by OFW families and a few anonymous donors. During that Wednesday morning, we learned that Jonard was to be executed on March 2012. </p>
<p>Vice-President Jejomar Binay spoke with a soft voice, and every word he uttered was measured with tact and diplomacy especially towards the aggrieved family. He opened the meeting with an appeal to not dwell on the past and instead focus on how both families could move on. He briefed us about the process regarding blood money cases. He assured Robert Mendoza that the government has taken cognizance of his family’s grief and loss. The Vice-President steered the conversation to the plight of Jonard Langamin and the urgent need for a solution prior to March. He asked Ka Bert in the softest and most gentle manner possible, whether he would be able to forgive Jonard and to put such act of forgiveness in writing. After a few quiet heartbeats, Ka Bert, who was looking down at that time, nodded yes.</p>
<p>The intensity of that moment shall stay with me forever. While the Vice-President and Ambassador Endaya of the DFA were discussing procedures, Nanay Edith leaped out of the sofa and crossed over to Ka Bert’s side and knelt before him. Her body shook with tears, emotions etched on her face like a glass sculpture. The room itself was suffused with joy pouring out from Edith’s grateful heart. Three years, that case was unresolved. It took ten minutes on that fateful Wednesday morning, for Jonard Langamin’s life to be spared. God was in the room.</p>
<p>Later that day, I watched the news and saw Bert Mendoza explaining why he decided to formally forgive Jonard. “I asked my son for a sign. I said that if I woke up early on Wednesday with a light feeling, that would be a sign from Robertson that all must be forgiven.” And yes, he did.</p>
<p>What now remains is for the Department of Foreign Affairs to send the letter of forgiveness signed by Robert Mendoza, as the patriarch of the family, to the Philippine Embassy which shall then formallly present this to the Saudi court. What is important is that Jonard’s life has been spared. What is inspiring was how Ka Bert found freedom in forgiveness. I wish the Langamin and Mendoza families the best of luck in their new lives and I thank Vice-President Binay and the DFA for resolving this case. (Send comments to toots.ople@yahoo.com. Follow me on Twitter, www.twitter.com/susanople.)</p>
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		<title>Common sense, in absentia</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/common-sense-in-absentia/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jan 2012 01:00:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Over the holidays, I have accumulated vignettes from overseas Filipino workers on vacation from their countries of work. Having been exposed to more stable governance, reliable services, and compatible systems, these Filipino expatriates would lament the lack of common sense in our own red tape-infested, messy and disjointed procedures and policies. Fernan Santos, a regular [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="socialize-in-content" style="float:right;"><div class="socialize-in-button socialize-in-button-vertical"><script type="text/javascript">
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Over the holidays, I have accumulated vignettes from overseas Filipino workers on vacation from their countries of work. Having been exposed to more stable governance, reliable services, and compatible systems, these Filipino expatriates would lament the lack of common sense in our own red tape-infested, messy and disjointed procedures and policies.</p>
<p>Fernan Santos, a regular chatter at the online chatroom of the daily Bantay OFW radio program over DZXL told me that he was actually called a “criminal” by a Bureau of Immigration agent at our international airport because he had a namesake on the NBI’s list of fugitives. After showing his own NBI clearance, employment contract and other papers proving that he was and had always been an overseas worker, the officer concerned relented but never apologized.</p>
<p>Fernan said that common sense would have long dictated that the Bureau of Immigration and the National Bureau of Investigation which are both under the jurisdiction of the Department of Justice have a common database that is regularly revisited by both institutions. In this way, my OFW friend from Saudi added, the humiliation of being held and questioned because of bearing a similar name to a wanted person would be minimized or prevented. </p>
<p>Resistance has replaced common sense in the way the records of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration and Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration remain devoid of compatibility. Both offices belong to one department but despite numerous crises abroad affecting thousands of OFWs, they each have their own databases unconnected by any digital bridge or software that would make timely search and verification procedures easier and faster to undertake.</p>
<p>If you look at how the work of different offices and agencies in government often overlap and converge, one is aghast at how simplified procedures are lost in translation and interpretation of various mandates and policies though the constituents may be one and the same. </p>
<p>“Archers”, an OFW based in Singapore, lamented how migrant workers are being charged mandatory membership in PhilHealth as if they were here and able to access all the benefits accruing to local workers. “Our company is obliged to provide us with health insurance so we barely are able to use our PhilHealth membership and yet, the agency wants to even increase our fees.”<br />
Last December 15, the PhilHealth Board issued Circular No. 022 that would raise the contributions of OFW members from the current Php900 to Php1,200 in January then to Php2,400 in July of 2012. This two-step increase was done without prior consultations or notice to the public or the sector concerned. Common sense would have dictated that given President Aquino’s vow of consultations and transparency, the Board would at least have given notice to its members about the planned increase. Such lack of common sense is lamentable given the institution’s role of promoting good health without jeopardizing the otherwise healthy relationship it has with the OFW sector.</p>
<p>During a pre-New Year lunch at DZXL with our OFW friends, I also overheard one of them lamenting the proliferation of courtesy lanes in frontline agencies such as the POEA, DFA Consular Section, and even the Bureau of Immigration (for a certificate to clear one’s name for travel). “Courtesy lanes have become an incentive for laziness, requiring a customer to pay more to for efficient service,” he lamented. Others chimed in, saying that in countries such as Singapore and Saudi Arabia, one goes through the same lanes as others, shelling out predictable and reasonable rates, without hassle. </p>
