Difference between revisions of "Southern Leyte Province, Philippines"

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==[[Southern Leyte News]]==
==[[Southern Leyte News]]==
'''Col Ruperto Kangleon's daughter recounts family ordeal during WW II'''
'''Protecting the forest is Leyte boxer's toughest fight'''
*Source: http://www.pia.gov.ph/?m=7&r=r08&id=59780
*Source: http://www.gmanews.tv/story/232614/special-reports/protecting-the-forest-is-leyte-boxers-toughest-fight
*Tuesday, October 18, 2011
*09/16/2011 | 06:44 PM
:by ES Gorne
:by MARK D. MERUEÑAS, GMA News




MAASIN CITY, Southern Leyte, Oct. 18 (PIA) -- Being a member of the family of highest guerilla leader in Leyte, the 81-year old daugther of then WW II Col. Ruperto Kangleon recounts how their family suffered the ordeal of escaping from the grips of Japanese army wanting to hostage the immediate family of Kangleon during the second world war.
MAASIN CITY, Southern Leyte - Against the advice of his parents, Mark Cadabos gave up farming and left his hometown in Southern Leyte at the tender age of 12 to pursue a boxing career in Manila in 2001.
The fifth child of the ten siblings of then Col Kangleon, Sister Lourdes Tagle Kangleon disclosed that for at least seven narrow escape sometimes in barefoot to different places like Barili and Carcar both in Cebu City, Jetafe in Bohol, Malitbog, Hinundayan, Libagon, Sogod and St. Bernard for almost four years in hiding away from their father, who fought against the enemy of the state during the weekly kapihan segment of the “Action Center” cable tv program at the Senior Citizen’s Building in Maasin City this morning.
 
Sister Kangleon, a medical doctor by profession who graduated at UST Medical School and took her post graduate studies in U.S. in 1956, is connected to the Medical Mission Sisters – International Religious Congregation of Women.
Fortunately for the young boy, he landed a spot and came under the tutelage of professional boxers at the Tiger City Boxing Stable in Mandaluyong City. For almost a decade, everything went as Cadabos had planned, until news of his father's death forced him to return here, to their small farming village of Lunas in the provincial capital of Maasin City.
She recounted in one of their escape route to a three – hour walk to the deep jungle of Libagon, wherein she, her mother and youngest daughter Cecilia were not able to join her other three brothers and older sister, Corazon escape , because she was very sick.
 
And to their fear, her brothers and sister Corazon were caught by the Japanese soldiers, however, failed to use them as a leverage for their father to surrender, Kangleon recounted.
With their breadwinner gone, Cadabos - now 22 years old - was left with the responsibility of attending to the needs of their family. He still occasionally fights in local matches in the province, but he never expected he would end up turning to the very practice he abandoned a decade ago for income: forest farming.
She recalled their father replied to the Japanese soldiers that he would not surrender and leave the fate of his four children at the hands of God. The four of children were brought to Tacloban City to join with the rest of people who were in prisoned by the Japanese soldiers.
 
The younger Kangleon remembered how their survived without food most of the time as they are enroute of their escapes, some times they scratch for rootcrops different places, pressed their throats to appease hunger, among other sufferings because they were the target of the Japanese soldiers being the family of the leader of the guerillas.
Cadabos is one of the more than 100 forest farmers belonging to a local people's organization, the Youth Innovators for Social and Environmental Development Association (YISEDA), which is protecting the Nacolod Mountain Range, locally called the "San Francisco Nature's Park."
After the war, she was grateful that all of the members of the family were all reunited.
 
She noted that the driving force of her father to be strong and dedicated to defend the nation is his love for the country.
No different from his exhausting boxing schedule in Manila, Cadabos starts each day by trekking to the foot of the 1,900-foot high mountain as early as 7 a.m. Six days a week, he brandishes a machete and lugs a hand-woven basket containing seedlings on his back as he makes a calculated ascent. He negotiates the slippery slopes, leaps over treacherous ravines, avoids sharp rocks, and endures bee stings in order to cultivate sections of arable land and plant seedlings in denuded areas.
The late Col. Ruperto Kangleon later became the Secretary of the National Defense during the administration of then President Carlos Garcia and a senator of the third congress of the Republic of the Philippines.### (PIA SoLeyte/esg)
 
The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has awarded their group some 400 hectares of forest land to protect for 25 years, with technical assistance from the government and funding from local governments and the German development agency Deutsche Gesellshaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ).
 
The project aims to institute effective sustainable forest management in the mountain range, warding off illegal loggers and kaingin farmers while restoring the forest land with a variety of trees like Lauan, Acacia, and Sagimsiman.
 
In a 2006 report, the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization said the Philippines lost around 157,000 hectares of forest annually from 2000 to 2005. Until last year, the country was still losing forests at the rate of 150,000 hectares per year, according to Dr. Bernd-Markus Liss of the GIZ.
 
In exchange for protecting the forest, the farmers gain the right to harvest trees while planting new seedlings in their place, in specially designated plantation areas on the slopes of the mountain range. At the same time, YISEDA members are taught proper agro-forestry, planting fruit-bearing trees, vegetables, and root crops that provide them with a steady source of income.
 
Also, Cadabos' community contributes in a huge way to easing the greenhouse effect that warms the planet through a global strategy known as Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation-plus (REDD+).
 
Boxing takes a backseat
 
Cadabos was planting seedlings near a mountain peak when our group of journalists from Manila visited the project site one rainy Thursday morning. He volunteered to assist us as we made the steep descent from the mountain.
 
He candidly told GMA News Online that he still intends to return to Manila to revive his abandoned boxing dream in the future. "Labing-pitong panalo [17 wins]," he says when asked about his career, "at apat na talo [And four losses]."
 
Referring to the famous boxing venue of most of his idol Manny Pacquiao's matches, he confesses, “Sana dumating din ang araw na ako naman ang lalaban sa Las Vegas." [I hope someday I can also fight in Las Vegas]
 
But that dream is still far away, Cadabos admits. For now, he is focusing his attention to the needs of the mountains surrounding their small village.
 
On this particular day, he is potting prepared seedlings to meet his group's daily quota of 10,000 seedlings. Their target is to pot a total of 120,000 plants in two weeks' time, all for the meager allowance of P120 a day or a total of only P1,440 for the entire endeavor.
 
"Okay lang kahit mahirap, kami din naman makikinabang niyan kapag tumagal [It doesn't matter if this job requires hard labor because villagers here like me are the ones who will benefit from this anyway when the time comes]," he says.
 
After ensuring that all the visitors have safely made their way down, the young boxer-farmer politely asks if we didn't mind him going back up the mountain to return to his farming duties. Cadabos gives a small nod to the journalists, turns around, and disappears behind the trees.
 
Back in the mountain, he will face another of his life’s battles which, despite being the toughest for him, he also finds the most rewarding. In this battle, unlike in his boxing stints, there are no tallies for wins and losses. There is only victory.


==Photo Gallery of Southern Leyte, Philippines==
==Photo Gallery of Southern Leyte, Philippines==

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