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PROGRAM THRUST FOR HUMAN DEVELOPMENT & HARMONY (HDH) Lambat-Liwanag. PROJECT TO BUILD A NETWORK OF CENTERS FOR EMPOWERING PARADIGMS |
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The symbol above, designed as the centerpiece artwork for this book's cover, has been adopted as the logo of the SanibLakas LightShare program under the program thrust for Human Development and Harmony. |
Documentation Book of First General Conference A Gathering of Light for
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Table of Contents |
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Messages
Foreword:
New Paradigms Have to be Encouraged by Fortunato
Sevilla III
Prologue:
A
New Life for You and This Material?
Chapter
1
Conference Background
Conference Convenor: Strong Center for Dynamic Research
Conference Convenor: Academe-Based Network for Light-Sharing
Netrork
Convenor: A
Synergism-Oriented Foundation
Chapter
2
Conference Opening
Welcome
Remarks: It’s
UST’s Honor to Host this Conference by Prof. Ernesto R. Gonzales
Message
of
Greeting:
A
Synergy
of
Light
for
the
People’s
Empowerment
by Prof. Ed Aurelio C. Reyes
Keynote Address: Let Us All Be Gatherers and Sharers of Light by Dr. Noemi A. Medina
Network Formalization: Signing the Collective Commitment by the members of the Network Council
Chapter
3 Conference Proper
Conference Context: Expanding ‘We’ Facing a Mountain of Tasks by Prof. Enrique D. Torres
Introducing the Conference Process: Simultaneous Paradigm Workshops by Prof. Bernard Karganilla
The Workshops: Discussions on the Paradigm Component Points
Plenary Resolutions: Adopting the Paradigms
Conference
Output: Working
Session Synthesis
Chapter 4 Challenge Raised and Taken
New Millennium Challenge: Let’s Welcome and Help Hasten
the Sunrise of Enlightenment! by
Prof. Ed Aurelio Reyes
Pledge of Commitment: ‘Titipunin Namin, Ipalalaganap, at Isasabuhay ang Liwanag!’
by Conference Participants
Addenda:
The Paradigm Handouts
Appendices
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Messages |
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Foreword: --------------- |
New Paradigms have to be Encouraged
By Fortunato Sevilla III
Assistant to the Rector for Research and Development
University of Sto. Tomas
THE UNIVERSITYof Sto. Tomas feels doubly honored with this opportunity to provide a foreword in the written version of the Lambat-Liwanag Conference on Empowering Paradigms. It has been a great honor to host the conference last October 2001 and be a tool towards the realization of the plans of the Lambat-Liwanag Network.
This book indeed embodies the "Gathering of Light and Empowerment" as expounded during the conference. It represents a distillation of the ideas and provides nuclei for a fusion or elaboration of ideas. It collimates light emanating through the fervent interest of the various network members and generates a potent means for empowerment through diverse means.
The context of the conference is very timely. The need for new paradigms for thought and action is manifested in the problems facing the world at this time. New paradigms have to be encouraged and new approaches have to be adopted. However, these shifts have to be preceded by an intensive and systematic study of available options. The collaboration of several academic institutions will indeed facilitate the accomplishment of this task.
The input from the various members of the Lambat-Liwanag Network could provide a wide spectrum of ideas that that can be exploited for the evolution of empowering paradigms. This book records the range of views and concerns set forth through the presentations and discussions during the conference. Through this publication, we foresee that more light will be radiated to enable more people to realize new potentials and novel approaches in human development.
Prologue: -------------- |
A New Life for You and
This Material?
By
Joydee C. Robledo
Co-Founder and Executive Director,
SanibLakas Foundation
GREETINGS
of prosperity of the mind, body and spirit to one and all! And, of course, for
everyone who wants to enjoy a bit, if not a lot, of comfort in life, may it also
be a wealthy year ahead. Welcome to this space where knowledge is abundantly
shared and wisdom is fully acknowledged.