<p>All these lamentations from our modern-day heroes remind me of a conversation I had with a Filipino diplomat assigned to a predominantly Muslim country. He lamented that while the Philippine Embassy and Filipino community leaders promote the Philippines as a tourist destination, they are unable to answer some basic questions from potential Muslim tourists. For example, does government even have a list of restaurants and hotels across the country that can provide Halal-certified food? We also do not have separate prayer rooms for men and women from Muslim countries in government offices, malls and tourist sites. We are insensitive to the needs of these Muslim tourists and yet we are surrounded by two major Muslim countries in Malaysia and Indonesia. </p>
<p>Perhaps we need a session or two to round up representatives from different sectors to just examine how uncommon common sense has become in the roll-out of various government services and projects. I, for one, would like to volunteer the involvement of the following OFWs and OFW relatives in such discussions: Fernan Santos, Ricky Tolentino, Rico Reyes, Nadene Pechayo, Eric Canlas and his wife, Raquel, Arnel Ragel. They comprise part of our regular chatters group at DZXL where my co-anchor Buddy Oberas and I maintain a two-hour public service program for OFWs.</p>
<p>Governance is much better when little things get solved. It pays to “shrink the change” rather than wait for entire mountains to move themselves. The more common sense fades away in governance, the higher the cost in public trust. (Send comments to toots.ople@yahoo.com. Follow me on Twitter via www.twitter.com/susanople)</p>
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		<title>Goodbye, 2011!</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/goodbye-2011/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/goodbye-2011/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 2012 02:00:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Like clothes on fire, we just couldn’t wait to shed 2011 fast enough. That was the year of major quakes, unbelievable tsunamis, fast-rising floods and rainfalls so voluminous that the earth could no longer absorb every drop. That was the year when the peso grew stronger diminishing the buying capacity of every dollar remitted from [...]]]></description>
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Like clothes on fire, we just couldn’t wait to shed 2011 fast enough. That was the year of major quakes, unbelievable tsunamis, fast-rising floods and rainfalls so voluminous that the earth could no longer absorb every drop. That was the year when the peso grew stronger diminishing the buying capacity of every dollar remitted from abroad. That was also the year when President Aquino better defined himself as a leader who means business when running after those who in his mind and heart have long betrayed the public’s trust. 2011 was the year when the Liberal Party as the administration party showed real muscle even when public opinion stood divided as to how it was flexed.</p>
<p>December 2011 was the year when Christmas became a sad and mute witness to entire villages swept away, to families shrunk by the cold, wet, muddy floods that woke them up to a living nightmare. The cities of Iligan and Cagayan de Oro would never greet December with the same kind of enthusiasm as before. Never, never again would a Christmas tree be but just a tree adorned with lights and ornaments in the flood victims’ eyes. December in 2012 will mark the first death anniversary of over a thousand dead and several more missing in these calamity-stricken areas.</p>
<p>2011 also bore witness to the execution of four Filipino drug mules in China and thousands more trafficked to other parts of the world. Let’s hope that 2012 will not produce more of the same death row cases. Let’s pray that 2012 will be remembered for the creation of a record-breaking number of jobs here at home because of unstoppable foray of investments and tourist arrivals into our shores. </p>
<p>For certain individuals, 2011 was a golden year. Congressman Manny Pacquiao ended the year that was with a new yacht, symbolic of his winning streak and marketing savvy. Beauty queens Venus Raj and Gwendolyn Ruais proved to the world the beauty-and-brains combination that resides in the Filipina. Filipino-American Robin Lim became CNN Hero of the Year for starting birthing clinics in Indonesia. Vice-President and presidential adviser on OFW affairs Jejomar Binay soared high in popularity and trust ratings as did the President himself. Justice Secretary Leila de Lima has moved up in the public’s esteem as a senatorial choice in 2013, and as a Cabinet Secretary with guts. </p>
<p>On the overseas employment front, as I write this, several OFW groups are up in arms because of a PhilHealth circular raising the premiums of almost all workers particularly migrant workers who would soon be paying 150% more than the 2011 rate of Php 900. Workers employed in Libya have slowly been returning with the partial lifting of the deployment ban while those in Syria are caught in the whirlwind of political protests and the abrupt raising of alert levels by the Department of Foreign Affairs. 2011 was the year when 41 countries were slated to be banned as labor-receiving countries on the basis of Republic Act no. 10022 had it not been for too many adverse reactions that led the DFA to reconsider its recommendations.</p>
<p>It would be hard to describe everything that happened in 2011. Suffice it to say that it had been a tough year that saw the world economy in shambles, despots removed through regime changes spurred on by social media, the passing of a creative technology genius by the name of Steve Jobs, earthquake after earthquake, flood after flood, and a nuclear incident that spooked the world. And those are just the events that transpired in front of news media. </p>
<p>We look forward to 2012 and pray that it would be the exact opposite of the Mayan prophecy: boom, not doom; new beginnings, and not the end of the world. But if there was anything that 2011 taught us, it was all about resiliency. That what we experienced in the year that was could only make us stronger, fitter, and more prepared for the year that has yet to unfold. Our biggest folly would be to shrug off all the lessons that 2011 wanted to teach us because we are simply too smug for our own good.</p>
