Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Padyak Ng Kalayaan

"...they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary.." Isaiah 40:31

My brother Nono and I are fond of biking. In our local dialect, to bike or to kick the pedals of bicycle means "padyak". It is nice to padyak around the community along the streets, hills and mountains because, it is good for the body and mind. I'm inspired because Nono is braver than me especially biking in far places where stamina is needed. So his being bold boasts my spirit eventually developing my body stamina too. This is the main reason why I bought my own bike...to have an exercises at least during my vacant time. I was able to reach the Municipality of San Andres alone which is somewhat 25 kilometers far from Odiongan then return without a rest! I was very proud I was able to make it for me who is just a beginner. I pray to God every day to give me a healthy body so that I can serve my family well...and biking is just one of my favorite exercises. I'm trying to change my lifestyle too especially my eating habits.
Here in my place in Odiongan, many are already into this kind of exercise. Children, youngster adults and even retirees are now imbibing this hobby. Young ones even "modify" their bikes and group themselves and stroll around the town to the point of organizing a race for children with modified bikes. Many bicycle shops were established and many are buying spare parts from brakes to derailers to helmet and body fit gears.

In fact last June 12, 2010 Engineer Bilshan Servanez, President of the Tablas Bikers Club organized a fun race of mountain bikers dubbed as "Padyak ng Kalayaan" (Biking for Freedom) to race around the barrios in Odiongan in support to the Municipality of Odiongan's Celebration of National Independence Day. 50 Mountain Bikers participated. A sign that Tablas Island in our province of Romblon has now many biking enthusiasts especially Mountain Biking. Even my friend Engineer Melvin Minano who is 60 years old joined the race and he's very fast. Jake Sodoy of Looc won the race. Nono and I just supported the race by biking only around the town. We did not join because most of the participants have a good stamina. We were given medals as "finisher" yet we were not able to finish.

Really biking is a fun. When my sister Jhoan visited my family I asked her to buy my wife and two daughters with bike. So we bike too in our barrio. I pray to God that we will be safe in biking. So go on, go to the nearest shop and buy and join us in the world of "padyaks" .

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Reunion


"All things work together for good to those who love God." Romans 8:28

My brother Harry Fetalsana, deacon of our church shared me this story from the Book Radical Reliance about our "reunion" with God. I was deeply touched. Here it is:

Marcel Sternberger was a methodical man of nearly 50, with bushy white hair, guileless brown eyes, and the bouncing enthusiasm of a czardas dancer of his native Hungary. He always took the 9:09 Long Island Railroad train from his suburban home to Woodside, N.Y., where he caught a subway into the city.
On the morning of January 10,1948, Sternberger boarded the 9:09 as usual. En route, he suddenly decided to visit Laszlo Victor, a Hungarian friend who lived in Brooklyn and was ill.
Accordingly, at Ozone Park, Sternberger changed to the subway for Brooklyn, went to his friend's house, and stayed until midafternoon. He then boarded a Manhattan-bound subway for his Fifth Avenue office. Here is Marcel's incredible story:


The car was crowded, and there seemed to be no chance of a seat. But just as I entered, a man sitting by the door suddenly jumped up to leave, and I slipped into the empty place. I've been living in New York long enough not to start conversations with strangers. But being a photographer, I have the peculiar habit of analyzing people's faces, and I was struck by the feature of the passenger on my left. He was probably in his late 30's, and when he glanced up, his eyes seemed to have a hurt expression in them. He was reading a Hungarian-language newspaper, and something prompted me to say in Hungarian, "I hope you don't mind if I glance at your paper." The man seemed surprised to be addressed in his native language. But he answered politely. "You may read it now. I'll have time later on."
During the half-hour ride to town, we had quite a conversation. He said his name was Bela Paskin. A law student when World War II started, he had been put into a German labor battalion and sent to the Ukraine. Later he was captured by the Russians and put to work burying German dead. After the war, he covered hundreds of miles on foot until he reached his home in Debrecen, a large city in eastern Hungary.

