Monisgnor Jeffrey Malanog, during the Regional Lay Leaders Conference in Tagbilaran, reminded the Laity not to separate our faith from our actions! True! It is...
Pope Francis marked 2024 as the Year of Prayer, in preparation for the 2025 Jubilee Year. Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas, together with the Diocese of...
To: All Laiko Heads of National Lay Organizations & Arch/diocesan Councils of the Laity Dear Brothers & Sisters,
The peace and love of the risen Lord be with you!
As we are confined for safety in our homes, we would like to take this as an opportunity for all of us to try and harness the modern technology to continue our mission of forming community of disciples amidst this situation.
We are pleased then to invite to a Post Quarantine Conversations on April 25, Saturday, 1:00 to 3:00 PM. Proposed Title is: New Mindsets for Emerging and Alternative Ministries… A Post-Quarantine Conversation.
We will be using a Zoom application for this. Kindly let us know if you’re capable and available to join this conversation by replying to this email on or before April 22 so that we could send you the link where you could register to actively participate in this meeting as well as the mechanics. It will be on a first- come – first- serve basis since participants are limited to 40 persons only.
Most Rev. Broderick Pabillo and the Laiko Board Members will be joining us in this sharing.
Thank you. Rest assured of my prayers for you and your loved ones’ safety!
Environment groups belonging to Break Free From Plastic Philippines (BFFP) lambast Asian Development Bank (ADB) for its push to incinerate medical wastes produced during the COVID-19 outbreak here in the Philippines. In its statement, ADB had said that “Manila should properly dispose of 16,800 tons of infectious medical wastes produced in the past two months of battling the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, or risk overwhelming its medical transport and disposal systems.” The ADB proposed that “other resources including mobile incinerators, industrial furnaces and cement kilns could be assessed for use if existing systems are overloaded and capacity is limited.”
Incinerating medical waste is no longer allowed as stated in the Department of Health (DOH) Manual on Health Care Waste Management. The manual says autoclave, microwave, sterilization and chemical disinfection are among the processes that can be used to treat medical wastes.
“It is unfortunate that ADB is taking advantage of the current crisis to revive its business agenda of incineration in the country which is legally prohibited.’ said Rei Panaligan, National Project Coordinator of BFFP Philippines.
The said bank has been financing waste-to-energy projects in Asia over the last ten years. Most of which are in China where the new coronavirus was first detected.
“This proposal from ADB is just a way to justify its financing of technology that is dirtier and deadlier than SARS CoV-2 virus because the health and environmental hazards that incinerators can bring are irreversible and irreparable,” Panaligan added.
The ADB is also behind the proposal for big ticket waste-to-energy incinerator projects in Quezon City, Cebu City and Davao City which all have failed due to financing and economic viability.
In 2018, the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA) launched its report ADB and Waste Incineration: Bankrolling Pollution; Blocking Solutions. The report is a critical review of how ADB promotes investments in WTE incineration despite documented negative impacts of these facilities on public health, environment, economy, and the climate.
According to GAIA, WTE incinerator facilities advanced by ADB present significant investment risks, fail to comply with key provisions of the bank’s safeguard standards as well as core pillars of the bank’s poverty reduction strategy, and present a lack of accountability to the very people within member countries it is mandated to serve.
“If indeed the ADB is a development bank, it should be investing in mainstreaming sustainable livelihoods based on the zero waste approach that will reduce poverty and uplift the living conditions and quality of life of waste workers and their communities instead of serving corporate interests.” said Aileen Lucero, National Coordinator of Ecowaste Coalition. “There are proven success stories across Asia in addressing municipal solid waste and even healthcare and industrial wastes without incineration,” added Lucero.
The groups reminded the bank that waste incineration—a practice that is both unsustainable and polluting—is illegal under the Philippine Clean Air Act. They also called on the ADB Board of Governors to do their duty to ensure that funding for COVID recovery goes to solutions that conserve resources, protect health and which do not harm the climate, rather than to dirty and destructive projects.
BFFP Philippines is a collaboration of leading health and environmental networks such as the EcoWaste Coalition, GAIA Asia Pacific, Greenpeace, Health Care Without Harm Southeast Asia, Mother Earth Foundation and Oceana Philippines International.
LiCASNews Inday Espina-Varona, Philippines April 17, 2020
In a span of 24 hours, the Philippines’ Department of Social Welfare changed two crucial policies in the delivery of aid to those affected by a lockdown aimed at stemming the spread of the new coronavirus.