<p>On a personal note, the Blas F. Ople Center and Our Times would like to thank all the people who have reacted to our advocacy for OFWs, and to our column; those who bothered to send e-mails and who read our articles on quiet Sundays. Special thanks to the management and editorial staff of Manila Bulletin Group of Publications. I wish also to thank my staff at the Ople Center: Jenny, Jolly, Jeff, Mark, Rayza, Dennis, Loloy and Fort, of course. A special thanks also to those who supported our recent Happy OFW Christmas event: Pag-IBIG Fund, Philam Life, Pagcor, SSS, PhilHealth, DBP, I-Remit, MG Forex Corporation, NYK-Fil Ship Management, Sun West and Century Properties, Inc. To WhiteBoard, you know who you are. Thanks to all and happy New Year everyone!</p>
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		<title>Christmas Love</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/christmas-love/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Dec 2011 02:00:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Today, my mother, Susana, my siblings as well as my daughter and I, will have lunch together at my brother’s condo unit in Quezon City. Each sub-family will bring food to share, and I am quite sure that my Kuya Bulos in Los Angeles, California and our eldest brother, Luis, who is based in Geneva, [...]]]></description>
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Today, my mother, Susana, my siblings as well as my daughter and I, will have lunch together at my brother’s condo unit in Quezon City. Each sub-family will bring food to share, and I am quite sure that my Kuya Bulos in Los Angeles, California and our eldest brother, Luis, who is based in Geneva, Switzerland, will call my mom on her mobile phone which will then get passed around like a box of yummy chocolates.</p>
<p>Such happy family reunions that straddle both the virtual and non-digital worlds make the Christmas holiday season really a joy to behold. One can tell from the constant uploading and tagging of photos on Facebook that this season has been both busy and happy, celebrated the Filipino way. </p>
<p>Today, we give thanks for the birth of our redeemer, Jesus Christ, in the most humble of places – a manger strewn with straw. After invoking His name in prayer, we then fit and fill our plates with food that we could afford, and exchange gifts with people closest to our hearts. The more lucky ones would have gifts ready for mass delivery, as a business strategy or as a marketing ploy. Politicians would have separate lists for media friends, party-mates, benefactors, staff, and next-of-kin. </p>
<p>This Christmas, I have my own modest list of special wishes for certain people and institutions:</p>
<p>1.	Jonard Langamin and his mother Edith – I pray and hope that the Langamin family would be able to raise the much needed Php 5-million in blood money being required of them so that 27-year old Jonard would not be executed in Saudi Arabia. Jonard deeply regrets his crime, and the aggrieved family, also Filipinos, have long forgiven him for killing their loved one during a heated altercation aboard a ship docked near Saudi Arabia. Nanay Edith and her husband sell fishball and sweet corn for a living. The aggrieved family is also of modest means. Raising Php 5-million to save Jonard from a daily income of P200/day is next to impossible. For those interested in helping out the Langamin family, here is Nanay Edith’s number: +639994307853.I also offer the same prayers for other OFWs on Saudi’s death row like Dondon Lanuza, Joselito Zapanta, and five others.</p>
<p>2.	President Benigno Simeon Aquino III – the year ahead will be a difficult one mainly due to an ailing world economy. My special wish for the President is that he acquires the gift of patience because the high road towards positive change will never be easy. I also pray for discernment and wisdom for PNoy and his closest advisers, because though we are their bosses, our voices are often discordant, and public opinion can be a product of herd mentality, rather than in-depth intellectual, spiritual, and emotional reflection. In the end, we need to rely just as much on his administration’s vision for the country that must come with a clear set of priorities on what must be done in the next five years.</p>
<p>3.	Members of the Senate – may their togas remind them of the need to study hard for the impeachment trial and be led by convictions rather than party affiliations, or the clarion call of a 2013 re-election. I wish for them the gift of discernment because the trial involves not just one man, but the credibility of an entire institution, and the stability of an entire nation as well. May they do their jobs well.</p>
<p>4.	Business leaders and top 100 companies – My Christmas wish for them is good karma based on their respective corporate social responsibility creed and actions; that fate and good fortune shine upon those who know how to give and pay back, from the heart, and serve as community partners and allies of civil society groups and their own employees. My special thanks go to private companies and government institutions like Pag-Ibig, PhilHealth, SSS, and DBP that sponsored our Happy OFW Christmas event last December 16. </p>
<p>5.	OFWs and Local Workers – My Christmas wish is for our workers here and abroad to rise above poverty and mediocrity, and discover the path of personal fulfilment by being able to do what they love most. I pray that there are lesser victims of human trafficking and drug trafficking in 2012.  I also pray and wish for greater absorption of workers by our local economy, in jobs that are not contractual in nature, so that our middle class can expand and flourish.</p>
<p>Love is the currency of the yuletide season, and it is difficult not to smile despite aching pockets and horrific traffic jams. The air itself is made light with affection, because kindness is an emotion made viral particularly on Christmas Day.</p>
<p>With this, let me rest my keyboard and end this piece by wishing you the most joyous Christmas ever! May your dreams for your family and for yourself come true! Thank you for being a part of “Our Times” this Christmas. (Send comments to toots.ople@yahoo.com. Follow me on Twitter via www.twitter.com/susanople.)</p>
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		<title>Heroes</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/heroes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/heroes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Oct 2011 02:23:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Panorama Magazine Columns]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Labor Attache Nasser Mustafa is a hero. While in Libya, he fulfilled his promise to bring home two Filipino domestic workers being held against their will by their employer, deposed Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s niece. While the Department of Foreign Affairs had enunciated its position to wait for the Libyan transition council to take over [...]]]></description>
