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Showing posts from October, 2015

Quick Snaps of the Molo Church and Molo Plaza

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The Molo Church and the Molo Plaza need no further introduction as this is one of every visitor's favorite churches in Iloilo City. If one happens to be in Molo, one cannot stop by without gazing up to the cathedral's facade and without taking a photo of it. Same is true with the gazebo found in the Molo plaza. So here, I am sharing to you the church and the plaza in Molo, Iloilo City. *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

Passing by the restored Yusay-Consing mansion

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En route to Camina Balay Nga Bato in Villa Arevalo, we passed by the Molo Plaza and noticed the newly opened Yusay-Consing Mansion which was earlier bought and restored by SM Corp. It was APEC week in Iloilo City then, so inside the mansion were endless pasalubong ideas from the well-loved biscocho to many pretty native handbags. I just took a photo of the scarf and shawls as they are the apples of my eye as well as the business card of a cooperative producing them.  ***     *** *** *** *** More on the Yusay-Consing mansion : http://www.mb.com.ph/iloilo-heritage-structure-will-be-preserved-sm/ http://www.mb.com.ph/iloilo-heritage-structure-will-be-preserved-sm/ Here too:  http://historicphilippines.com/sights-of-ilo%C2%B2-series/sightssounds-of-ilo%C2%B2-2/the-historic-yusay-consing-mansion-molo-iloilo/the-yusay-consing-mansion-molo/

Voices from Chernobyl and the Jalaur River Dam Project

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Belarussian journalist and writer Svetlana Alexievich's body of work consists of nonfiction but she specifically got this year's Nobel Prize for her book, Voices from Chernobyl. Originally written in Russian which follows her country's oral tradition, the book gave voices to the victims of the largest technical disaster of the twentieth century. I was able to read a short but already riveting portion of the book in Paris Review, and I quote here the portion which I believe can represent the pain of 2.1 million people: I was twenty-three. Two months later I went back to Moscow. From the train station straight to the cemetery. To him! And at the cemetery I started going into labor. Just as I started talking to him—they called the ambulance. It was two weeks before I was due. They showed her to me—a girl. “Natashenka,” I called out. “Your father named you Natashenka.” She looked healthy. Arms, legs. But she had cirrhosis of the liver. Her liver had twenty-eight ...

Heritage House Tour and Tsokalate at Camina Balay Nga Bato

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If you have a half day to spare when you get to visit Iloilo City, a visit to Camina Balay Nga Bato in Villa Arevalo is a must. It can easily be reached as this is located just along the road plied by the Oton jeepney. The house is open to walk-in visitors and for a fee of P150, one is treated to a 5-minute video presentation on the history of the house, a tour of the house filled with hardwood furniture and all things old, and a demi tasse of tsokolate. For an additional cost of P50/pax, a group of five can also enjoy the house's molo soup. Filled with antiques (some are for sale), this heritage curio shop is also a dining place during the evening, serving native and organic home dishes such as lupo and takway. Here are some of the photos I was able to take during my visit: *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

Submersion of Panay Bukidnons: A Call for Salvage

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Submersion of Panay Bukidnons: A Call for Salvage Aside from the imminent fact that the Jalaur River Dam shall submerge portions of their ancestral domain, the Panay Bukidnon's cultural heritage also faces submersion Sunburn, scratches from blades of grasses, and scars from insect bites are among the souvenirs I and a friend got from our three-day immersion with the Panay Bukidnons of Brgy. Garangan, Calinog, Iloilo. We slept and lived with them in order to hear stories about stars and gather recipes of their traditional cooking but we ended up hearing more pressing matters, about the dam project and the struggle to keep the heritage vis-a-vis the daily needs for survival. On our second morning, we traversed the mountainside planted among others with coffee and cacao trees owned by our host family, with the end of reaching Jalaur River where a megadam project is to be implemented. Along the way, we traversed at least ten live streams including Karangayan and Bukay Ng...