Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Mahirap Maging Mahirap: How are the poor coping with COVID-19?

Mahirap Maging Mahirap: How are the poor coping with COVID-19?

Kwentong Kalusugan sa Komunidad ukol sa COVID-19 (KKK-COVID19)
Institute of Philippine Culture (IPC), Ateneo de Manila University
Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc. (UGAT) 


UGAT thanks everyone who joined its first-ever webinar, where four anthropologists talked about the impacts of Covid-19 and the resulting quarantine on the urban poor.

Here is an infographic prepared by Ateneo de Manila University student Kay Atienza, who joined the webinar and got inspired to design this visual aid free of charge.

The speakers of the webinar facilitated by Dr. Mary Racelis of the Institute of Philippine Culture discussed topics related to the experiences of Filipinos during the enhanced community quarantine, with a focus on the plight of the urban poor.


Dr. Maria Carinnes Alejandria of the University of Santo Tomas discussed the struggles of the residents in BASECO compound in Manila, particularly those involved in the garlic industry.



Dr. Josh San Pedro of the Coalition for People's Health shed light on the struggles of disseminating COVID-related information to the public as reflected in his work as a physician-anthropologist in Quezon City.


Dr. Gideon Lasco of University of the Philippines Diliman highlighted the most vulnerable sectors of the society during COVID-19 pandemic, emphasizing the point that the pandemic can be viewed as "syndemic". The issues arising during ECQ should not be divorced from the apparent disparities brought by different social, economic, and political contexts.


Watch the video here

Maria Paz Palis, Ateneo de Manila University

MARIA PAZ PALIS
Ateneo de Manila University

25 January 1965 - 22 April 2020


Maria Paz Palis made her transition around 1:30PM today, April 22, 2020 in Iloilo City. She died of complications to breast cancer. Paz was 55. Please continue to pray for her eternal repose.

Patsy was a valiant spirit, a prayer warrior, unwavering in her love and support to family and friends, and always positive and upbeat in spite of pain and challenging situations. Join our family as we celebrate a life well lived! — from Joseph Palis, 22 April 2020

Friday, April 17, 2020

Mahirap Maging Mahirap (UGAT and IPC Webinar on COVID 19)

Mahirap Maging Mahirap (UGAT and IPC Webinar on COVID 19)

Kwentong Kalusugan sa Komunidad ukol sa COVID-19 (KKK-COVID19)
Institute of Philippine Culture (IPC), Ateneo de Manila University
Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc. (UGAT) 


Join us as we co-host (with Ateneo's Institute of Philippine Culture) an online conversation on COVID-19 with anthropologists who are working closely with marginalized communities.


Anthropologists Mary Racelis, Maria Carinnes Alejandria, Josh San Pedro and Gideon Lasco will share their observations about COVID-19 and the urban poor experiences during the nationwide quarantine, public health and medical interventions, and local and global responses. They will share their observations about on-the-ground realities and point to ways to improve our response to the pandemic.

This webinar is co-sponsored by Ugnayang Pang-AghamTao (UGAT), Ateneo de Manila University's Institute of Philippine Culture, the Department of Science and Technology, and the Philippine Center for Health and Research Development.

Presenters:
Maria Carinnes Alejandria, PhD
- Assistant Professor, University of Santo Tomas

Joshua San Pedro, MD
- Co-convenor, Coalition for People's Right to Health
- Community Physician, Council for Health and Development

Gideon Lasco, MD, PhD
- Senior Lecturer, University of the Philippines Diliman
- Research Fellow, Ateneo de Manila University

Moderator:
Mary Racelis, PhD (honoris causa)
- Research Scientist, Institute of Philippine Culture
- Senior Lecturer, Ateneo de Manila University
- Senior Lecturer, University of the Philippines Diliman



Registration:

This webinar is FREE and open to the public. Register Now at bit.ly/kkkcovidpart3.

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

TALAARAWAN: a collection of autoethnographic diaries in the time of COVID-19

We are inviting everyone, not just anthropologists but also students, professionals, kids, academics, government, non-government, the religious sector, corporate employees, our frontliners, and volunteers, to send to us your everyday anecdotes of your experiences, reactions, feelings, and observations during the COVID-19 lockdown.


