Balay Mindanaw’s partnership with Disaster Aid International
This short video is an overview of Balay Mindanaw’s disaster response work with Disaster Aid International, including the installation of the SkyHydrant water filtration system:
This short video is an overview of Balay Mindanaw’s disaster response work with Disaster Aid International, including the installation of the SkyHydrant water filtration system:
The following article was originally posted on the Ramon Aboitiz Foundation, Inc. (RAFI) website. Balay Mindanaw was one of the five finalists in the 6th… Read More »A PARTNER IN THE JOURNEY TO RECOVERY
As I reflect on how I reacted/responded to the recent disasters like Sendong, Pablo, Bohol earthquake and Yolanda, I give thanks to the crisis caused… Read More »My Thoughts on Disaster Response Volunteer Work, and the 1976 Earthquake and Tsunami – Kaloy
Local officials of Sta. Josefa town in the Province of Agusan del Sur expressed gratefulness to Balay Mindanaw for assisting their local government unit in becoming… Read More »Sta. Josefa LGU thanks Balay Mindanaw for helping make them disaster-resilient
Perhaps if you visited the barangay (village) of San Juan in Ormoc City early morning of Christmas in the year 2013, you would see the soft sunrise touching the tops of the trees laid bare by Supertyphoon Yolanda (international name: Haiyan) that devastated many areas of the Visayas region earlier that November. The rural barangay of San Juan is found just at the border of Ormoc, just before its boundary with the municipality of Merida.
On your visit, you might turn left from the Ormoc City-Merida Road, leaving behind the hard concrete road onto rough, dusty streets with rice fields on either side. The scenery is now and used to be a lush green. Back then, after Yolanda, it was predominantly brown, most of the foliage blown away by the typhoon. Beyond the rice fields, you would come across a bridge from which you would see a multitude of damaged houses. Some of the lucky ones had a G.I. sheet or two ripped off of their roofs. Those that weren’t as fortunate were completely destroyed altogether.
Perhaps in the midst of the rubble lit by the early morning sunrise you would find an interesting sight. You might find Girlie Arcillas pushing her partner, Danny Ciesneros, up the streets on a wheelchair. Once they reach level ground, they exchange places. Girlie would carefully help Danny up from the wheelchair. Danny would then push the wheelchair, with Girlie sitting on it for support, exercising his legs, both of which had been broken by a car accident the year before. This would become the pair’s routine for months. Sometimes they would go on like this for three hours, depending on Danny’s strength at the time.Read More »Danny Ciesneros: on his feet again