How
did you come to be holding this material right now?
All readers of this book are expected to have widely varied answers to
this question. Some simply belong to institutions of learning listed in the
directory of that network secretariat based at the University of Sto.
Tomas–Social Research Center (UST-SRC) in Espaňa, Manila. Others may have
earlier manifested their desire to participate in the process of developing and
refining one paradigm or another in the Network’s enumeration of “The
Empowering Paradigms.” Still others would whisper that they just couldn’t
say “No” to a friend who was too eagerly insistent that they should read
this book.
But
quite many of you would admit that you did not really plan to get hold of a copy
of this but, here you are reading the prologue, as if some kind of force
“led” you to it and even moved your hand to get past the cover.
How many times have you experienced being led by a seemingly accidental
series of circumstances and occurrences to something that you would later deem
to be very important in your career path or life focus from that point on?
Would you later realize that it was one of those “Celestine
Coincidences”? and is not at all accidental? That is something we cannot know
for sure right this moment.
Whatever
circumstances caused this interaction between you and this copy of Lambat-Liwanag:
A Gathering of Light for Empowerment, we are confident that this book
will make an impact on you and your life and even on the lives of those whom you
greatly influence. The book
amplifies the serious challenge raised by the Lambat-Liwanag Network of
Centers for Empowering Paradigms against the dominant models or patterns of
thought and action that are divisive and disempowering.
We
predict that readers of this book would go through some serious and significant
self-retrospection. You’d likely ask yourselves: Have I been contributing to
dehumanization of people by the way I look at things, by the way I do my work?
Have I been participating in the forging of my own chains?
Have our thoughts and actions really been contributing to our collective
upliftment or to its opposite? Have my own views on these paradigms been
logically and spiritually coherent? Don’t I need such consistency in
recognizing and projecting my integrity? Answering these questions squarely and
in succession can indeed change our lives!
SanibLakas
Foundation is proud to have brought together such intelligent and energetic
leaders and institutions as those who founded the Lambat-Liwanag Network on
February 14, 2001. We congratulate the Network itself and the UST-SRC for
jointly convening the First Conference for these paradigms on October 26, 2001,
with more than fifty participants from various educational and other
institutions, or less than nine months after its founding.
And
we also congratulate the Network and its partner, the UST-SRC, for coming out
with this book that carries quite a big sampling of empowering paradigms-related
handouts that we expect to make a big impact on almost all, if not indeed all,
of its readers. In reacting with happy resonance with, or even with indignant
rejection of, ideas carried by this book, you might be in for starting a series
of changes in paradigm, or changes in outlook, or changes in basic attitudes, or
the proverbial “change of heart.”
This
book celebrates that First Lambat-Liwanag Conference in October
2001, where light was gathered and shared among dozens of participants from all
those institutions. Now, just past the first anniversary of the Network, light
is being spread again, this time among all the thousands of readers the
thought-provoking contents of this book can possibly reach, to gather and later
to share more and more light. The
entire society is being gifted with an offered opportunity to partake of this
Synergy of Light. And you are also being given the opportunity to say and also
amplify within the same process what you think and feel, all in the honest
pursuit of what is good in the reality of our lives.
Lambat-Liwanag
is mainly an academe-based network. It is a synergy mainly of institutions of
the mind, calling out on millions of minds to pay heed to the whispers of the
heart and spirit. We seek to have a
strong synergy of hearts and minds of a big and continually growing number of
people so we can all finally free ourselves from disempowerment and
fragmentation.
After
having been brought together by “Celestine Coincidences,” you and this
material will likely begin a new life. The possibilities are immense, as our
interactions on these paradigms will greatly enrich us all in the process. This
undertaking of the SanibLakas Foundation is yet another endeavor to make the
principle of synergism live and work within and among us through empowering
paradigms that seek to “unite than divide,” as well as to “liberate than
restrict.”