Since 15 March, NCR has been placed into a lockdown as a government measure to contain the spread of the COVID-19 acute respiratory disease. The following day, an enhanced community quarantine was announced extending the lockdown to the entirety of Luzon, while several local governments in Visayas and Mindanao posed restrictions of their own. The lockdown has caused a massive and abrupt societal change closing businesses, suspending classes, shutting down public transportation, and momentarily halting work, urging more than 50 million people to stay at home—an abnormality in our normative way of life. Suspending what essentially constitutes our daily lives has exposed the overwhelming social inequality in our country, the frailty of our economy highly dependent on import and export, the politics of the opportunists, and the kind of morality we hide underneath our language and behavior. Living on lockdown and staying at home are not the same for every Filipino. For some of us, the pandemic has occupied so much of our thinking and created a confused, incomprehensible emotional and psychological state, while for many people living in underprivileged circumstances physical distancing, handwashing, and wearing masks are only secondary to their day-to-day struggle to get food for their families.

As the only association of anthropologists in the Philippines, the Ugnayang Pang-Agham Tao sees the importance of listening to the personal and connecting it to the collective memory and cultural experiences of Filipinos in this extraordinary time. We encourage you to send us your own observations, reactions, and experiences based on the different senses—sight, smell, touch, hearing, feeling. Your submissions can be in the form of any of the following: short journal entries, long essays, photographs, photo essays, audio recordings, video, description of what you are feeling or the smells or the sounds you associate with or peculiar to you while you are under quarantine, screenshots and links to news you follow, drawings and illustrations of your environment, a list of words to describe the situation, etc. Your diary entries are in itself diary entries in the strict definition of the term. We are interested in submissions that you are writing for yourself and not only for the public or for clout such as the kind for a blog, Facebook, or Twitter. The submissions we seek include the reactions you experience intimately but are otherwise concealed.

We are particularly interested in your reflections on the following: What worries you during this time? What do you think about the government response? How do you feel about the volunteer efforts among the private sector and the civil society? What does ‘physical distancing’ and ‘quarantine’ look like to you? How do you cope or interact with others while on quarantine? While on lockdown, what do you feel before you go to sleep and after waking up? Have you also lost track of time? What are you thinking about when you need to go outside? How do you feel about the security checkpoints? What is your mood? What is the mood in your environment? Has there been a change in the way you understand yourself, family, personal and professional relationships, neighborhood, community, the medical workers, frontliners, the government, your schoolwork, society in general? How do you visualize the Philippines after the pandemic? What should we learn from this experience?


The COVID-19 diaries project is a collaborative work and the main goal of the project is for all of us to remember this time and learn from our own experiences and experiences of others. This project is a work-in-progress, but with your permission we intend to use your entries to curate an online (and later on physical) exhibit of TALAARAWAN. We can also bring together some entries for a special issue of the AGHAMTAO journal or a feature of your entry on the UGAT Blog (https://ugatconference.wixsite.com/ugat).

All of your entries will only be used for the purpose we aim in this TALAARAWAN project. Submitting your diaries to UGAT means you are giving us consent to publish your entries. All entries will remain confidential and your identity anonymous if you choose to. Please be ensured that we will respect your data privacy rights (https://www.privacy.gov.ph/know-your-rights/).

HOW TO SUBMIT:
Your diary entry can be in any Philippine language or in English. Please include your name (optional), date of diary entry, affiliation/ taga-saan, your occupation (e.g. student), and age. There are two ways to submit your diaries:

1) You can send your submissions to ugat.talaarawan@gmail.com, if you particularly want to remain anonymous. Please use an email address where you want us to contact you.
2) You can publicly post your entry on social media (FB, IG, Twitter) and use #talaarawanCOVID19 or tag us @ugat1978. Using the hashtag or tagging us means you are allowing UGAT to use your post and your name.

If you have questions, you can message our FB Page @ugat1978 (https://www.facebook.com/groups/ugat1978/) or send them to ugat.talaarawan@gmail.com.


Reference: https://www.facebook.com/ugat1978/posts/928298614293645