About the Ifugao Community Support Trust

Supporting livelihoods, access to education and community well being in the Ifugao Province of the Philippines.
News, photos, videos and stories beginning Christmas 2013.More about the Trust and our Trustees


Friday, January 29, 2016

Former European Football Player Plays with Youth in Burnay 

by Lorraine Allig, Jan 2016

In a small village like Burnay people rarely see foreigners come there who can talk and laugh with them. But on the 2nd day of January 2016 a former European Football player from Auckland New Zealand Joseph Martegani, assisted by Matt Alesevich, an Amrerican journalist, conducted a one day workshop at Burnay Elementary School. It was attended by the Burnay Youth Organization (BYO) with some kids and some boys from the Don Bosco High School.
At first the participants are very shy, hiding themselves and finding it hard to speak to them. But after some funny games they don’t hide themselves anymore.
The activity starts with a funny Introduction game. Instead of saying the name of the sitio (settlement) where they live, some say “over there”, “below there” and pointed at a direction, then laugh at their own words. Joseph, who has been traveling to almost all of the countries in Asia to conduct youth camps, introduced a lot of games which he learned in the countries while travelling that make the youths actively participate and enjoy the day. According to him “When you do these games they are very funny and you can laugh, you have fun, but if you analyze it a little bit they are very interesting games - like the circle game. "Some people don’t want to go to the center and some are really learning about their identity.”
The games are truly interesting, exciting and when you are playing you can almost forgot that you are playing with foreigners. Just like the "Have you ever" game in which one of the youth says “have you ever changed your pants” then the others agree and stand up and transfer to another seat. But some remained in their seats which means they never changed their pants! That game is really different and it is a game that involves honesty but actually while playing the game a lot of lies are said by the participants.



If many of the games are simple and funny there is also a game that is challenging and probably the hardest game. That was introduced by Matt Alesevich who holds the map for the game. “It is a trial and error process” says Megahn a BYO member. While playing the game you would concentrate to memorize every move and then analyze where to go next. From more than 10 individuals who played they go a lot of rounds and even consumed the allotted time for the game before one of the players step to the finish line.
One of the longest game is the 21 game “We spent like half an hour trying to get to 21 but then once done then a minute afterwards we did it again, straight away and without problem” said Rendt Gorter afterwards. When they give the instruction it really looks simple even the actions are simple but when you do it actual it is not really simple.
Even though they just played a lot of funny and challenging games those games also has a purpose which is “to develop cooperation in leadership quality like self-esteem, self-confidence, activity workshop communication, team building and problem solving” says 50 year old Joseph.
At the end of the activity the youth enjoyed all the games and they also learned some lessons “The lesson I learned from the sports clinic is sportsmanship. With the games introduced by the speakers and played by us, I can say I enjoyed and it is so interesting because it harness and develop my skills and talents. It was also a memorable activity for me as I get to socialize with the youth and speakers” says Reisha Bantiyan the vice-president of BYO.
Joseph has already been in the Philippines 6 times before and went to places like Davao, Baguio, Cebu, Palawan and some part of Manila to conduct a youth camp. He also went to Bicol just before coming to Ifugao and conducted a 4 day camping for his last activity. Joseph is working with the Brighten Foundation Youth Program from New Zealand and he is here because Rendt Gorter invited him to come here in Ifugao. It is nice to hear that he finds our village “very peaceful and relax lifestyle” and the people here are “friendly and easy to talk to.” Before he ends the conversation he left a message for the BYO saying “I enjoy my first meeting with Ifugaos. I hope to come back and meet more people.”