As
light-gatherers and light-sharers, may we all keep up this conscious effort of
coming together and of trying to discover how best each one could live with
empowered and renewed spirits, as we all come into fruition. Shared success is
success multiplied. And the work has barely started.
Come
and share your own ray of light. And join in happily watching the gradual but
glorious sunrise of our synergized wisdom.
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Chapter 1
Conference Background |
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Conference Convenors: ---------------------------------- |
UST-SRC:
Strong
Center for Dynamic Research
ESTABLISHED
in 1979, the Social Research Center is the research arm of the University of Sto.
Tomas for the Social Sciences. As
an integral part of the University, the SRC envisions itself to be a “partner
in the realization of the University’s three main functions of teaching, doing
research, and rendering community service.” Its broad objectives are to
conduct and promote pure and applied research on relevant issues, to foster a
research atmosphere in the academic community, and to support planning and
policy-making in the university through institutional studies.
As
the UST research program is recently upgraded by new infrastructure, staff
development and over-all administrative support, SRC can vigorously carry out
its vision in the mainstream of social research and development in the
Philippines. A pro-active and integrative dimension of social studies is
evolving especially now that research undertakings at UST are consolidated
within the united hub of a multi-disciplinary research complex.
The
initial progression of social research is envisioned to focus on the economics
of endogenous science and technology, industry, society and ecology. The initial
targets of social research are economics of productivity, and culturally-rooted
equity and ecology. The initial thrust is specifically pointed to the
transformation of Philippine society towards a more genuine total human
development and harmony.
Therefore,
this initial thrust of social research is global
by orientation but culturally rooted by approach in the different dimensions of
socio-religious-cultural studies, sustainable development and economic
development dimensions of globalization.
SRC’s
research program covers the following:
(1)
Sustainable Development and Ecological Anthropology –
This study program aims to balance growth orientations of economic development
with equal emphasis to the sustainability of ecology and endogenous community.
(2)
Socio-Religious and Socio-Cultural Studies –
In brief this program consolidates the baseline social research program of the
SRC in the areas of church and religion, children and youth, older persons and
indigenous culture.
(3)
Poverty and Women in Development –
This undertakes study of both local and global issues in the total eradication
of global poverty with the women in particular as the strategy of development
research and program development.
(4)
Economics Research in Technology, Productivity, Equity and Ecology –
These economic studies aim to assess the total integration of endogenous science
and technology to Filipino productivity and industrialization.
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'Lambat': Academe-Based Network
WE
NOW have a network of light-gatherers and light-sharers, committed to
help empower our fellow humans by freeing them from those divisive and
self-limiting patterns of thinking and behavior. These old paradigms have gone
unchallenged for centuries but they are now being brought up for critical
reexamination under the glaring light of reason and inspiration.
This is the LAMBAT-LIWANAG Network of Centers for Empowering
Paradigms. ‘Lambat’ is the Filipino word for network; and ‘Liwanag’
our word for Light. This network,
mainly academe-based, was convened by the synergism-oriented SanibLakas
Foundation under its overarching program thrust for Human Development and
Harmony (HDH).
People
from all walks of life, especially those of the Academe and those working with
education-related organizations, institutions and agencies, are invited to join
the Lambat-Liwanag Network in the way most suitable to their nature and
capabilities, as the network researches, refines, discusses, validates,
propagates and mainstreams the paradigms of thought and behavior most helpful
for the full flowering of the human potentials, for individual
self-actualization and the continuing collective evolution of human
civilization. Its challenge: Dare
to be pioneers with us in this wide-eyed quest deep into the yet uncharted
waters of new millennium.
This
network embraces research centers and equivalent entities in different
universities and schools, mostly in Manila, with definite plans for nationwide
expansion. The five founding
centers, all in the City of Manila, are:
The network was later joined
by the Philippine Science and Technology Center (PSTC in Baguio City,
recently renamed as Sentro ng Agham Pilipino); and
the Applied Cosmic Anthropology Program of the Asian Social Institute (ASI).
