Schools are children’s second home. It is in school where they discover new things, develop their skills, unleash their potentials, and strive to achieve their dreams. But what if both their house and school got destroyed? Should it stop them from learning and dreaming? For the children of Bantayan Island, it should not. On the morning of November 8, 2013, super typhoon Yolanda made its fourth landfall in this island of Northern Cebu, leaving 253 damaged schools or about 90 percent of the total number of schools on the area. The typhoon may have ravished the schools, but not the importance of education to the Bantayanons.
Bayanihan in Bantayan
As the local and national government respond to the disaster with the help of various international humanitarian aids, the residents of the three municipalities of Bantayan Island started picking up the broken pieces and assembling them together.
Ma. Argeline Adlaon, a Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program Parent Leader, is just one among the hundreds of parents who did their own initiative of rehabilitating the dilapidated rooms in the schools of their children in their own little ways. According to her, they decided to help in repairing the schools as they do not want their kids to be discouraged by the effects of the disaster.
“Turo sa amin ng Pantawid Pamilya na mahalaga ang edukasyon ng mga bata, kaya kahit kami-kami lang, tumulong kami na maayos ‘yung mga eskwelahan para makapasok na rin sa eskwela yung mga bata. Kahit na sa tent lang, basta makapag-aral na ulit sila (Pantawid Pamilya taught us the importance of education that is why we decided to help in rebuilding schools so that our children can already attend their classes. Even if they hold classes in a tent, what is important is that they can study again.),” said Argeline.
Makeshift classrooms
Two months after the storm, classes in Bantayan Island were back, but not to how it was. What used to be school quadrangles became the classrooms, with tents as temporary shelters for the chairs and the blackboard that were left by the typhoon. There are 9,597 household beneficiaries of Pantawid Pamilya in Bantayan Island, with 12,206 school age (3-18 years old) children being monitored by the program for education (as of May 28, 2014).
Amelita Espinosa, a substitute teacher in Okoy Elementary School, shared that the children were very sad after they saw what happened to their school. But despite this, they are still enthusiastic to go back to school. Most of the children tried their best to save their books by drying the pages up under the sun.
Many of Teacher Amelita’s students are beneficiaries of Pantawid Pamilya, and they are the ones who are very excited to go back to school. Eight-year old Judith Mhar Quijano lost her home to Yolanda, but going back to school and being safe after the typhoon are more important to her. She shared that her family is thankful not only to Pantawid Pamilya for the continued support, but to those who gave her and her classmates new school supplies as well.
The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), through its flagship social protection program Pantawid Pamilya, sees the importance of education in fighting the intergenerational cycle of poverty.
DSWD Secretary Corazon Soliman said, “It is very positive to see that the children beneficiaries of Pantawid Pamilya are enthusiastic to go back to school after the typhoon. Despite the disaster, these children were not discouraged to start studying again, in fact, they even find school therapeutic.”
The school buildings and classrooms in Bantayan Island will be rehabilitated soon. Houses will be built again. Lives will be back to normal. But there is no other powerful sign of recovery than the dynamism and willingness of the children to learn. Their positivity will always be there, and no typhoon can ever wash it away.