Saturday, December 5, 2015

A magic potion from the South Pacific

[Rendt Gorter, Barrier Bulletin, November 2015]

The very first time I took some jars of Sven Stellin's Kanuka Balm along on a journey to the Philippines, I was surprised at how enthusiastically this gift was received by my friends there. It was only later that I learned that in the Ifugao mountains of Northern Luzon there is a long-standing esteem for traditional healing products.
The Ifugao district, and really whole of the Mountain Province in the North of the Philippine's largest island, are the home of distinct tribes that to this day can trace their roots to the different boats they respectively arrived on, perhaps a thousand years ago. If that sounds familiar, then think briefly about what history tells us about the distant origins of the Polynesians as boat people coming out of South-East Asia. That dates from an era when your ancestors defined your identity and where your boat was named after who you were.
The people that over many generations settled deep in the steep valleys of the high mountains became part of those mountains. Today the spectacular rice terraces built laboriously over centuries to create level surfaces that could be irrigated, attract many foreign travellers who take the overnight bus ride for the 10 hour journey from Manila. UNESCO has designated five different valleys across a region larger than Coromandel as world heritage sites.
The rice terraces of the Cordilleras are the only monuments in the Philippines that show no evidence of having been influenced by colonial cultures in a history that goes back 494 years to the arrival of the Spanish. Owing to the difficult terrain, the Cordillera tribes are among the few peoples of the Philippines who have successfully resisted any foreign domination and have preserved their languages and authentic tribal culture. The history of the terraces is intertwined with that of its people, their culture, and their traditional practices.
Igorot, or Cordillerans, is the collective name of several Austronesian ethnic groups in the Philippines, who inhabit the mountains of Luzon. The Ifugao are the people inhabiting Ifugao Province. The term "Ifugao" is derived from "ipugo" which means "earth people", "mortals" or "humans", as distinguished from spirits and deities. It also means "from the hill", as pugo means hill. In other words, these are people deeply bound to their land and history.
The healing properties of the Kanuka Balm were confirmed to me on following trips by the people who had received the Barrier Gold products and I was asked to bring more supplies, for instance by Kay Davidson. Kay is a cheerful American missionary that has taken a number of orphans into her large house. After her husband died, she stayed on and has after several decades become a well-known community member in the town of Solano, the gateway into the Ifugao.
Further up in the mountains, another person that gained relief and better sleep is Connie Lacadin who is a trustee and treasurer of the Ifugao Community Support Trust that I sponsor with the financial help of friends. Like the other trustees whom I presented with jars, she has been passing it on to friends and relatives as 'a magic potion from the South Pacific.'
The ICS Trust was formed after the death of my father with a group of his friends and was endowed with the property he left behind after spending the last decade of his life in the Ifugao. I was easily talked into supporting this project by Connie and the others as a legacy from my father, as I myself have for twenty years been leading and designing development aid projects in other countries. And as our trustees are made up of respected locals, with a former bank manager and now advisor to the provincial governor, a former deputy mayor, a retired Filipino business man returned from the US, the manager of a farmers cooperative bank, along with Connie who is a senior manager at the municipality, I felt the trust would have integrity and the local support needed.
What we have done is to convert part of my father's property into a small farm with pigs and chicken. We also prepared the 5 bedroom house that my father built as a guesthouse for visitors and supporters. It sits on a site with a stunning view overlooking the rice terraces of Burnay.
With money donated so far we have been able to sustain a cooperative piggery with a group of local women as a livelihood project, and a sponsor form Great Barrier Island has made it possible for at least one young woman to enter college so she will be able to fulfil her dream and become a teacher. We hope, having by now shown that we can do this, to attract more sponsors who want to become involved and visit our guesthouse.
'Why don’t you bring more of this cream and we will sell it as fundraiser for our charity?' Connie suggested to me on my visit last Christmas. I already regularly take back organic Ifugao coffee to sell on Great Barrier so I thought that was a great idea. When I told Sven he was pleased to hear that and last Easter provided me with a whole box at cost, as a donation to our work in the Philippines. Thank you Sven.
Rendt Gorter 

Monday, December 22, 2014

End of year Update

Supporting families, creating futures, building resilient communities.