During the First Lambat-Liwanag Conference for Empowering Paradigms held
at the University of Sto. Tomas in October 2001, three more schools manifested
through representatives their decision to join. These were the College of
Community Health Development amd
Management (in Tanay, Rizal), Colegio
del San Juan de Letran, and the Philippine Christian University (PCU).
Efforts and processes are underway for Lambat-Liwanag
to be joined by equivalent entities within Adamson University (AU), Assumption
College, De La Salle University-College of St. Benilde
(DLSU-CSB), and the Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU).
For a much broader reach within the
Academe, Lambat-Liwanag has started establishing close contacts with such
wide groupings as the Education Network (E-Net), Alliance of Concerned Teachers
(ACT), Environment Education Network (EEN), Philippine Association of Schools,
Colleges and Universities (PASCU), and the Catholic Education Association of the
Philippines (CEAP), as well us with key officials of the Department of
Education, (Dep Ed) and the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd).
Beyond the Academe, we have already
enlisted the participation and support of various non-government organizations
(NGOs), especially with their respective paradigm-shifting advocacies in the
fields of human rights, sustainable development, health, justice, peace, gender
relations, families, technology, aesthetics, governance and economics.
Entities that seek to participate on account of only one or a few of the
paradigms are to be considered “outer core” members, with their own
consultative councils to be set up.
And among all these, and even well beyond
our shores, we are utilizing the Internet to bring us in close touch with
academic and other relevant entities throughout the Philippines and around the
world. We are also preparing to
launch a quarterly journal publication, called LightShare, to
serve the entire light-sharing network.
Dr. Noemi Alindogan-Medina
(chairperson, Social Sciences Dept., PNU) Network Council Chairperson
Prof. Enrique D. Torres (chief, Human
Rights Office, PUP), Council
Network Vice Chairperson
Prof. Ernesto R. Gonzales (head, Social
Research Center, UST), Secretary-General
Dr. Romeo M. Barrios (head, University
Center for Research, Seminars and Conferences, PLM), Member
Prof. Bernard Karganilla (director,
Manila Studies Program, UPM), Member
Dr. Mina Ramirez. (president, ASI;
director, ACAP), Council Member
Engr. Faustino G. Mendoza Jr. (president,
SAP-Baguio), Council Member
Prof. Ed Aurelio C. Reyes
(ASI; president, SanibLakas Foundation), Network Convenor (non-voting)
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SANIBAKAS FOUNDATION is a
formalized synergy of individuals who are dedicated to pursue the vision of
human development and harmony through synergy, and who have teamed up among
themselves and with like-minded and like-spirited people to pursue program
thrusts, programs, and projects that fulfill the mission of promoting synergism
consciousness and building actual synergies in various areas of human concern.
SanibLakas members are synergy-oriented individuals.
They had been discovered and
seen to have independently adopted as part of their respective missions in life
the promotion and conscious application on day-to-day and long-term
challenges to advance human development and harmony.
They fully recognize that while commonalities are bonding elements,
diversity is a source of dynamism for synergies and is therefore a resource to
be valued and managed well.
SanibLakas Foundation is a compact organization, with a definite
membership, and membership-recruitment and development systems, management
and coordinative functionaries and an elected leadership, with definite terms,
respective duties and prerogatives to make for healthy teamwork. It has acquired
official status as a foundation with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Its
status and systems make it a formalized synergy of persons who freely decide to
work within its embrace. This accounts for for the foundation’s stbility in
distinctions, priorities and work styles.
SanibLakas envisions a society where human development is advanced faster
and most comprehensively in an atmosphere of harmony, as sustained by the
level of human development previously attained at any time, especially of human
maturity with all people manifesting a predisposition to synergize among
themselves and with Nature. In such society, individual human beings are
continually empowered in their spirituality, self-discovery and
self-actualization, and entire sections of the population are empowered to
guarantee continuing social and economic upliftment for broader human
development and harmony.
