Once the immediate emergency of the floodwaters had subsided, the next question was, "Where do we go from here?" The "where we went", was back into the community with whole new sets of questions. The faster families can regain some sense of normalcy, some sense of being together as a family, the better. So the question was, "Ok", what does that take. What it took was providing things to cook with (rice being already provided by World Vision). The happy fellow you see is holding a kalan a small charcoal cooker, and a bag of uling (charcoal). It also took providing woven sleeping mats called banigs and temporary beds of marine plywood and five hollow blocks. We'd given out blankets sheets
Next was getting kids back to school. School uniforms and shoes, book bags and notebooks had been either washed away or ruined beyond redemption. It is just this sort of interruption that can curtail a child's education forever. The need was urgent. A number of in
Yesterday was witness to the fruit of a five -year partnership between Shiphrah Birthing Home and Family Planning of the Philippines (FPOP). Partnering with the UN FPOP brought out more than 200 buckets filled with very smart supplies for our pregnant moms. Each bucket contained a towel, a flashlight, personal hygiene and laundry supplies, flip-flops, several pairs of new underwear, a duster (our moms most often wear a loose garment like this when giving birth), and a tabo (dipper). We had taken names
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