Report from the chair, Rendt Gorter, Lagawe, 21 December 2014.
It is a year ago now that we reformed the Trust originally founded by my father Kayes (using the Anglophone spelling he used here) and fellow residents from Lagawe, under the new name of ‘Ifugao Community Support Trust’. We defined our aim as community development and our focus would be on families, by supporting livelihoods and education.
To get established, gain experience and build a track record, we had set ourselves three goals for this year: 1. To start a women’s livelihood group raising pigs at my father’s farm, 2. To support one youth from the Barangay of Burnay, the district where we are based, into higher education working with an overseas sponsor, and 3. To make the guest house serviceable again to accommodate supporters. These we have achieved.
The Trustees divided the supervision of the projects between each other, we now have good financial systems in place and two staff from my father’s time in regular employment who have shown responsibility for the security and maintenance of the property. We are now ready for the next phase which during the coming year will prepare for expanding educational support and starting a self-supporting social enterprise by 2016.

The Burnay Women’s Livelihood Project: Supporting families

By the end of 2014, the Burnay pig growers’ collective has raised 6 piglets. In August the six week old piglets were bought for 2,500 peso each (~70 NZD) with money given by supporters from New Zealand. I have been paying for feed since then, and by now they are eating about $60-100 per week of the pre-mix feeds normally used here: Hog Starter, Hog Grower, Hog Finisher and Lactating Sow Feed.
To start with, the neglected stables needed to be refurbished for use again and several working bees with the help of husbands and other family members completed this.
When the stables were first constructed, Kayes had a thriving pig farm, with effluent management and organic inputs that in its heyday was visited by agricultural students from the nearby polytechnic. Designing and building stabling for stock had been my father’s trade many years ago so he took his drawings to local steel workers and built custom designed pig pens for sows and piglets that made feeding and cleaning easy. At the time he wrote and published a booklet entitled “Organic Farming in Ifugao”. His former partner and farm manager Lolita Addagna – they had separated a year before his death – now leads the women’s cooperative and brings along her lifelong 7experience from raising pigs as well as from working with Kayes.
Today saw a new addition to the stables with a mother pig inseminated about a month ago, bought for 20,000 pesos (~600 NZD) using the $450 donated by supporters in New Zealand. A pig has a gestation period of about 4 months and piglets are weaned at about 6 weeks.
After another month of fattening, the six piglets will be ready for sale for around 20,000 pesos each, depending on their actual live weight and market rates at the time. Profits from the sale of piglets will go to buy another bunch of piglets, plus another mother sow. By the time two mother pigs farrow in the middle of 2015, the second lot of piglets will be sold to finance feed of the next generation and for a first pay out to the group members. After that, the pig project should be mostly self-supporting and the women will need to fulfil their side of the bargain and begin to repay our Trust in live piglets.
The aim for 2015 is to develop this project, together with raising chicken, ducks, Tilapia and compost making into a showcase for how impoverished rural families can grow their livelihoods, and to be ready for the Trust to launch a full scale social enterprise buying and selling members produce, offering profits to members and investors. For Trustee and former deputy mayor Nora Luglug who works with the members, achieving self-reliance is a critical goal for these families.

Educational support: Creating futures

The challenge for youth from rural backgrounds, particularly those from broken families, is to gain entry into professional careers that can support families of their own and so escape the hand-to-mouth existence of casual labour. Especially those children coming from landless or impoverished families have little chance to find an open door.
All of our Trustees themselves are already engaged in sponsoring or have taken into their home secondary students from remote villages or poorer families to help with their education.
Connie Lacadin, the Trust’s treasurer, is herself human resource development officer at the Lagawe municipality and has clear ideas for building pathways into future careers. She designed the ICST Educational Assistance Program (EAP) with the Specific Objectives to 1. Provide specific educational cash assistance to poor but deserving students; and 2. To assist parents of beneficiaries with guiding, mentoring, counselling selected beneficiaries who would like to pursue a career through education. The policy clearly outlines the enrolment procedure and conditions to maintain support, as well as the respective obligations of the student, the parent or parents, and the ICST, including the expectation that professionally employed graduates would eventually pay back the costs of education advanced by the Trust for the benefit of future students.