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Labor Attache Nasser Mustafa is a hero.  While in Libya, he fulfilled his promise to bring home two Filipino domestic workers being held against their will by their employer, deposed Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s niece. While the Department of Foreign Affairs had enunciated its position to wait for the Libyan transition council to take over the country’s leadership, Labor Attache Mustafa worked out a bold rescue plan.</p>
<p>What was remarkable about his feat is the modesty attached to it. An initial statement issued by the Department of Foreign Affairs regarding the Philippine Embassy’s rescue mission conjured images of an elaborate and grandiose plan, citing the use of two embassy teams and a pit stop at the embassy itself. That someone even felt compelled to issue such a premature and half-baked statement without proper coordination with the labor department smacks of territorial assertion rather than the more benign country team approach.</p>
<p>Here are some details about the actual rescue as gathered by this writer: </p>
<p>•	Mary Ann and Diana Jill have long wanted to come home and feared for their lives as the conflict in Libya intensified but their  employer, a niece of Col. Gadhafi, refused to let them go.<br />
•	It took ten days for Labor Attache Mustafa to locate the actual residence of Diana’s employer which at times was surrounded by rebel forces.<br />
•	At around 6.30 AM of September 19 (Manila time), Labor Attache Nasser Mustafa, embassy driver Alih Mariwa and his Libyan friend and interpreter Awal Ajanti rescued Diana Jill Rivera and Mary Ann Ducos from their Libyan employers.<br />
•	On the morning of the rescue, Mustafa was in touch with the two women via mobile phone and he requested Mary Ann to go up the roof and wave to him as a confirmation that he was in front of the right house.<br />
•	While Mary Ann was on top of the roof, Diana Jill was keeping guard on the ground. She made sure that her two little wards were asleep and that none of the armed guards and her employers were awake.<br />
•	The two left the house using the front gate, leaving behind all their belongings, as instructed by the labor attaché.<br />
•	Once they were in the embassy car, Labor Attache Mustafa instructed Alih Mariwa to drive as fast as he could away from the house and towards the Tunisian border.<br />
•	Diana Jill and Mary Ann were able to cross the border from Libya to Tunisia using travel documents prepared by the Philippine Embassy.</p>
<p>On his Facebook page, two days after the daring rescue, Labor Attache Mustafa posted this comment: “Real success is finding your life’s work in the work that you love.” Bravo Labatt Nash Mustafa for your heroism and leadership in bringing our two OFWs home!<br />
Upon hearing of Mustafa’s efforts, civil society groups allied with the Blas F. Ople Policy Center were quick to come together and plan a tribute dinner for him. Jun Aguilar of the Filipino Migrant Workers’ Group said that the labor attache’s three-man team breathe life to President Aquino’s inaugural directive of an even more responsive DFA and DoLE for distressed OFWs.</p>
<p>There are more people to thank for working behind the scenes and also for assuring the two OFWs of new and better beginnings. First dibs go to Jenny Rivera who tirelessly worked for the freedom of her sister, Diana Jill. Her persistence in going to DoLE, the DFA, and OWWA to follow up her sister’s case led her to become the Ople Center’s liaison officer. Labor Attache Mustafa did the actual rescue but it was Jenny’s fighting spirit that kept that option open from February to September of this year.</p>
<p>Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Rafael Seguis accommodated all our requests, and was ever present at the DFA whenever Jenny had information to share. We at the Ople Center also acknowledge the help of the staff and officers at the Office of the Undersecretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs. Special thanks go to Vice-President Jejomar Binay who had comforted Jenny in the past and kept his promise of making sure that her sister’s case would not be forgotten.</p>
<p>James Concepcion, president of the Days Hotel and Cecille Tan, vice president for operations, have assured Diana Jill and Mary Ann that they could train and work for the Days Hotel in Cebu City. Such a generous job offer gave both OFWs real hope after months of despair and danger in the Gadhafi compound. Special thanks also to Jane Ampeloquio of Emergent Concept for willingly taking on the task of training these two household workers.</p>
<p>Upon their arrival in Manila, the two OFWs bonded with their families at the posh Midas Hotel where their weekend stay was sponsored by good friends, Zaldy and Mylene Co through my best friend Arleen Ong. Finally but never least, we offer perpetual thanks to the Lord who have yet to fail us in our mission to help distressed OFWs. He makes the impossible, simply possible. (Send your comments to toots.ople@yahoo.com. Follow me on Twitter via www.twitter.com/susanople. The Ople Center’s hotline is 8335337.)</p>
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		<title>Coming back home</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/coming-back-home/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/coming-back-home/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Aug 2011 03:07:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Panorama Magazine Columns]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Home is where you grew up, and where the amazing smell of childhood memories lives on forever. It is where you’d want to eternally rest someday, though hopefully not that soon – with the graves of family and friends just a whisper away. In my travels abroad, I have met Filipinos who thought and dreamt [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="socialize-in-content" style="float:right;"><div class="socialize-in-button socialize-in-button-vertical"><script type="text/javascript">
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Home is where you grew up, and where the amazing smell of childhood memories lives on forever. It is where you’d want to eternally rest someday, though hopefully not that soon – with the graves of family and friends just a whisper away.</p>