I myself knew Debrecen quite well, and we talked about it for a while. Then he told me the rest of his story. When he went to the apartment once occupied by his father, mother, brothers and sisters, he found strangers living there. Then he went upstairs to the apartment that he and his wife once had. It also was occupied by strangers. None of them had ever heard of his family.
As he was leaving, full of sadness, a boy ran after him, calling "Paskin bacsi! Paskin bacsi!" That means "Uncle Paskin." The child was the son of some old neighbors of his. He went to the boy's home and talked to his parents. "Your whole family is dead,"they told him. "The Nazis took them and your wife to Auschwitz."
Auschwitz was one of the worst Nazi concentration camps. Paskin gave up all hope. A few days later, too heartsick to remain any longer in Hungary, he set out again on foot,stealing across border after border until he reached Paris. He managed to immigrate to the United States in October 1947, just three months before I met him.

All the time he had been talking, I kept thinking that somehow his story seemed familiar. A young woman whom I had met recently at the home of friends had also been from Debrecen; she had been sent to Auschwitz; from there she had been transferred to work in a German munitions factory. Her relatives had been killed in the gas chambers. Later, she was liberated by the Americans and was brought here in the first boatload of displaced persons in 1946.
Her story had moved me so much that I had written down her address and phone number , intending to invite her to meet my family and thus help relieve the terrible emptiness in her life.

It seemed impossible that there could be any connection between these two people, but as I neared my station, I fumbled anxiously in my address book. I asked in what I hoped was a casual voice, "Was your wife's name Marya?" He turned pale. "Yes!" He answered. "How did you know?" He looked as if he were about to faint. I said, Let's get off the train." I took him by the arm at the next station and led him to a phone booth. He stood there like a man in a trance while I dialed her phone number. It seemed hours before Marya Paskin answered. (Later I learned her room was alongside the telephone, but she was in the habit of never answering it because she had so few friends and the calls were always for someone else. This time however, there was no one else at home and, after letting it ring for a while, she responded.) When I heard her voice at last, I told her who I was and asked her to describe her husband. She seemed surprise at the question, but gave me a description. Then I asked her where she had lived in Debrecen, and she told me the address. Asking her to hold the line, I turned to Paskin and said, "Did you and your wife live on such-and-such street?"
"Yes!" Bela exclaimed. He was white as a sheet and trembling.
"Try to be calm." I urged him. "Something miraculous is about to happen to you. Here, take this telephone and talk to your wife!"
He nodded his head in mute bewilderment, his eyes bright with tears. He took the receiver, listened a moment to his wife's voice, then suddenly cried, "This is Bela! This is Bela!" and he began to mumble hysterically. Seeing that the poor fellow was so excited he couldn't talk coherently, I took the receiver from his shaking hands.
"Stay where you are," I told Marya, who also sounded hysterical. "I am sending your husband to you. We will be there in a few minutes."
Bela was crying like a baby and saying over and over again, "It is my wife. I go to my wife!"

At first I thought I had better accompany Paskin. lest the man should faint from excitement, but I decided that this was a moment in which no strangers should intrude. Putting Paskin into a taxicab, I directed the driver to take him to Marya's address, paid the fare,and said goodbye.
Bela Paskin's reunion with his wife was a moment so poignant, so electric with suddenly released emotion, that afterward neither he nor Marya could recall much about it.
"I remember only that when I left the phone, I walked to the mirror like a dream to see if maybe my hair had turned gray," she said later. "The next thing I know, a taxi stops in front of the house , and it is my husband who comes toward me. Details I cannot remember; only this I know...that I was happy for the first time in many years."
"Even now it is difficult to believe that it happened. We have both suffered so much; I have almost lost the capability to not be afraid. Each time my husband goes from house I say to myself, 'Will anything happen to take him from me again?'"
Her husband is confident that no horrible misfortune will ever again befall them. "Providence has brought us together," he says simply. "It was meant to be."