On April 17, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles announced that the department, which is headed by retired Army chief Rolando Bautista, would no longer exercise veto powers over the list of beneficiaries of the government social amelioration program from local government units.
The social welfare office also backed off its April 16 demand that private aid groups seek permission and pay application fees to continue efforts to fill the vacuum in basic social services to communities and health workers.
Nograles said the department will now validate the recipient lists post-distribution of aid, allowing faster flow of about US$1.573 billion in cash aid to vulnerable families outside of those already enrolled in the government’s unconditional cash transfer program for the poor.
The announcement came a week after a general outcry from elected village leaders tasked with the actual distribution of aid.
Dozens of these officials slammed the national government for delays caused by a slew of convoluted, sometimes contradictory, rules and President Rodrigo Duterte’s insistence on centralizing powers in the hands of a small group of retired military officers in his Cabinet.
Duterte said the move would cut down corruption and lead to systematic and prompt delivery of services.
While nobody questions the generals’ personal integrity, their policies display lack of consensus-building skills and a narrow preference for “order” over empathy toward the needs of the country’s 17.6 million poor families, including the 5.2 million families that live in the capital Manila.
LiCAS News Inday Espina-Varona, Philippines April 17, 2020
Health officials have ordered a stop to the testing of people for COVID-19 in a village in the central Philippines after learning that at least 54 residents have been infected by the disease.
Daisy Villa of the Cebu City Health department announced a stop to tests as armed soldiers and policemen started to barricade the village of Zapatera to prevent residents from leaving.
Villa said the order to stop the tests came from the country’s Department of Health in Manila, which advised local officials to consider the entire village infected.
Health undersecretary Rosario Vergeire denied a halt to testing in Zapatera village.
Cebu City Mayor Ergardo Labella, responding to appeals by the local village head, ordered mass testing to continue.
The city government said 82 have now tested positive in the village. The mayor ordered testing in all other nearby villages.
The alarm in the city of Cebu came as the mayor of the city of Valenzuela in the capital announced that its first round of mass testing showed five of 40 tests turned out positive for infection.
Valenzuela Mayor Rex Gatchalian ordered those confirmed of the disease to be isolated in a building initially constructed as a drug rehabilitation facility.
“We will take care of them,” said the mayor. “We’ll make sure they are well-fed and they’ll be given medical intervention,” he said.
Gatchalian said the patients will again be tested based on existing testing protocols “until they turn negative.”
On April 17, the health department recorded 218 new cases of COVID-19, raising the total to 5,878.
The gap between the number of recoveries and deaths further widened as 52 more people recovered from the disease, bringing the total to 487. The death toll is now 387, with 25 new fatalities.
Gatchalian typifies local government executives in the Philippines who have become critical of the national health department’s cumbersome COVID-19 testing protocol.
The mayor decided to focus first on patients with known exposure to cases earlier confirmed by the Department of Health.
“If we want to contain the spread of COVID-19, then we have to test exposed residents, whether or not they have symptoms, and then isolate the new infections,” he said.
This modified process of testing would also allow a new round of contact tracing, said Gatchalian.
He described the first results of the mass testing in his city as “alarming.”
He warned that not testing all persons with exposure to confirmed cases increases the odds of community transmission even with a lockdown.
The city government is spending local funds for the tests, with an initial target of 550, followed by mass testing of health personnel.
The first round will be completed on April 18, with kits sourced from South Korea but using the Philippine health department’s two-day test process.
The mayor said kits and testing cost about US$100 per patient, with a private hospital processing swab samples.
The case in the central Philippine city of Cebu is sobering and raises questions of what the national government risked by delaying the purchase of test kits and authorizing decentralized tests.
On April 16, the Philippine Senate has passed a resolution calling for the resignation of Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, citing failure in leadership.
President Rodrigo Duterte, however, rejected the call.
The health secretary also got the support of a Catholic bishop who said Duque may not be a perfect leader but “he is delivering something.”
“The fact that the increase of the infection of the virus is not the same with other countries means there is good management involved,” said Bishop Oscar Florencio of the Military Ordinariate.
The prelate said if there is really a need to change Duque, it should come from the president.
“If [the senators] are persistent to remove Duque then let’s wait up to the end of the enhanced community quarantine by the end of April and strategize again,” he said.
Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said the inter-agency task force handling the government’s COVID-19 response appreciates Duque for “telling it as it is.”
Duque earlier claimed a tight global supply market prevented the arrival of test purchases, but legislators said the government only started looking after a surge in infections.
The Philippines until last week was dependent on donations from China, Singapore, South Korea, and other aid partners.
April 15, 2020 Virginia Forrester General Audience
This morning’s General Audience was held at 9:30 am from the Library of the Apostolic Vatican Palace.
Taking up the series of catecheses on the Beatitudes, in his address in Italian the Pope focused his meditation on the seventh: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God” (Matthew 5:9).
After summarizing his catechesis in several languages, the Holy Father expressed special greetings to the faithful.
The General Audience ended with the recitation of the Pater Noster and the Apostolic Blessing.
The Holy Father’s Catechesis
Dear Brothers and Sisters, good morning!
Today’s catechesis is dedicated to the seventh Beatitude, that of the “peacemakers,” who are proclaimed sons of God. I rejoice that it happens immediately after Easter, because the peace of Christ is the fruit of his Death and Resurrection, as we heard in the Letter of Saint Paul.
To understand this Beatitude it’s necessary to explain the meaning of the word “peace,” which can be misunderstood or sometimes trivialized. We must orient ourselves between two ideas of peace: the first is the biblical, where the beautiful word shalom appears, which expresses abundance, prosperity, and wellbeing. When in Hebrew one wishes shalom, one wishes a good life, full, prosperous but also in keeping with truth and justice, which will have fulfillment in the Messiah, Prince of Peace (Cf. Isaiah 9:6; Micah 5:4-5).
There is, then, the other meaning, more widespread, of the word “peace,” which is understood as a sort of inner tranquillity: I am tranquil, I am in peace. This is a modern idea, psychological and more suggestive. One thinks commonly that peace is quiet, harmony and internal balance. This meaning of the word “peace” is incomplete and can’t be absolutized, because in life restlessness can be an important moment of growth. Often it’s the Lord Himself who sows restlessness in us, to go to encounter Him, to meet Him. In this sense, it’s an important moment of growth; whereas, it can happen that interior tranquillity corresponds to a domesticated conscience and not to a true spiritual redemption. Many times the Lord must be a “sign of contradiction” (Cf. Luke 2:43-35), shaking our false securities, to lead us to salvation. And in that moment it seems there is no peace but it is the Lord who puts us on this way, to arrive at the peace that He Himself will give us.
At this point we must remember that the Lord understands His peace as different from human <peace>, from that of the world, when He says: ”Peace I leave you; my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you” (John 14:27). Jesus’ peace is another peace, different from worldly peace. We ask ourselves: how does the world give peace? If we think of warlike conflicts — wars normally end in two ways: either the defeat of one of the sides or with peace treaties. We can only hope and pray that this second way is always entered into; however, we must consider that history is an infinite series of peace treaties refuted by successive wars, or by the metamorphosis of those same wars in other ways and in other places. In our time also, a piecemeal” war is being fought on more scenarios and in different ways.[1] We must at least suspect that in the framework of a globalization made up especially of economic and financial interests, the “peace” of some corresponds to the “war” of others. And this isn’t Christ’s peace!
Instead, how does the Lord Jesus give His peace? We heard Saint Paul say that the peace of Christ is “to make of two, one” (Cf. Ephesians 2:14), to cancel enmity and reconcile. And the way to fulfill this work of peace is His body. In fact, He reconciles all things and puts peace with the Blood of His Cross, as the same Apostle says elsewhere (Cf. Colossians 1:20). And here I ask myself, we can all ask ourselves: who are, then, the “peacemakers”? The seventh Beatitude is the most active, explicitly operative. The verbal expression is analogous to that used in the first verse of the Bible for creation and it indicates initiative and laboriousness. By its nature love is creative — love is always creative — and seeks reconciliation at all cost. Those are called sons of God who have learned the art of peace and exercise it; they know that there is no reconciliation without giving one’s life, and that peace is always sought no matter what. Don’t forget this! It’s sought thus. This isn’t an autonomous work, fruit of one’s own capabilities; it’s a manifestation of grace received from Christ, who is our peace, who has rendered us sons of God.
True shalom and true interior balance flow from Christ’s peace, which comes from His Cross and generates a new humanity, embodied in an infinite array of men and women Saints, inventive, creative, who always thought of new ways to love –, the men and women Saints that make peace. This life of sons of God, which by the Blood of Christ our brothers seek and discover, is true happiness. Blessed are those that go on this way.