<p>In my travels abroad, I have met Filipinos who thought and dreamt of home like an ethereal rainbow, after a cold shower of rain. For them, the golden pot lies at its end, when weary bones could finally retire with full financial security. One’s journey to reach that pot has taken quite a few OFWs to places that one gets to read about only in Arabian fairy tales.</p>
<p>Still, the idea of home beckons and that thought is made easier by the prospects of having fallbacks ready once a migrant worker’s journey ends. It is in this light that I welcome the creation of a Php 2-Billion OFW Reintegration Fund by the Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration in partnership with the Development Bank of the Philippines and the Land Bank of the Philippines. This fund was launched with no less than the full support of President Benigno Simeon Aquino.</p>
<p>Under this program, a former or current OFW can borrow amounts ranging from Php 300,000 to Php 2 million, to put up a business of his or her own. The business loan is payable up to 7 years at an annual interest rate of 7.5%. People in business tell me that these terms are quite good, especially for a start-up enterprise. </p>
<p>What would it take for an OFW to obtain such a loan from OWWA? First, he or she must undergo a business orientation seminar from any of OWWA’s regional offices. This would prepare the applicant in formulating a feasibility study that is an essential step when putting up a business. The applicant only needs to show proof of previous or current OWWA membership.</p>
<p>From seminar mode, the OFW entrepreneur will be referred to the nearest Land Bank or DBP branch that would evaluate all of these applications. Approval would rise and fall depending on how carefully the business proposal was put together, because the Php 2-billion Reintegration Fund also needs to be sustainable.</p>
<p>Recently, the Blas F. Ople Center and the Sagip-OFW Program of Sen. Manny Villar together with the Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration’s National Reintegration Center for OFWs with the help of such corporations as Fortune Life, Seaoil and the Passenger Accident Management and Insurance Agency or PAMI launched its first ever OFW Reintegration Fair at the Star Mall along EDSA, Mandaluyong City. Special mention goes to DZXL Tatak RMN and DWIZ for serving as our media partners.</p>
<p>We expected around a hundred participants. Much to our surprise, a line has formed even before the doors of the Mall officially opened. One OFW said that he came all the way from Bataan just to listen to the talks of our resource persons. Our simple program started with an overview of the OWWA Reintegration Fund courtesy of Director Maria Luisa Reyes of the National Reintegration Center for OFWs. </p>
<p>It was followed by a reinvigorating talk by franchising guru and noted businessman Paul Tibig of V. Cargo. Myrna Padilla flew in from Davao City to inspire our OFWs and their families with a searing rendition of her life as a former domestic worker turned entrepreneur. Myrna is a spectacular example of the proverbial rags-to-riches story, as she now runs her own business process outsourcing company.</p>
<p>Former journalist and a friend of all, Peter Sing, gave our OFW friends a snapshot of what it takes to leave the safe cove of employment to foray into the more unpredictable waters of entrepreneurship. His personal advocacy is on savings and investments particularly among OFWs because his mother worked abroad to support her family as well.</p>
<p>Randell Tiongson who is a business columnist and registered financial planner anchored all the preceding discussions with pragmatic tips on financial security. Randell has been lecturing about financial security from Hong Kong to Singapore, and in different corners of the country.</p>
<p>Finally, our OFW Reintegration Fair ended on a high note with the prospective entrepreneurs asking our panelists from the Development Bank of the Philippines, Land Bank of the Philippines and OWWA.</p>
<p>Indeed, there are horizons to be explored beyond just leaving our shores. Windows on entrepreneurship have opened via the Reintegration Fund put together with the economic liberation of our overseas workers in mind.</p>
<p>We all have it in ourselves to define our lives. One cannot and should not be an OFW forever. But as in all things, going into business requires due diligence, perseverance, and the desire to learn endlessly, unceasingly along the way. It is for the adventurous heart and a detail-oriented mind. </p>
<p>My father once said that overseas employment is and should be just a temporary program. In the end, his dream was for foreign capital, technology and our world-class workforce to converge in an industrial explosion within our own geographic boundaries. </p>
<p>Today, we might just see that dream happen,  even without the foreign capital, as thousands of OFW families now turn to entrepreneurship as their roadmap to home. (Visit my blog at www.susanople.com. Follow me on Twitter via www.twitter.com/susanople. Add me on Facebook via www.facebook.com/susantootsople. Send your comments to toots.ople@yahoo.com)</p>
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		<title>Sustainability and the act of saving lives</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/sustainability-and-the-act-of-saving-lives/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/sustainability-and-the-act-of-saving-lives/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 31 Jul 2011 08:55:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[If you have the power to save a life, would you do it? Or do you set a limit on how much time, effort, and money you are willing to set aside before you even decide to act? That is the crux of the matter involving the creation of a technical working group to study [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="socialize-in-content" style="float:right;"><div class="socialize-in-button socialize-in-button-vertical"><script type="text/javascript">
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>If you have the power to save a life, would you do it? Or do you set a limit on how much time, effort, and money you are willing to set aside before you even decide to act? </p>
<p>That is the crux of the matter involving the creation of a technical working group to study what the administration’s policy should be when it comes to blood money involving overseas Filipino workers on death row.</p>
<p>The decision of the Office of the President to create a technical working group to study and create guidelines on cases involving blood money stemmed from unusually high amounts being required by aggrieved families. The Department of Foreign Affairs have raised the issue of sustainability in relation to requests for blood money.</p>