Skeptical persons will no doubt attribute the events of that memorable afternoon to mere chance. But was it chance that made Marcel Sternberger suddenly decide to visit his sick friend and hence take the subway line that he had never ridden before? Was it chance that caused the man sitting by the door of the car rush out just as Sternberger came in? Was it chance that caused Bela Paskin to be sitting beside Sternberger, reading a Hungarian newspaper?
Was it chance...or did God ride the Brooklyn subway that afternoon?
As significant and as urgent as this life-changing reunion became to Bela Paskin, our reunion to a nearer, deepening relationship with our God is of great urgency and offers a far more wonderful reward. We would weep with regret if we knew what we are missing in a life that knows about Him but rarely if ever feels His touch. His Spirit keeps urging us to live on a better plane while we seem content to ride this subway of our lives in the routine normalcy of a self-imposed emptiness. We need not live alone. God waits patiently, yet insistently, for us to let Him give His unhindered satisfaction, sustenance and security.


(Taken from the book "Radical Reliance Living 24/7 with God at the Center" by Joseph M. Stowell, pages 23-27.)

Sunday, June 6, 2010

The True Test Of Loving God

"If ye love me, keep my commandments. " John 14:15

The fruit of love is obedience. When you obey, it means there is love in your heart for Lord Jesus. " If a man loves me, he will keep my words." We sing "I Love You Lord" but the Lord knows it is just your mouth that loves but your heart is far away from Him. Talk is cheap. If you really love Jesus, then the habit of your life is obedience. When love cannot produce good thing, it is not the real thing. It is like fashion jewelry. It looks shiny and genuine from a distance but to a trained eye, it is fake. In the opening of Beijing, China Olympics, organizers did everything to make it glitch-free including making a young girl mime a song before a crowd of billions because the real singer was not pretty. That early age, a girl is taught how to deceive, all because the performer was not pretty. Our hearts should not be far from Him. we must be sincere. Today, many people who know the Bible do not let it change their lives. They say they follow Jesus but don't live by His standards. People who live this way are hypocrites. This is a warning to all: consider a change of mind and heart that will protect you from making a terrible mistake. God does not accept disobedience. Because of disobedience Adam and Eve fell, Samson lost his strength, Saul lost his kingdom. True love has always practical manifestation. One should manifest an excitement in going to Church. One should get involved in the Church program.
To love Jesus is to love the Word of God. We cannot claim to love Jesus while neglecting and rejecting His Word. Only those who love the Lord are going to heaven. No heaven for disobedient people. If you love Jesus, you will delight his Word. If our love for Jesus is genuine, then we will strive to obey and be loyal to Him all the time. Love's obedience is inclusive,and unconditional. Inclusive means-everything. It means you will obey all. You won't strive to obey only some words or words which are less demanding or the most convenient to us. That is called "Cafeteria Christianity". This means like in the Cafeteria you only choose anything you like to eat. You make your own meal if you like. That is not loving Jesus. Loving Jesus means I will do everything all things that please Him. It means obeying Jesus and keeping His Words in every area of life. Love is more than lovely words. It is commitment and conduct. Obeying God is often a struggle because it may mean giving up somethingwe truly want. Commitment and obedience to God cannot be negotiated. "Half-way Obedience"won't do. Selective obedience is just another form of disobedience. The command is simple. "If you love me, keep my commandments."May we in everything always live in obedience with our God. This is the true test of loving God.
(In picture is my father-in law Rev. Pastor Teofilito A. Rufon. He is the Resident Pastor of Odiongan Baptist Church, Odiongan, Romblon. This article was his Message last June 6, 2010 Sunday Worship Service)

Friday, June 4, 2010

Lola Aning


"Can a woman forget her own baby and not love the child she bore? Even if a mother should forget her child, I will never forget you." Isaiah 49: 15


This is the story of my grandmother. A short story. My grandmother is Irene Morada-Moral. She was born on the year unknown to us but she died last December 10, 2002 at the age of 88 in Odiongan, Romblon. Lola "Aning" as we fondly call her has 4 children: Ernesto, Arturo, Lucy and my mother, Irejean. She was married to Juan Montesa Moral (we call him Lolo Angki) somewhere in Sitio Hinugusan, Municipality of Badajoz (now San Agustin). My mother who was the youngest was left at age 6 months under the custody of her mother, our grand grandmother Rufina "Pining" Mangaya-Morada. The other three siblings of my mom were left to the care of my grandfather, "Lolo Angki." My Lola's brother and sisters are Miguel, Sebastiana, Felicidad and Daisy. Our Lola Daisy and her family is very close to us. Every year Lola Daisy visits us in Romblon.