And again, happy Easter to all, in the peace of Christ!
[Original text: Italian] [ZENIT’s translation by Virginia M. Forrester]
I greet warmly the Italian-speaking faithful. I wish you all to live fully the Easter message, in fidelity to your Baptism and to be joyful witnesses of Christ, dead and risen for us.
Finally, I greet young people, the sick, the elderly and newlyweds. Dearests, I exhort you to look constantly at Jesus who has overcome death and who helps us to accept the sufferings and trials of life, as a precious occasion of redemption and salvation. May the Lord bless you and the Virgin Mary protect you!
Licas news Jose Torres Jr., Philippines April 15, 2020
The Archdiocese of Manila will be implementing changes in its activities even after the lockdown due to the global spread of the new coronavirus disease.
Bishop Broderick Pabillo, Manila’s apostolic administrator, said the archdiocese will definitely strengthen its social media presence and improve the ministry for the sick.
The prelate said the global health crisis has proven that social media has become an important toll in the people’s practice of their faith.
“Some realizations become clear to us,” said Bishop Pabillo in a pastoral statement released this week.
He noted that parishes that have “well-developed social media ministry” were able to reach their people easily and offer them services.
“Thus, we should develop our social media ministry. Online religious services are here to stay,” said the bishop.
He said the media apostolate “is here to stay and will play a greater role in the life of the Church from now on.”
Bishop Pabillo also urged all church institutions to set up “good social media ministries.”
He also noted that the pandemic “has shown us the importance of the ministry to the sick.”
The bishop said that in the Archdiocese of Manila there are only five priests who are in the hospital chaplaincy. Most of hospital chaplains are either religious or guest priests.
“We should seriously think as an archdiocese to strengthen our ministry to the sick, even down to the parochial level,” he said.
The prelate said the ministry to the sick should not only cater to the sick in hospitals but also to the medical staff, and the elderly in their homes.
He said there is a need to recruit younger lay ministers from older altar servers, or older choir members, or even ask religious sisters and brothers to help in the ministry.
In his pastoral statement, Bishop Pabillo also noted that the practice of “social distancing” will continue even after the pandemic.
He said there should be more Masses on Sundays after the pandemic to limit the attendance of people or ask the people to come when there are less people.
“Each parish is to determine the adequate spaces to be observed between the Mass attendees,” said the bishop.
“This would mean that Masses should no longer be on an hourly basis,” he said, adding that some time should be given between services for the cleaning of the church.
Big celebrations should be done outdoors, and churches can invest in big screens and outdoor sound systems for people who will remain outside the church.
The bishop said he expects alcohol and hand sanitizers to become regular features at the door of churches and offices.
He mulled providing a foot bath at the door steps of churches and offices.
Bishop Pabillo said people have to do away with the practice of touching or kissing religious images in churches, saying a bow or a moment of silent prayer would be enough. He urged members of the clergy in the archdiocese to use their creativity to serve the faithful “in the new situation that we are now in.”
A church official has echoed the calls for the immediate release of the government’s cash aid to workers, as Covid-19 quarantine measures continue to affect their livelihood and food security.
Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos pressed for a sense of urgency in assisting the country’s ordinary workers.
“We strongly demand that the Department of Labor and Employment immediately release the financial assistance to all affected workers whether from small, medium, and large enterprises,” Alminaza said.
The bishop, who also co-chairs the Church People – Workers Solidarity (CWS), said that many workers have not yet received the cash assistance since the Luzon-wide lockdown was imposed.
“Thus, workers and their families are left without income to buy food and other basic necessities,” said Alminaza.
He also urged the government to ask companies employing affected workers to apply for the cash assistance to mitigate the impact of the quarantine measures due to the coronavirus pandemic.
According to him, the DOLE assistance requires employers as the ones who should apply for the financial assistance for their workers.
“We reiterate our call to the government to oblige all companies to apply on behalf of their workers and/or allow workers to apply directly for the said assistance,” said the bishop.
About 220,000 workers affected by the lockdown have benefited from its Covid-19 Adjustment Measures Program, the DOLE said.
Around 1.4 million workers have reportedly been displaced since the lockdown forced businesses to temporarily close or implement flexible work arrangements.
As church groups joined various efforts in distributing aid, a Catholic charity focused its attention to helping people with disabilities and informal workers.