<p>But first, a definition of terms.</p>
<p>Qisas is a principle under the Shari’a or Islamic law that makes the actual perpetrator of a crime alone guilty, and alone liable to punishment. The punishment must be the exact equivalent of the crime, i.e. tooth for a tooth, life for a life. [5:45, The Holy Qur'an]</p>
<p>However, in consideration of the priceless value of human life, the Islamic law explicitly recommends the substitution of compensation on another plane — through the so-called “diyyah” or blood money compensation for the victim’s mandatory heirs.</p>
<p>Upon the acceptance of “diyyah”, a letter of forgiveness or “tanazul” is issued by the victim’s mandatory heirs.</p>
<p>Once the “tanazul” is issued, the private aspects of the case iareextinguished, and what is left is the public rights aspect of the case which can be waived by the King or Emir (head of state).</p>
<p>Without a “tanazul”, the King (in Saudi Arabia’s case) will never issue pardon or commute the sentence of the perpetrator. </p>
<p>As an OFW advocate, I believe that the technical working group should lose no time in fulfilling its mandate from the President. Time is of the essence considering that some of these cases involving OFWs on death row have been in the legal pipeline for several years. </p>
<p>The case of Dondon Lanuza for example is already a decade-old. Dondon was convicted of stabbing to death an Arab national. This year, for the very first time, the aggrieved family has signified willingness to consider blood money. The Saudi court had ruled that it would be up to the victim’s son to decide on the private aspect of this case when he reaches legal age (18) which would be sometime in 2015. </p>
<p>However, this rare window of opportunity may soon close unless the Lanuza family is able to resolve the issue of blood money amounting to millions of pesos. </p>
<p>My sincere belief is that the Aquino administration has no other recourse but to help families of OFWs on death row particularly in Saudi Arabia to raise the agreed upon “diyyah”. To discard or downplay previous arrangements because the costs are high and the question of sustainability has been raised, would lead to the diminution in the credibility of our own embassy in Riyadh and the Philippine government as a whole.</p>
<p>One must also note the spirit behind Section 27 of Republic Act No. 8042 otherwise known as the Migrant Workers’ Act of 1995:</p>
<p>“The protection of the Filipino migrant workers and the promotion of their welfare in particular, and the protection of the dignity and fundamental rights and freedom of the Filipino citizen abroad, in general, shall be the highest priority concerns of the Secretary of Foreign Affairs and the Philippine foreign service posts.”</p>
<p>In governance, there are matters that only the heart can see. In the case of these OFWs, the aggrieved families have already opened their hearts to the call of forgiveness. Calculating the “sustainability” in hearing such calls for rationalizing what is intrinsically emotional; putting boundaries and ceilings on a State’s capability to save lives.</p>
<p>I am not one to condone the crimes of the OFWs involved. They do not come begging with clean hands. But I must argue on the side of forgiveness and a second chance at reforms and restitution. </p>
<p>In the case of OFW Junard Langamin, he was 27 years old when he first stepped on the ship together with another OFW whose life Junard would soon take away. They left as friends but as the days went by and pressures at work continue to build up, the two Filipinos suddenly found themselves fighting below the ship’s deck. A knife was drawn, a life extinguished.</p>
<p>Junard’s mom is a peanut and corn vendor who wakes up at 5 o’clock every morning to push her cart from her home to the Baliuag Bus Terminal in Caloocan City. How can the Langamin family raise the amount of Php 5 million in exchange for Junard’s freedom without government’s help?</p>
<p>I urge the technical working group well in deciding which lives to save, and which to forego. (Follow me on Twitter via www.twitter.com/susanople. Send comments to toots.ople@yahoo.com)</p>
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		<title>Ople Center Reactions to the Taiwan Deportation Issue</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/ople-center-reactions-to-the-taiwan-deportation-issue/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/ople-center-reactions-to-the-taiwan-deportation-issue/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Feb 2011 04:28:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[News Release Blas F. Ople Policy Center February 10, 2010 NGO calls on PH to say less and do more to show appreciation for its friendship with Taiwan Former labor undersecretary and known OFW advocate Susan Ople called on the Aquino administration to bare its plans on how to mitigate the impact of further fall-out [...]]]></description>
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>News Release</p>
<p>Blas F. Ople Policy Center</p>
<p>February 10, 2010</p>
<p>NGO calls on PH to say less and do more to show appreciation for its friendship with Taiwan</p>
<p>Former labor undersecretary and known OFW advocate Susan Ople called on the Aquino administration to bare its plans on how to mitigate the impact of further fall-out from the ongoing row between the Philippines and Taiwan over the recent deportation of 24 Taiwanese nationals to mainland China.</p>
<p>The daughter of the late Foreign Affairs Secretary Blas F. Ople stressed that while the Philippine government continues to invoke its One-China policy, the fate of over 100,000 Filipino workers and their families back home hang in the balance.</p>
<p>&#8220;Are we truly prepared to walk the talk? What is our contingency plan once Taiwan decides not to renew the contracts of our workers? If we don&#8217;t even have one, then I appeal to government officials to come up with more nuanced and sober statements,&#8221;&#8216; Ople said, adding that the worsening rift is now causing Filipinos in Taiwan deep concern.</p>
<p>The head of the Blas F. Ople Policy Center, a non-government organization known for helping distressed OFWs, said that there are instances in the diplomatic world when the &#8220;&#8216;less talk-more action&#8217;&#8221; rule should be observed. &#8220;&#8216;To my mind, this is one such instance. Let our diplomats and private industry leaders sort this out with their counterparts as long-standing friends are wont to do, below the radar screen but always with deep respect and appreciation for each other.&#8221;&#8216;</p>