My mom told me a lot of experiences under my grandmother. Lola abandoned them when they were young. During my mom's infancy, she survived by breastfeeding from the breasts of other nursing mothers in their barangay. Formula milk was scarce so her lola Pining just gave her a bottlefeed with "am" (pulverized,grounded, milled fine rice that resembles like a milk). She also left Lolo Angki and according to some folks Lola married to another man and had another child but the child was abandoned too. It was a talk of the town during those years.
All Lola's children were not sent to school instead Lola Pining and my Lolo Angki did the responsibility. In the late college days of my mother (1964) , her Lola Pining died and she had no choice but to stay with Lola Aning. When the time came when Lola Pining will not live long any more because of her illnes, she left an amount of 500 pesos and some coins to her daughter Sebastiana (my Lola's sister) to complete my mother's studies at the University of the East. Before Lola Pining died, her land was divided to her children. Some inheritance like the "cavan" (a big container made of wooden box) were inherited by Lola Aning since she is the eldest. Little of those valuables were given to her brother and sisters.
Lola has a strict personality. She is well known for being perfectionist and disciplinarian. All of us her grandchildren suffered a military type of discipline. She scolds us everytime we commit mistakes. We were sometimes physically hurt and cried at times. My mom cannot forget too the way Lola treated her . My mom asked for a coin for fare going to school. Lola hardly gave the coins to her to the point of running after the coins rolling under the bed. My mom was crying while trying to get the coins. It was a heart-breaking experience. One remarkable characteristic of Lola is her despising voice. Her words will surely pierce and injure your heart. She always scold us. Every one and all of us even her younger brother and sisters. Even my father Evaristo Baino FameroSr., was not spared with Lola's mighty attitude. My Dad in order to "survive the ordeal " would escape on our house or act like a "lion tamer" by buying a lot of exotic sea foods just to please and not be scolded by Lola Aning. I can recall the time when me, Nono and Kuya Bong while sleeping was whipped with her belt because according to her we were not sleeping because our eyes were open which is actually we were in deep sleep that afternoon of our elementary days in Barangay Liwayway, and one time also when Lola scolded me in San Pablo, Lucena, it was really painful so I went to her brother Lolo Miguel for comfort. I was crying while eating together with Lolo Miguel (we fondly call him Mike). Lolo Mike told me "kalain gid man ning batasan si manang." (Lola Aning has really a bad character.) Mom did not fetch me in San Pablo so it was really a sad days of my life. Every day I was hurt. My heart aches were projected into writing in a piece of paper. (Which my mom later was able to read too.) Then one day I asked 100 pesos from Tito Boy and I escaped from San Pablo going to Manila alone though I don't know where the roads in Manila are. But with my sharp memory I was able to locate our Boarding House in Legarda near San Sebastian Church.
On the other side of the coin...behind the character of my Lola ... lies a virtue. A virtue of being a disciplinarian. A virtue which was left to all of us as a legacy. A super clean, very organized and prepared Lola, a thrifty, and a good cook (you must be sure you will leave no food in your own plate because she really gets mad!). There is always a vegetable on the table. Everybody were satisfied because all her prepared foods were very delicious. We understood and loved Lola. Yes it was very hurting, her shout, but thinking it deeply it was also good. A lesson until now I am applying with my life. Being orderly and disciplined in everything you do. Of all her grandchildren with my mom, I was the one who stayed with her for at least..a long time. Not really very long. It was only month-long because prior to my entry in College in Manila some time 1990, I stayed in San Pablo, Lucena City where she temporarily resided with her nephew Miguel "Boy" Morada Jr who gave her "all" her daily needs. And with that time span I have known her very much. Physically, emotionally and even spiritually, I knew her. I have even known that she was stabbed many times by a robber yet she was able to survive in ICU of a hospital in San Pablo. I have witnessed too sometime in the year 1979, when typhoon "Atang" hit Romblon, she was trapped in the pier inside the ship floating and being smashed by big waves yet the ship beside the port did not sink. Only after the typhoon she went out of the semi-wrecked ship with a lot of bruises and wounds which made her resembled and looked like a "mummy" wrapped with sterile gauze. I have seen Lola crying while walking alone in the street going home to us. Lola really has "seven lives" like a cat according to them. That was how I have known Lola. After going to market and cooking and cleaning, I massage her legs inside her room every time we finished our supper, before retiring to bed. Every night I usually place a drop of Eye-Mo in her tired eyes.
Despite our hardships, despite what Lola did to my mom, mom did not resent. We strived hard. Mom painstakingly sent us to school. Until all of us her six grandchildren finished our studies without Lola's so much presence and support . Then one day, Lola Aning got sick of colon cancer. In the year 2002, she was confined at FEU hospital. There all of us visited her. All of my brothers and sisters, and all the family circle cheaped-in for her hospitalization. She had an operation. She's under a Colostomy bag. It was a hard day for all of us. We took good care of her. Even Uncle Ernesto came to visit all the way from San Agustin who died also after Lola's death. After her confinement, our family decided to bring her home in the province in Odiongan. In her face shows a lot of meaning. A lot of repentance. Prior to her death she asked for forgiveness. Lola Daisy told me: "though manang Aning did not treat your mommy well , still your mom loved your Lola so much."
There are still a lot of stories about Lola. These are only few. Very few. Up to her last breath I was with her. Prince John my youngest brother who was holding her stethoscope and listening to the heart beat of Lola, told me, "Kuya, Lola aning was gone." She died peacefully. A peaceful death. Only Lola Daisy went home in Odiongan to attend her funeral. Her body lies in Libertad Cemetery in Odiongan, Romblon. If Lola is reading this blog, I say "thank you Lola"- for without you..I have not seen the beauty of this world.













