Volume 7 Numbers 5 - 10 l Special Edition Newspacket
October 21, 2008

Editor's Musing
by Dennis Estopace (
editor@ofwjournalism.net ), Resident Editor

THE song about stopping the world and melting with somebody kept playing in my head while working on this magazine, especially on the cover story “Free Movement.”
The song’s lyrics may be about this thing called love but Mr. Jeremaiah Opiniano’s story sums up the level that Filipino migration achieved since the early 80s, the so-called second wave.
We have seen, felt, and moved with the changes in every wave: from the trickle of engineers to Middle Eastern countries to the surpassing by women of the number of workers going out.
While it remains suspect if these changes are getting better “all the time,” one thread links all these waves of migration—the human being’s dream of a better life, which as the song goes, “the kind which never hate.”

That dream is dreamt not only by the migrant Filipino already in any of the 190 countries she or he is in but also by his or her neighbor in a ramshackle house beside the migrant family’s semi-bungalow home.
This is the point of Dr. Filomeno Aguilar in his story “Houses of Representatives.”
That dream is dreamt also by advocates for migrant welfare who ironically are working to erase their reason for existence by forcing the state to implement the law and serve its course. Read “Sheltered Lives” by OFW Journalism Consortium’s new reporters Luis Carlo Liberato and Ruben Jeffrey Asuncion to peek at this dream.
There are also dreams realized, unwittingly by forces beyond migrants’ control or shaped as they move forward with their lives. This was what Candice Cerezo tried to capture in her story about a caregiver-turned-millionaire, in “Caregiver, millionaire.”
Other stories here are equally palatable, as is the magazine’s aim of bringing migration policy debates to the level of human suffering and salvation.
That is our promise to the Embassy of the Royal Netherlands here, which forked the money for this project and to whom we are grateful.
We are equally grateful to the writers who accepted the task despite knowing the magazine’s budget excludes a promise of compensation.
Editing the stories here is like embarking on a pilgrimage where the sights and sounds encountered are both pleasing and rueful.
The latter you may find in any story is mostly the editor’s faults while the former –all the best details in the story– are the writer’s inherent skills.


Free Movement
PARIS, FRANCE—TERESA winced as if the camera flash hit her – just like she did when two men mauled her in her room here early morning three years ago.
“It just feels like it happened yesterday, you know, because I’m still illegal, undocumented, irregular, whatever,” she said, waving her arms as if the bad memories could be waved off like fruit flies.
JEREMAIAH M. OPINIANO reports for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
 
Full story 
The houses that migrant workers build (but do not live in)
Houses of Representatives
THERE’S a remarkable landscape sculptured in the upland villages of Batangas province, more than a hundred kilometers southeast of Manila.
Except for the meandering road, these villages emit a very urban feel and air about them, dispelling the urbane notions toward rustic towns located uphill from the coast.
One of these is the village we’ll call Sumilang, where brightly-painted houses offer an explosion of colors – cream, light blue, orange, red, white, and yellow.
FILOMENO AGUILAR JR. contributes for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
Full story

Caregiver-Millionaire
I WILL never forget Edward Fabish; he made me rich.
I never thought things would turn out this way. Eight years ago, I was working as a stenographer at the Manila Prosecutors’ Office in City Hall.
When I left my job, my bosses –all prosecutors, my colleagues, and fellow stenographers never thought I would take the job of a caregiver. They said I was not the type.
RAMONA ALVIR as told to CANDICE Y. CEREZO for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
Full story

Trading Places
Buying, selling may be key to Asian migrants’ unity
KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA—THE Kota Raya shopping mall here on Sundays reflects that Asian migrant workers understand each other if their heads of state allow the market as a platform for communication.
Here, words melding with nods and a thumbs-up sign are easily understood as agreement on a certain price for hand-woven silk or hand-sewn leather sandals. JEREMAIAH M. OPINIANO reports for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
Full story