<p>The center pointed out the irony that billions of pesos are being poured in to finance conditional cash transfers to the poor yet the government seems to be too stingy in its statements extolling the mutually beneficial relations between Taiwan and the Philippines over the years that have led to decent jobs for hundreds of thousands of Filipinos.</p>
<p>&#8216;Low-skilled migrant workers in Taiwan including Filipinos earn at least twice, if not triple, the minimum wage in their homeland. Taiwan has been quite effective in promoting the rights of all workers including foreign workers. And while we adhere to the One-China policy as many other countries do, we should not fail to recognize and be grateful for the enormous contributions of the peoples and leadership of Taiwan to our country.&#8221;</p>
<p>The anti-human trafficking advocate noted that there may have been a coordination gap when the Bureau of Immigration failed to notify the Manila Economic and Cultural Office about the pending case involving 24 Taiwanese nationals. &#8216;This is not to cast aspersion on any single agency but simple courtesies do matter. Had the MECO and even our labor department been informed early on about this then perhaps a more amicable compromise could have been reached through diplomatic and private sector channels without compromising our foreign policy.&#8217; &#8221;</p>
<p>The lack of coordination between and among different agencies is apparent even with the post-deportation statements being issued by various officials.</p>
<p>Ople thus appealed to the Aquino administration: &#8220;&#8216;Speak with one voice, and deliver one clear and unified message.&#8221;&#8216; The NGO leader said that at this point, the government should simply refer all media inquiries about the Taiwan rift to the labor department, while making known the Philippines&#8217; desire to reach out to the people of Taiwan and engage in talks about mutual cooperation in the fight against transnational crime.</p>
<p>END</p>
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		<title>Year 2011</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/year-2011/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/year-2011/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Dec 2010 07:37:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I was born in the 60’s. I was too young to recall why an angry mob shooed the Beatles away from our airport but old enough to remember the soundtracks from such TV comedies as “M.A.S.H” and “Welcome Back, Kotter.” My father owned a blue Chevrolet Impala with a leather backseat big and wide enough [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="socialize-in-content" style="float:right;"><div class="socialize-in-button socialize-in-button-vertical"><script type="text/javascript">
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>I was born in the 60’s. I was too young to recall why an angry mob shooed the Beatles away from our airport but old enough to remember the soundtracks from such TV comedies as “M.A.S.H” and “Welcome Back, Kotter.” My father owned a blue Chevrolet Impala with a leather backseat big and wide enough to swallow me up. I imagined it as a spaceship, with its oversized built-in radio and a near-panoramic windshield. Soon enough, that car gave way to a succession of other vehicles – including a Ford Fierra that was so springy that my brothers and I had to hold on to something every time the tires hit a pothole.</p>
<p>My nieces and nephews don’t know any of these things – the Love Bus, music cartridges for car stereos, long-playing albums and 45 singles, Chocovim and Selecta fresh milk in bottles, foot-jumps and Chinese jackstones, Pepe Pimentel’s Kuwarta o Kahon, and a broadsheet known as the Daily Express. In that sense, I consider myself lucky because while these kids have technology on their side, the age group that I belong to has the context and content to go with it. At that time, our toys were either living creatures like spiders in a matchbox or inanimate objects that you need to push or drag around, or cut into pieces like clay. The music that we played had lyrics encased in complete sentences with commas and periods and not just telegraphic dashes and a sprinkling of Ahs and Ohs.</p>
<p>The simplicity of life then is worlds apart from the simplicity of life now. During my youth, it didn’t take a whole lot to make me smile, laugh, and giggle. Contentment was an ice cream cone bought at the sidewalk from our neighbourhood “sorbetero”. We walked to church for Sunday mass and came home with pan-de-coco in a brown bag. My brothers flew handmade kites called “boca-boca”. We owned two dogs, named Frito and Tootsie. My mother cooked our meals or decided what meals to serve. My father waited up for us when we were late in coming home. Our phones had dials; so did our television set.</p>
<p>Today, every television set in my townhouse has its matching remote control. All my music fit in a thumb-size IPOD shuffle. We use the Internet to check out movies to watch, and sometimes to order food for delivery. My daughter sends me an SMS when she’s out late at night, and vice-versa. My coffee is three-in-one, and my books are all on Kindle. My handwriting has gone bad but my typing skills would put a full-time administrative assistant to shame. Nowadays, contentment is an expensive fruity yoghurt sundae bought in a mall, in a tiny plastic cup.</p>
<p>If as a child, I’d been asked to describe the year 2011, I would have balked at such a challenge. Yet, here we all are. I am all grown up and expanding sideways with a daughter so wise and independent at the age of 25. I have more dogs than you have fingers. I never thought then that “broadband” would become one word and mean so much. We have face transplants, and liposuctions, and reality shows that depict it. They now give away houses and millions of pesos in a single game show that back in our time would just have the tallest refrigerator as a major door prize. I follow the news on Twitter, and meet friends on Facebook.</p>
<p>Looking back, it is no longer true that the only thing certain in life is death and taxes. The march of time is certain; it waits for no one yet we feel each step in our creaky joints, in the hazy glow of subdued memories. The kids out there would see 2011 emblazoned in the Starbucks planners that they worked hard to obtain, sticker by sticker. We, who are much older, see 2011 as an appreciation of life lived in a continuum, from birth to adulthood, from the dustbin of memories to the creation of new skills and experiences. It is amazing, this thing called life. No matter when lived and by whom, life is for us to either waste or nourish, regardless of what year it is.</p>