Ferrol's Binucot Beach: Home of the Green Sea Turtles

"...God created... all kinds of creatures that live in the water..and blessed them...and told them... to reproduce and to fill the sea.." Genesis 1:21-22

The captivating and alluring white beach of Sitio Binucot in Barangay Bunsoran, Municipality of Ferrol, Province of Romblon, Philippines is one among the many niches of Baby Green Sea Turtles in the world. Last January 11, 2010, 62 baby species of Olive Ridley ( Lepidochelys olivacea) were released to the seas of Binucot Beach.

Also, last April 20, 2010, 63 eggs of Green Sea Turtles (Chelonia mydas) were successfully hatched and released to the sea . The turtles were guarded and taken care of for 2 months by Mr. Raymund G. Inocencio, an employee of Provincial Government's Environment and Natural Resources Office (ENRO) and the family who lived there, Mr. and Mrs. Leon I. Loquinto.
According to the residents , two species of sea turtles are are hatching in the beach. The Olive Ridley and the Green Sea Turtles. Of the seven endangered species of sea turtles in the world, it was estimated that 4 are spotted in Binucot. They were the Olive Ridley, Green Sea, Hawksbill, and the Leatherback sea turtles.

The wastes of the "pawikan" (local dialect for sea turtles) serve as a nutrient and a fertilizer to the "lusayan" (seagrass beds). Pawikans help in the balance of "bahuras" (coral reefs) and lusayan. The coral reefs and the seagrass beds serves as the breeding grounds for marine life. If these are not protected, marine ecology will be disrupted.
In response to this, the Provincial Government Office's ENRO, in coordination with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources Office, and the Municipal Government of Ferrol, created a Pawikan Center which includes Hatchery Station (breeding grounds) and Rescue Center. Among the Municipal Officials who spearheaded in the creation of the center were Tourism Officer Arturo M. Muros, Fisheries and Aquatic Resources Chairman, Mr. Ernie A. Falo, Barangay Officials led by Barangay Captain Generoso F. Mercano and the nearby residents.

The Pawikan Center will protect and rescue the sea turtles in the coming years. The center will also help boast the Tourism Industry and in the livelihood and income of the residents.

(Taken with permission from Mr. Raymund G. Inocencio, Provincial Government of Romblon).