SanibLakas Foundation exists to perform these twin
tasks: (1) to promote synergism consciousness and (2) build actual
synergies. To promote such
consciousness, each member is mandated to pursue continuing personal and shared
education on this principle. To
help build synergies, each member is expected to attain a strong inner synergy
as a person (integrity of body, mind and spirit, integrity of thoughts, words
and deeds), and to exemplify the ways of synergism in interacting with other
people (shared-self mindset in self-actualization). The foundation stands to
orchestrate and synergize the members’ efforts in these mission taks. This
organization is mission-driven and synergy-powered.
Accepting the invitation to join SanibLakas Foundation as members is the
basic way these people team up among themselves even if they are working in
separate programs. Only persons who
believe in team-play in various synergism-oriented efforts and who are therefore
ready at least to communicate with team-mates frequently concerning their work
and personal growth as synergy-builders, are to be invited and sworn-in into the
organization. SanibLakas fully respects and institutionalizes the right of each
member to decide how best to pursue what was in the first place her/his own
personal sense of mission. However, if the choice is to basically work
alone, this organization is not the one for them to join.
SanibLakas is a believer in team-ups.
Because its programs and projects are synergism-oriented, it is confident
that persons most dedicated to the pursuit of these programs and projects make
for good co-equal teammates for collegial bodies leading program or
project work or even for core groups initiating such work. (SanibLakas members
and these individual partners differ only in that the fact the former are fully
conscious of the directions and progress in the various other programs of the
Foundation, and are also conscious to discover and develop persons to recruit as
SanibLakas Foundation members, in line with the above criteria.)
Contribution to Human Development and Harmony (HDH) is the
overarching program thrust of the Foundation. A complementary and contributory
program thrust covers efforts for Integrated Empowerment for Social and
Economic Upliftment (IESEU). Under these two main program thrusts are
closely-interlinked programs and projects.
A. Program Thrust for Human Development and Harmony (HDH)
The
HDH
program
thrust focuses impact on individual human empowerment from enhancement of
spirituality, self-discovery, self-development and self-actualization. This
program believes that human development and harmony can be validly likened to a
pair of feet making baby steps forward. Further progress in either one can be
made only on the basis of progress already attained in the other.
Programs under HDH:
1.
LightShare is
the program for the study and sharing of synergism basics and application for
integrated development. This covers:
(a) Lambat-Liwanag, a mainly academe-based
research, refinement and comprehensive promotion of empowering paradigms as
alternatives to dominant ones that are divisive and disempowering; and (b) Sanib-Sinag,
the encouragement and facilitation of personal-experiences-based sharings and
reflections through earnest human conversations and through meditations.
2.
Sanib-Sining is the program for the promotion of “synaesthetics,” the
discovery and development of capabilities in aesthetic creativity and
appreciation in as many people as possible. This is a consciousness
campaign based on the Credo for Synaesthetics.
3.
Sanib-Sigla is the new program for developing physical fitness in the
context of holistic health and collective effort. It promotes the Holistic
Health paradigm with balanced growth of health in all human dimensions (physical,
mental, emotional, spiritual) to sustain the growth in each of these
dimensions.
4.
The “Earth
Synergy” program is contribution to planetary synergy-building,
by promoting inter-species and interracial harmonies mainly through a poem on Earth
Synergy for the New Millennium, with translations in more than a dozen
languages, and a multi-nationality ceremony called “Handshakes and Hugs for
Earth Synergy” to propagate its message in solemnity.
B. Program Thrust for Integrated Empowerment for Social and Economic Upliftment (IESEU)
The
IESEU program
thrust focuses on education, network-building and training to help empower
entire sectors and sections of the population for social and economic upliftment
contributory to broader human development and harmony.