<p>Dear Readers, a new year is upon us. I wish you a year of contentment amid challenges and opportunities that would come your way. My father once said, “Pessimism is a state of mind but optimism is a strategy for living.” In my heart, I know that 2011 will be a good year for all of us. No matter how old or young you are, I pray that you open yourself to the best that this year has to offer. Happy New Year! (Send comments to <a href="mailto:toots.ople@yahoo.com">toots.ople@yahoo.com</a>. Follow me on Twitter via <a href="http://www.twitter.com/susanople">www.twitter.com/susanople</a>.</p>
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		<title>Merry Christmas!</title>
		<link>http://www.susanople.com/merry-christmas/</link>
		<comments>http://www.susanople.com/merry-christmas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Dec 2010 07:31:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan Ople</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Panorama Magazine Columns]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[human trafficking]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Millions of Filipinos are barely hanging on financially because this was a tough year for many of us. Whoever described poverty as an accumulation of missed opportunities nailed the truth. Ours is a resilient, hardworking race. Unfortunately, the society we live in is divided into two worlds- “the haves” and “don’t-haves”. Rarely do these two [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="socialize-in-content" style="float:right;"><div class="socialize-in-button socialize-in-button-vertical"><script type="text/javascript">
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			<script src="http://widgets.fbshare.me/files/fbshare.js"></script></div></div><p>Millions of Filipinos are barely hanging on financially because this was a tough year for many of us. Whoever described poverty as an accumulation of missed opportunities nailed the truth. Ours is a resilient, hardworking race. Unfortunately, the society we live in is divided into two worlds- “the haves” and “don’t-haves”. Rarely do these two worlds intersect. Except at Christmas.</p>
<p>Christmas is the season that unifies, harmonizes, and blends life streams into one single giving bloc of humanity. We are kinder at Christmas. We are more giving of ourselves at Christmas. We are more hopeful at Christmas. The inaccessible becomes accessible; the selfish becomes selfless; the sad becomes less sad; and people stingy with smiles, are more prone to curve their lips at the slightest prompting. This is why Christmas is the season that closes the year. Because no matter how horrific the entire year was for some people, love ends it beautifully through Christmas.</p>
<p>I remember growing up thinking that Christmas was always about gift-wrapped boxes and food galore. My work as an OFW advocate has tempered that belief a hundred-fold. Christmas is intrinsically about the celebration of faith and hope in mankind and the Divine Creator. Perhaps, it’s because the number of gifts one expects to receive as he or she grows older is in direct proportion to the number of friends and family still alive. Somehow, age does make for a more mellow understanding of how the world turns. In my prayers, I always say, “I lift everything up to you, Lord.” And I do. That simple line has given me my second wind during the most difficult times of my life. Faith is the perpetual gift of survival, and vice-versa.</p>
<p>Christmas is when the Lord looks at us from way up high with a twinkle in his eye and says, “Make me proud.” He knows that there is no better and more consistent time on earth than Christmas for us to gather together in His name to simply say, “Thank you, Lord.” No other time than now and no other message than that. Those who grumble about a less than joyous Christmas miss the point. This time it’s not about us – but all about Him. The best gift of all is to just being able to acknowledge Him in our lives.</p>
<p>Thus, the challenge is on how we can seek inspiration and aspiration from this golden season of love, peace, and charity. After all, Christmas comes only once a year. Here are some of my suggestions.</p>
<p>To the jobless multitudes out there who have more notices of disconnection than greeting cards in the mail, I say – keep the faith, stick close to family and friends, and do what you can to get the most smiles and laughter out of Christmas.</p>
<p>To the miserable wife, whose family is threatened by a spoiled, anonymous mistress, I say – give the other woman all the reasons to envy you this Christmas, because by doing so, you’ll be giving your man all the reasons to stay and never let go.</p>
<p>To the perpetually tired husband, struggling to keep the same lifestyle that the family has grown used to, I say – spend a full day doing something that makes you and you alone very, very happy because you deserve it as a solid provider all year long.</p>
<p>To children who belong to a broken home, I say – make this Christmas an occasion to make your siblings feel more loved than ever, and always know that whatever faults your parents have do not detract from your individual obligation to be good to yourself and to your siblings.</p>
<p>To the very rich and extremely famous, I say – make this Christmas not about you. Make it about the people who keep your households clean, your cars running, and your office a delight to go to. Humility must be the Christmas wreath on your door; and, generosity must be the song that you hum throughout the season.</p>
<p>To the overseas workers yearning for family and home, I say – transform Christmas into a season of surprises for your family. Mail them individual postcards; create a YouTube video with you singing a Christmas carol; team up with Internet shops that can deliver the most unexpected goodies like <em>lechon </em>on Christmas Day.</p>
<p>And to my readers, who have made Panorama Magazine their loyal Sunday companion, I say – think of all the blessings in your life and multiply that by a thousand – that exactly is what I wish for you this Christmas. Blessings to many to count, smiles by the minute, and a heart bursting with laughter and joy!</p>
<p>Christmas is what we make of it. And what we make of it defines who we truly are. Merry Christmas everyone! (Send comments to <a href="mailto:toots.ople@yahoo.com">toots.ople@yahoo.com</a>. Follow me on Twitter via <a href="http://www.twitter.com/susanople">www.twitter.com/susanople</a>.</p>
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