What the weather brings
>> Sunday, October 12, 2014
BENCHWARMER
By Ramon Dacawi
(This piece
found print five years ago this month. Rhoda’s family still comes to mind,
especially when it pours.-RD)
When it rains,
Rhoda Boquiren comes to mind.
She’s that 37-year
old mother of five moving up and down Session Road. When she’s lucky enough,
you see her pulling a plastic bag almost empty or half-full of recyclables on
one hand and Benjamin Jr., her youngest at six, on the other.
Like Metro-Manilans
picking up the pieces in the wake of the flooding, she should be cursing the
rain. She can’t sell cartons and paper that shop owners leave for the rains to
drench on the main street.
It seems, too, she
rues, that everybody now also segregates recyclables or collects what’s already
segregated. Two years ago, she remembered a woman with a car competing with
her. When she asked, the woman, who was then working in an international
company, told her she, too, had mouths to feed.
The upside is that
rain, if not too strong, does wonders to her sayote plant. The shoots and
tendrils grow fast and soon get blanched or – for better taste – get sautéed if
there’s lard to come by. With rain, her kids can eat and won’t have to fetch
water for a while.
So, plus or minus,
what the rain brings depends on who and where you are.
Rhoda’s family of
seven huddles in a shanty deep into Purok 5, Sto. Rosario , not
quite in danger of getting flooded. The downside is it’s far from the road.
Benjamin Jr. often complains why he has to walk and walk – often up and
down Session Rd.
Rhoda can’t
carry him always. With a tiny, frail and asthmatic frame, she coughs often. Her
doctor had told her to be on maintenance dose to prevent osteoporosis (or
is it scoliosis?) from getting worse.
The last time Rhoda
herself was cuddled was when she was 12. The ninth of 12 children of a
coconut farmer worker in Catubig, Samar, she was then on board a ship, on her
way to find her fortune in Manila . As she had no ticket, a neighbor also
bound for the big city cuddled her like her own child to spare her of the
fare.
“I thought
then life was kind in Manila ,” she said in Tagalog.
She worked as
domestic for a family in Bicutan, Rizal. She couldn’t cope and so asked her
sister Celia, who lived nearby, to take her in. At 17 she agreed to work in a
printing press in Malabon. She told her employer not to pay her , just to
provide her food, a place to stay and support for her education.
Given more work
than study hours, she quit both at the end of her sophomore year in high
school. She decided to come up to Baguio , again to work a
domestic.
In the wake of the
July 16, 1990 that hit Baguio , Rhoda found refuge in an evacuation center near
the city slaughterhouse. There, she met Benjamin, a miner who was sidelined due
to work-related injuries, but still volunteered in the rescue operations for
victims trapped in the collapsed Nevada Hotel in the wake of the July 16, 1990
earthquake.
Two years ago,
Rhoda unwrapped Benjamin’s bronze plaque credential in
volunteerism.
“In recognition
of service above and beyond the call of duty in rescue of victims of the July
16, 1990 earthquake,” the inscription read.
It was presented by
Benguet Corp, on September 28 that year, signed by Alfonso Yuchengco, chairman
of the board, and Dennis Bemonte, president.
Rhoda remembers
Benjamin was among those who rescued Sonia Roco, wife of then Senator Raul
Roco. The temblor struck while Sonia was attending a conference sponsored by
the United States Agency for International Development at the Nevada Hotel.
Benjamin Sr. is now
on-and-off at odd jobs, as his old injuries prevent full-time work. If he can
find some materials, he can improve their shanty, which they built with support
from a nun. It bears no number, and stands on a lot owned by somebody
else.
The patchwork of GI
sheets, canvas and scrap without electricity or plumbing is home to
their five children – Rejie, 16 and out of school; Sharmaine, 15;
Sunshine, 12, Benzon 10, and Benjamin Jr. On rainless nights, the kids
sometimes go to a neighbor’s house to watch TV.
The couple had
tried opening a mico-mini store with a P5,000 livelihood loan from the city
social welfare and development office. It was promising at first, until
customers became familiar to be refused credit. Rhoda’s consolation
was having repaid the loan.
Two years back, an
Ibaloi woman raising her own daughter in Kentucky got wind of Rhoda’s plight.
She included Rhoda in several anonymous fund support to the needy here. Part of
it went to the family’s daily sustenance, the bulk for Rhoda work on
in a door-to-door vending of fish and vegetables.
The family’s needs,
however, were too much to bear – including her and the children’s medications.
The would-be livelihood capital was re-channeled to addressing them. .
Each time the
weather permits, Rhoda is back along Session Road rummaging through bags of
trash. Or at city hall where employees hand her their collections of empty plastic
bottles. Passersby can identify her through Benjamin Jr., who sits
on the pavement and wails at times when he’s had enough of walking.
******
P.S. – Thanks to a
fund support raised by siblings Sunshine and Paulo Paclayan-Balanza, from
fellow church-goers in Michigan, Rhoda and Benjamin eventually improved
the family abode. home. Thanks to support from Shoshin Kinderhilfe, the
humanitarian foundation former world karate champion Julian Chees founded in
southern Germany, Sharmaine, now a sophomore at the King’s College in La
Trinidad, Benguet, recently was able to take her class examination.
(email:mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments).
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