Programs
under IESEU:
1. Program for organizing and network-building to build strong synergies for
environment conservation. We have
formed the SALIKA (SanibLakas ng Inang Kalikasan)
to
recruit the hitherto unmobilized common people for environmental activism
and promote the spirit of team-play among members of existing environment
organizations. SALIKA is offering
free seminars to its members forming teams among along lines of work, such as
education, media, law enforcement, and various ecosystems. It is the co-convenor
(with the CLEAR group) of a monthly environmental forum at Kamayan-EDSA.
2. The program of education on synergism for associative economics mainly through
cooperatives. The Cooperative Education on Synergism
(CES)
entails a long-term education process with cooperatives about the synergism
principle. We are promoting
an education campaign for wide and vigorous implementation by the cooperatives
themselves focused on the principle of synergism. The principle, after all, is at the very essence of
cooperativism.
3.
DakiLahi
is the program for national synergy-building among Filipinos worldwide to
promote a keen sense of history and national mission and provide protection and
to build a sustainable prosperity for all. Regaining this sense of nationhood
entails a process of awakening, collective self-discovery of aspirations and
perspectives of the various ethno-linguistic, socio-political, religio-spiritual,
locational, civic, occupational, age and gender groupings, all to be addressed
in synergy with one another and in the full context of the nation’s holistic
perspectives.
4.
SanibLakas is starting to build a program institution named the Citizens’
Rights for Education and Assertion Trainings for Empowerment (CREATE),
which
offers education and training courses in organization development and effective
communications, as well as other aspects of comprehensive advocacy of the
people’s rights.
C.
Special Service Projects for Synergism Promotion (SSPSP)
The
SPSP
cluster
of programs seeks to run special programs and projects contributory to promoting
synergism consciousness in support of both program thrusts.
SanibLakas
ng Taongbayan Foundation co-founders (per SEC document, August 1997): Ed Aurelio C. Reyes, Marie R. Marciano, Joydee C. Robledo,
Mila R. Garcia, Romy Lee B. Ancheta, Araceli C. Ocampo, and Elizabeth C. Roxas.
SanibLakas ng Taongbayan, Inc.
co-founders: Reyes, Ocampo, Ancheta, Marciano and Garcia (per
SEC document September 1996)
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Chapter 2
Conference Opening |
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Welcome Remarks: ---------------------------- |
IT
IS the honor of the University of Sto. Tomas to host this conference. UST is the first university in this part of
the world, antedating even Harvard in the U.S., and producing such illustrious alumni as
Jose Rizal and Emilio Jacinto. But it was criticized by Rizal, the ilustrado
propagandist, the voice of the enlightened in his time, criticized directly and
also indirectly through his Fili, for being in his view the
embodiment of what education should not be. Jacinto subtly criticized it by
emphasizing the equality of all humans in his Kartilya ng Katipunan.
UST-SRC is proud to report that the
University has since changed much of that. This happy development is now put to
poetic symbolism by the honor we have in hosting this conference for the
development and mainstreaming of empowering paradigms on our patterns of
thinking and behavior.
Alluding the to UST of his time, Rizal
described microscopes glistening behind closed glass panels in storage-display
shelves. The students were then made to merely behold with awe the instruments
of science instead of being able to use them to behold with much more awe the
throbbing cells of life itself. Lambat-Liwanag, in contrast, seeks to develop
all kinds of social microscopes and distribute them among the people so we may
all view ourselves in the microcosm of how each ordinary Filipino thinks,
behaves, and lives.
Likewise, unlike most of our mass media
that only reach the people with their copies and signal, Lambat-Liwanag will
reach all the schools and all the people with microphones and tape recorders the
better to draw out their observations, their coping ways, their wisdom and
gather this light to be enjoyed by all, in the form of the wholistic,
interconnected, liberative and harmonizing, and therefore empowering,
paradigms.
There is an urgent need for all academic
institutions in this country to upgrade their research work.
Thus, there is need for dynamic directioning of research work toward
people-based primary research, toward the empowering essence of education, and
toward concertedness that can eliminate much duplication of efforts and
counterproductive competition.