To begin with, the ICST Educational Assistance Program would be offered to one of the children of an indigent, poor family in Burnay, Lagawe. One young woman from Burnay was thus selected and found a sponsor in New Zealand. In cooperation with the children’s home in Solano founded by the American Kay Davidson where the 19-year old had been in residence since her early years, she has now taken up board in Santiago and begun college studies in Social Welfare. With the support of the Lagawe officers of the Department of Social Welfare, the woman and her mother entered into an agreement with the Trust and thus were assisted to start on this path.
In 2015, and if new sponsors can be found to support college and boarding costs of at least 15,000 pesos per half-year semester (~500NZD), more students will be enrolled.

The Guesthouse: The Gorter Mountain Retreat

When Kayes Gorter first started pacing out the 7 bedroom house on the hill overlooking Burnay Valley, he had a vision for a home for abandoned children, a guesthouse for their overseas sponsors, and to help finance that endeavour, by opening a ‘Mountain Retreat’ for visiting hikers and nature lovers venturing into this iconic region of the Philippines. That idea lives on and the guesthouse is now ready to accommodate both supporters and tourists whose contribution will go towards the maintenance costs of the farm.
Critical repairs to the roof, foundations and termite-damaged flooring were completed this year. Visitors are now welcome, says Trustee Ben Buyawe, who recently returned home to retire from a life time career in the United States, and who will be welcoming the guests.

Capacity Development: Empowering community initiatives

The communities of the Ifugao can look back on a long history of working together to live of the land and solve shared problems. In modern times this can be seen in the number of community-based groups and local NGOs as well as local government programmes that promote working together. The work of the Trust, no little thanks to the professional and personal involvement of its Trustees, is an integral part of such community wide efforts. In 2015, the Trust aims to contribute to the capacity development of civil society with training and access to resources for colleagues from other organisations. I will draw on my work in consulting in New Zealand and overseas work experience in development and aid, and recruit further assistance where possible, to organise training and professional support in areas such as Project identification and design, Grant application writing, Project administration and management, Human resource management and development, and Project evaluation and reporting.

Looking forward: Aims for 2015

With the pilot projects nearing completion, the Trust is now ready to launch into next phase, which includes legal incorporation, building showcase projects at the farm and preparing for the launch of a commercial social enterprise in Burnay which over time can demonstrate how working together can be profitable for all involved, attracting investors keen to invest in social good. With that, we have especially corporate sponsors and expatriate workers from Ifugao in mind.

This is a critical phase for the Trust. All too often good ideas lose momentum after the initial startup. By now I have exhausted my credit line with the bank and so we are appealing to our friends to widen interest in the project and recruit further supporters to help us find the resources to keep growing this grass roots initiative. Even if it is just a like on Facebook, your support is appreciated.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Still dreaming

I am off to the Philippines again, and this time with high expectations. When shortly before I returned to New Zealand in April 2014, the trustees and friends of my deceased father had come together for a planning meeting, and we had dreamed of 'livelihood projects' for poor women and 'educational assistance' for deprived youth. 
Six months on we have half a dozen pigs growing fat and we have sponsors for a couple of young women. 
And what if we could expand that into two more villages this Christmas, perhaps combining this for better effect with another community project?
When a few people get together and put money into something they believe in, the fashionable term for that is crowd funding, 'the practice of funding a project by raising small amounts from many people.' What if the word went out and friends of friends would chip in a small amount of money each? What if it was so easy that it didn't matter how much each gave, because the next person along would make up the difference?
So on the 'crowdfunding' website givealittle.co.nz there now is a page for the Ifugao Community Support Trust. 
Do take a look. Moral support in itself already goes a long way, but if you mentioned this initiative over a cup of coffee sometime, then who knows, next time you are together you might be drinking some of the organic Ifugao coffee our supporters have been enjoying .