Sheltered Lives
QUEZON CITY, PHILIPPINES—RAIN is pouring in buckets as Imelda Rebate steps inside the office of Kanlungan Centre Foundation, the oldest nonprofit group for abused women migrant workers.
Across the drenched porch, a younger woman is at a peach-colored table, her head slightly bowed and eyes fixed on an open tattered and yellowing folder.
Her mouth moves while she reads, as if praying silently that this case will not add to the folders of cases –some 248 of them– that remain open. LUIS CARLO S. LIBERATO and RUBEN JEFFREY A. ASUNCION report for the OFW Journalism Consortium®. Full story


Market Reins
Government auditors rule failure of migration policies in protecting OFWs

INSURANCE agent Lilian Baltazar couldn’t put illegal recruiter Joel behind bars – he already is.
The ability to operate a scam in prison highlights what government auditors discovered in its appraisal of Philippine policies on recruitment for overseas work. The Commission on Audit concludes a state policy failure in arresting illegal recruitment.
Take Baltazar’s experience as anecdotal example. MADELAINE JOY A. ESTRADA and JEREMAIAH M. OPINIANO report for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
Full story

Trade Advantage
Reporting from Tours and Paris, France and from Binangonan, Rizal Province, Philippines
IN TOURS, France, they buried the fountain of youth.
In this garden city south of Paris is where a quarter of a million people speak the country’s purest French. Visibly, the elderly walk slowly through Tours’s tourist spots, enjoying the crisp air and light dazzling sun.
A lady, maybe in her early 70s, stepped outside the city’s inter-city train station on black size five ballet flats. JEREMAIAH M. OPINIANO reports for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
  Full story

Water Women
Seafaring industry’s policies on treatment of women on troubled waters

FOUR graduates of the Maritime Academy of the Asia and the Pacific are at greater risk than their classmates because they are women.
University of the Philippines professor Lucia Palpal-latoc Tangi came to this conclusion after in-depth interviews with a dozen women seafarers, most of who are working as bar waitresses, utility, and massage therapists on passenger and cruise liners. WILLIAM ALZONA reports for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
Full story

Schengen Diaries
THERE wasn’t a “Keep silent” sign inside the interview room, but you could hear a pin drop inside the Belgian Embassy in Makati City.
Everyone lining up for a Schengen visa could hear a whisper, even of those getting interviewed.
It was my sixth time in the Embassy and things were as they were since the first time I set foot inside—the colorful lives stayed colorful.
WILLIAM ALZONA reports for the OFW Journalism Consortium®.
Full story

Migration Journalism: The story of the OFW Journalism Consortium
by
DENNIS ESTOPACE and JEREMAIAH OPINIANO
IT WAS a humid afternoon six years ago when three men sipped coffee and conspired against Philippine journalism.
“It’s a crazy idea but it could work,” one of the men, a reporter for The Manila Times then, said.
“What could be different…,” the youngest of the trio, who would fly off to Maldives in six months time, said. Full story


The OFW Journalism Consortium: A Reader’s View
by ILDEFONSO F. BAGASAO
AMONG my peers, there seems to be a common observation in the reporting of any kind of news that media generally shows bias for sensational stories that whet the reading public’s appetite for such accounts but which incidentally also sells newspapers, broadsheets and tabloids.
News reportage on Filipino migrants is no exception.
Stories about overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) coming home in coffins, jumping out of the windows, committing suicides, of rape, torture, and other forms of maltreatment in foreign shores, continue to dominate our daily newspapers. One has to find balance and variety in reporting of this or any kind of news. Full story


How to take care of your money?
Read the stories of the OFW Journalism Consortium on financial literacy for Filipinos abroad and their families back home. Click here

2006 Special Newspacket on Financial Literacy in Overseas Filipinos
by the OFW Journalism Consortium cited in the newsletter Migrant Remittances
(published by the United States Agency for International Development [USAID]-Microenterprise Development Office and the United Kingdom Department for International Development [DFID])
http://www.livelihoods.org/hot_topics/docs/Migrant%20Remittances_Oct06.pdf


These articles are free, but to publish, broadcast, rewrite, or redistribute this, please write or email the OFW Journalism Consortium editor@ofwjournalism.net or ofwjournalism
@gmail.com for permission.
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