Catholic Relief Services is supporting PWDs and workers in the informal economy who are struggling because of the Covid-19 lockdown with over P1.2 million of initial assistance.
Matthew McGarry, CRS sub-regional country representative, said that beyond the dangers of the disease itself is the current situation for poor families to meet their basic needs.
“We are focusing our efforts on assisting the most vulnerable populations, who bear the brunt of the lockdown and are at the greatest risk from the spread of Covid-19,” McGarry said.
CRS, the U.S. bishops’ overseas relief and development agency, has programs across Asia. They have a sub-regional office in Manila.
The agency has partnered with Tahanang Walang Hagdanan, Inc. (TWHI) to help at least 116 people with disabilities in a TWHI residential facility in Cainta, Rizal.
The assistance include a one-month supply of food and hygiene items that the residents themselves selected during remote consultations with CRS and TWHI.
Melo Bueza, TWHI’s social worker, said people with disabilities are suffering the brunt of the coronavirus outbreak.
Licas news Mark Saludes, Philippines April 15, 2020
At 62 years of age, Father Alfredo Guerrero of the Cubao Diocese in Manila admitted that he is not that young and is among those who are at risk of infection of the new coronavirus.
To ensure that he will be healthy and safe from the virus, the priest said he takes all the necessary precautions and maintains the “right dose” of his own medicine against the crisis.
“I always laugh and make other people laugh,” said the priest, a believer in the maxim that “laughter is still the best medicine.”
On Palm Sunday, Father Alfredo used humor to remind the faithful of the meaning of the blessing of the palms.
“We put them on our doors or altars to signify that we welcome Jesus in our homes,” he said.
“It is not an amulet to protect you from evil, especially if evil sleeps beside you, eats with you, and pays the rent,” the priest said in jest.
“It cannot protect you if the evil is your spouse,” he said.
No one laughed, except for the few church workers inside the chapel who were live streaming the celebration online.
The chapel was empty because of the “enhanced community quarantine” across the country. Public mass gatherings have been prohibited for a month now.
“I am not used to cracking jokes that no one laughs,” said the priest.
“Maybe people are laughing while they were watching the Mass on the internet, but it is different when you see them laugh in person,” he said.
Father Alfredo, or Bong to his friends, celebrated his 34th anniversary as a priest on Holy Saturday.
In the past month, most of the work of many parishes was not that of liturgical celebrations. Of course, we had to prepare our churches and ourselves for the online masses and other religious services. Those did not take much time. What took most of our time was organizing how to distribute the gift certificates (GCs) and in large part, the actual giving of the GCs to the poor families together with our volunteers and barangay officials. Some parishes also spent time packing rice and other goods to distribute to the people. In a word, works of charity characterized our church activities during this time.
We have done a lot to help many people during this lock down. We now house more than 440 street people in 8 facilities in the archdiocese of Manila. Some 510 medical front liners are given lodging in 23 parishes, hostels, and convents. We have generously received help in the form of food items and sleeping materials from many religious communities and generous parishioners. Helping the poor has been an important expression of our work as church during these days. We were able to reach more than 400,000 families through our gift checks and food packs.
After the quarantine days, it would not be right to just toss the street people back to the streets and to let the hospitals take care of their medical staff. We have to maintain the good will and the relationships that we have created with the beneficiaries, with the donors and with the administrations of various medical institutions. The parishes, schools and religious communities need to set up structures that can create a continuous relationship with the people. Besides, it would not mean that come May 1, there would no longer be any COVID 19. This virus will be around for some time so our effort to contain it should also continue.
Another consideration that we have to look deeply are our financial situation. People will give to the church once the public services start, but surely not as much as they had been doing. Everyone’s pocket has been affected by the quarantine. Thus the parishes are to plan very carefully with their finance councils how to make ends meet in the coming months. It is good that there are already vicariates who help the poor parishes meet their obligations to their personnel. As we have decided at the start of the lock down, as much as possible we will not dismiss people from our workforce. If people are not able to work, it is not that they do not want to work. Everyone among us is a victim of these hard times.
As we try to help our parish and school personnel, let us also explain to them to be patient and not to demand the same treatment as before, as if nothing had happened. The challenge now is how to keep the morale of our people high in spite of the fact that we all face hard times. Let us all face this new situation with generosity and trust.
Broderick Pabillo Chairman Episcopal Commission on Lay Apostolate April 14, 2020