Sunday, April 27, 2014

The contract

The women turned up early, so they joined Rodelyn and Lolita who were preparing the food for our shared dinner. Lolita had chosen four friends – “not good to have too many!” she had explained to me earlier. Beatrice Tayaban, Aniseta Pagal, Mary Ballabong, Grace Fontainillo and Lolita Adagna were the names later signed on the Animal Sponsorship Contract (Swine).
Connie and I had been late to the trustee meeting, trying to get the agreement and project plan finalized and then find somewhere to print it. It was Saturday and that was market day in Lagawe, so all the central roads were blocked with stalls and tents. In the end we split up, and I found an internet cafĂ© with a printer while Connie took the Styrofoam cooler to the ice shop. We were still well within “Filipono time’ and only Ben was already waiting for us when we arrived at the guest house in Burnay. But we were closely followed by another trustee, Jovencio Dipia-o. He was late because since he was also a trustee of the Lagawe organic coffee growers coop, I had asked him to organise 20 kilograms of roasted plunger coffee packets which I could take back to New Zealand the following day and try to sell as a fundraiser.
When Nora arrived we started the trustee meeting since we wanted to hear first about the preparations for the livelihood project. Nora had been talking with the group to discuss the project and to also get to know them a little better. “They each have between 3 and 7 children and one is a grandmother. And one of them has a deaf-mute child for whom they have not been able to find any schooling.”
Nora had found out that the women were experienced with raising pigs and chicken, but only Lolita had been involved in the kind of larger scale project we were starting and they were very excited about that. “They live hand to mouth and are never able to save enough to build up livestock and to generate regular income.” Lolita was just about to slaughter the 7 pigs she had reared for the wedding of her daughter that was coming up the next week. That had only been possible thanks to her adult children contributing money. But after that she would be back at zero.
The aim of the livelihood project was to sustain income by returning part of the profits from livestock sale directly to feed the next round of piglets, produced by breeding sows kept in the same stable. The women knew that they could keep growing pigs once we had kickstarted the project with purchased piglets and feed for two breeding rounds. We would just have to find financial supporters that would put in the NZD 300 per pig needed for the first year. After that, the women expected to be raising at least 20 pigs per year with the money they themselves would earn.  
At the same time, probably twice as many piglets could be produced. The agreement with our Ifugao Community Support Trust stipulated that half of these, but not more than the twenty they would receive during the first year, would be returned to the Trust every year, in compensation for both the use of the piggery we were providing and the funds raised for the initial investment. Those pigs would then provide stock to extend the program elsewhere in Ifugao Provinces, which was the plan for 2015 onwards.

Before signing the agreement, Nora and Connie sat down once more with the women and went through the fine print, paragraph by paragraph. The contract was in English which is the official language in the Philippines, so Nora carefully explained each clause in the Ifugao that the women spoke at home.
Then all of us went up to the stables and discussed the repair work that the women would do, or that they would get their husbands to do, before the project could be started. And since there was space to start other projects later, we looked around and talked about raising chicken, growing vegetable and cropping mushrooms, using composted pig manure as fertilizer. It was exciting talking about what could happen here and we continued planning over the dinner that was waiting for us below at the guest house.

