Archives for posts with tag: outreach

Don’t be like me.

Don’t be someone whose life revolves around Zara sales and internet porn and comic books and fastfood pizza and bottomless Tang Strawberry Juice.

Don’t be helpless and impotent and indifferent in the face of real social issues.

Be like Zarah.

Be someone who cares enough to step outside of the trappings of the corporate world to do more than donate funds to faceless charities.

Be someone who spends her Saturdays actually immersed in the Bayan ni Juan community located in far-flung Calauan, Laguna to do developmental work with the kids who live there. There are thousands of them, mostly relocatees from the Typhoon Ondoy calamity, and have owned even less in their lifetimes than some of us more fortunate people  have spent on clothes and bags and Starbucks coffee in one day. They are the poorest of the poor, the ones who get swept under the rug when progress calls.

Zarah gives them everything she has to give. She reads them stories. She teaches them songs of hope. She coaches them through their dance routines. She teaches them value formation. She laughs with them, she plays with them, she chases them out of despair and desolation. She’s a saint to them, and they love her incredibly.

Even if she can be a machine-gun-toting bad-ass sometimes..

As do I. I just stand on the sidelines and help carry stuff and treat the kids to piggybacks and play basketball with them on their rudimentary street courts. But I marvel at the selflessness and soul and strength and spirit that she finds within herself to share so much to these people, even as she lives her weekday life as a full-time mommy and corporate prodigy.

We try to go there every Saturday. It’s hot, dirty, sweaty work, but we love it incredibly. We always go home smelling of soil and filth, but with huge smiles on our faces and our hearts as light as jazz.

But I wish I could do more.

One thing these kids haven’t got is a school. Zarah’s dream, which she shares with her partners in her development work, is to fund a mobile school for them, which will be run by Salesians of Don Bosco. It will cost PhP2-million, which is a lofty dream for one person to bring to life, but not for ten, a hundred, a thousand good souls working together.

These kids have been stuck in generations of poverty. But they never stop hoping and dreaming of elevation. This is one concrete way that they can escape the downtrodden cycle they have navigated thus far.

Can you help?

Contact Zarah Hernaez, +63 928 304 3267.

And watch this video. These are the faces behind the hope that we feel.

Be a Superstar and help fight for the future.

(And yes, that’s Zarah singing. She’s amazing.)

The spate of devastating typhoons that hit our country has left thousands of families homeless, struggling to survive.  And while there has been an unprecedented outpouring of support from both individuals and aid organizations, the long road to recovery has only just begun.

If you’re hungry to help, join Operation Smilewich, a project that aims to provide them with not just food but hope. For a very minimal fee, participants can donate Smilewiches, mini-sandwiches with personalized notes that let the typhoon victims know that someone is looking out for them.

Smilewich

You’ll get to create, write and design these personalized notes yourself on the spot at the Smilewich Factory. One of my favorite features is the virtual “Design An Avatar” meme on the Facebook page. You could turn something like this…

16150_169979678859_500818859_2877620_4579132_n…into this…

14351_1163894135268_1165304449_400551_1179304_n

Come to Bonifacio High Street, Taguig on November 14 from 9am to 5pm and stop by the Smilewich Factory. For those who can’t come, you can also send a pledge to smilewich@gmail.com, and the Smilewich crew will pack the sandwiches in your name.

For those on Facebook, join the Smilewich group right now and get a head start on the fun.

It’s a simple gesture, but one that will hopefully go a long way in feeding their spirits.

This event was made possible by the collaborative efforts of Kraft Eden Cheese, Bonifacio High Street and The Philippine Red Cross. All proceeds will go to the Philippine National Red Cross.

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