BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
BAGUIO
CITY -- Compassion respects no barriers. It has, in fact, has linked members of
Rotary with guards and inmates of the Baguio city jail.
The
Rotary Club of Baguio Summer Capital was recently cited by the Rotary Youth
Support Liaison Council for Great East Japan Earthquake for contributing to the
“Rotary Wind of Hope Scholarship”, an educational support program for children
orphaned by the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11 last year.
“The
donation will be spent exclusively as scholarships for the earthquake-stricken
students of universities and technical colleges,” wrote Misao Ueno, chairman of
the Rotary Youth Support Liaison Council for Great East Japan Earthquake in a
letter of gratitude to the club.
Baguio
Foundation vice-president Minoru Saito recently presented the citation to RCBSC
immediate past president Antonio Tactay.
It
took the inmates about two months to respond to the call for international
support to the victims of the killer quake and tsunami. It took them until May
8, 2012 to turn over their support through then jail warden, Chief
Inspector Severino Khita.
It
was “Mother’s Day” and “Red Cross Day” and the warden organized what the
prisoners call a “springtime”. It was an occasion for them to venture into the
jail courtyard for a “Mother’s Day” reunion with their families.
The
prisoners handed the warden a gift box. Inside was P4,000 in four P1,000 bills
that they announced was their response to the call for aid to Eastern Japan.
As
the banks were closed, warden Khita waited the following morning to have an
elderly woman detainee escorted to the Philippine National Bank branch. She
deposited the amount to the account of the Philippine National Red Cross which
was then into the thick of a campaign for the victims.
Early
last month, the Rotarians led by club founder Virgilio Bautista and incoming
president Joris Karl Dacawi found themselves inside the jail. They had escorted
to prison visiting Rotarian Stanley Tokigawa of AlaMoana District 5000 in
Honolulu and Prof. David McQuittey of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminar
based in Fort Worth, Texas.
The
two visitors came from Alaminos, Pangasinan where they delivered a container
van of medical supplies for the town. They braved a storm in coming up to
Baguio to link with fellow Rotarians. They brought three boxes of rubber
sandals that turned out to be the entry point towards a continuing partnership
in prison reform.
Rotary
Summer decided the sandals would fit the women inmates who received the same in
a program inside the prison chapel. In her response, a woman detainee brought
the Rotarians to the possibility of their expanding prison reform by bringing
in a bread oven.
Her
point was easily clear to the visitors. Over lunch, Tokigawa and
McQuittey were asking what it would take to deliver the oven. Back in Honolulu,
Tokigawa sent the amount needed, thereby sealing sustainable relations
between the Summer Club Rotarians and the inmates.
“We
have contacted TESDA (Technical Education and Skills Development Authority) and
it’s ready to train the inmates how to bake their own pandesal,” jail warden,
Chief Insp. Wilson Banasen, said.
“That
means bigger and better quality bread at less cost for our wards,” noted Chief
Ins. Maryann Tresmanio, wardress for the women’s dorm. “For sure, their
training will open livelihood opportunity through baking when they have been
released from detention.” (e-mail:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments)
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