Monday, April 21, 2014

The Burnay Women's Livelihood Coop

A neighbour's pig pen
Lolita didn’t need convincing. She had been raising pigs all her life and she didn’t need me to repeat the calculation of costs to know that, if done properly, the potential income is double the investment. But would she be able to convince the other women she had started talking to? 
Nora, who was trustee and our community development volunteer, offered to come along and meet the women. As Carmen, our adviser from the Department of Social Welfare and Development had instructed us, just listen to the women, find out what they want to do, and help them achieve that. Nora, herself a former deputy mayor of the provincial capital Lagawe, now retired and grandmother, would explain that the women could divide their income between themselves and would only have to set aside enough for the next round of breeding. If the trust would buy them a dozen or so 45-day piglets once, and one more time after 6 months, then that would set them up to become self-funding thereafter. 
Lolita, Robert and Nora discuss the project.
“And what about the money you will lend us for feeding the piglets – don’t you want that back?” We explained that while we wanted to re-invest in other groups elsewhere in Ifugao, we simply wanted the women from Burnay to pay us back with ten piglets twice a year. These we could then either pass on to new groups or cash in at the local market. While the trust would manage their cash, with a separate bank account, how the money should be divided would be essentially their decision. We just wanted to extend the scheme further once it had proven itself and been fine tuned.
Robert inspects the piggery
The stables adjacent to the guest house would need only a little work to be able to accommodate multiple batches of pigs for fattening as well as a couple of breeding sows. We had invited Robert, our resident carpenter, along for the inspection. He kicked the posts holding up the piggery, and warned us that some repairs would be needed. No worry, laughed Lolita, that is what we have our men for.
As we parted, I said to Lolita ‘Simply tell the other women that we will find you money to pay for the first year, provide the stables and help you solve problems along the way. And then you just have to help us help other women. You can’t really lose.’

Friday, April 18, 2014

Return to Ifugao

The air-conditioning was already blowing cold air while the bus passengers were stowing their belongings in the overhead racks. After the humid heat still lingering at 10 pm in downtown Manila, I realised that I would need to put on some warm clothes for the overnight trip to Lagawe. My reserved seat was occupied, but to my surprise it turned out to be Lucia. A neighbour in Burnay Valley and wife of the maintenance man at the guesthouse, she was welcome company for the 8 hour journey into the mountains, so I slipped into the aisle seat next to her without protest. I was expected and Robert had a number of issues waiting for me to be sorted out, I was told immediately.
End of the road at Bunog

I was last in Ifugao Province over Christmas. The guesthouse my father had built from local timbers on the slopes overlooking Burnay Valley was one of the largest houses in the area. The 7 bed-room residence was located at the far end of Bunug village, a small settlement of perhaps 10 houses and itself at the end of a small one lane road. Robert was employed for 10 or more hours a week to look after the property, together with Rodelyn who was the resident housekeeper.
While the house has 4WD access, many if not most homes in the valley can only be reached on foot, 5 to 30 minutes along rice paddies or forest tracks from the nearest roadhead. In fact, there are only 3 cars in the district of perhaps a thousand inhabitants, and our trust owns one of them.
To hear news from the trust, my first stop after the bus arrived in the town centre of Lagawe was the home of Connie and Mel. It was still early, not even 6 AM yet, and after saying goodbye to Lucia, I walked through the market street were shops were just beginning to open. When I arrived, coffee was percolating and breakfast was soon on the table, with rice and fried foods being the standard Filipino morning fare.
Connie is the Trust Treasurer and we quickly caught up on news from the guesthouse, and then exchanged family news. I had just missed my brother Tim by a day when I visited his family at home in Singapore during the 12 hour stopover, but they were happy to look at some photos from his visit to Great Barrier Island with his two young daughters the week before.
With Tim and the trustees my father had brought together, we had decided to keep the project alive after my father’s unexpected death last year. Kayes had first come here a decade earlier to visit a child he had been sponsoring, decided to stay and then had always sought other ways to be a helpful community member.
During my last visit in December, we had agreed to model the future work of this trust on that of the Aotea Family Support Group Trust whom I worked with in New Zealand. The charity would also be a trustee and volunteer led organisation helping communities in Ifugao Province to develop strengths and support vulnerable people. To make that possible, we wanted to find local and foreign supporters that wanted to become part of the ‘Ifugao Support Group’, using the guesthouse as our local base.
After breakfast I started up our car and drove it into the hills above the township to Bunug village. From there it was a quick walk across rice fields to get to the guesthouse and I was pleased to finally arrive, after travelling for five days since setting out from Great Barrier Island.

About Me

After ten years of preparing and coordinating aid programmes across Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Caucasus, I spent several years completing a PhD. I explored why participation in environmental governance is so difficult. Now I work as community organizer back home on Great Barrier Island.