When SanibLakas Foundation called the
meeting of the Lambat-Liwanag founding core, I am proud to have been among them,
and I am ever thankful to have gotten to meet for the first time and get to work
together since then with wonderful people who have actually been my counterparts as
research heads of the various schools that are practically UST’s neighbors
within the City of Manila.
That meeting at PNU last February 14 was
actually long overdue. But SanibLakas saw the firm basis for us in that group to
meet and work together to start a network that would grow and continue growing.
As I welcome you to this venue, I thank you
all for validating the fact of that growth by being part of that growth.
We were only a handful in this ambitious effort for empowering paradigms
when we had our series of meetings at PNU, UST, PLM and UP-Manila.
Despite our limited time and start-up
resources, with the Lambat-Liwanag network having absolutely no funds as of yet,
the number of people gathered here is a very loud assertion of a reality to be
discussed later by Prof. Eric Torres, that Lambat-Liwanag is an expanding
‘we’!!!
On behalf of UST and of the conference
organizers, I am honored to say, Welcome to the First Lambat-Liwanag Conference
on Empowering Paradigms! Welcome to
the Lambat-Liwanag Family!
Message of Greeting: ------------------------------ |
SANIBLAKAS was founded in 1996 as a non-stock, non-profit corporation and reorganized as a foundation the following year. Growth between these two years was not mainly in the status, but more importantly in our awareness about the synergism principle itself, its many nuances, and its application to the quest for human development and harmony.
The
I
would like to acknowledge now the presence here of my close-in teammate
especially during that period, and even up to now, Ms. Joydee Cahanding Robledo.
(applause from the body) Joydee, please acknowledge their applause. She didn’t expect this, Friends.
Thank you!
Donated human and material resources of
synergized SanibLakas members and individual partners have been the fuel of this
organization, allowing us to do much work with no organizational funds to speak
of.
The two-fold mission of SanibLakas is to
widely promote consciousness of the synergism principle and to build actual
synergies. It is actually only one
mission, a synergy of two inseparable and mutually-strengthening folds. Each
component of any bigger synergy is, after all, a smaller synergy. It has its own
inner synergy, its own “innergy,” the dynamic unity of diverse parts. Two
folds of our reason for being are enfolded into each other: the expansion of
consciousness or thinking of the synergism principle among more and more minds,
and the actualization of the principle into concrete teamwork and harmonies on
the ground. These are concrete actual synergies like the fast-growing
Lambat-Liwanag network itself. SanibLakas breathes and thinks synergism, and
does work to build synergies. SanibLakas is synergism, it is itself a
synergy. To think, preach and do teamwork and harmony is to be teamwork
and harmony.
The empowering paradigms you will consider
in workshops this afternoon all envision synergies in various areas of human
life and consciousness. The spirit within has whispered to us that human synergy
should be breathing in all those aspects of our human living and being. But
observations on dominant patterns of thinking and behavior have been telling us
that these patterns, these paradigms, have been dividing us and disempowering
the great majorities.
And so, SanibLakas came up with a set of
empowering paradigm titles, each with a handful of “bullet points,” and
convinced a handful of people who were heading social research centers or
equivalent units in their separate universities, to come together in an effort
to develop, refine, popularize and mainstream the empowering paradigms. And so,
less than nine months ago we formed Lambat-Liwanag – a handful of people with
about the same number of sheets of paper containing those empowering paradigm
outlines that are almost the same as those that you find in your conference kits
this afternoon. Almost the same,
because we have started working on those outlines, adding two new paradigms,
refining a point here and a point there, and starting to write out in paragraphs
a whole lot of assertions, analyses and references, as well as to gather related
literature on them, that have since started to breathe life into these
paradigms. The related literature
items that we were able to reproduce have been given to you as paradigm-specific
handouts. There are actually more such materials in our possession, but we have
been unable to reproduce all of them for all of you in time for this Conference.
We will do so afterwards by including them in the documentation of this
Conference.
But all these materials can never by
themselves breathe life into the empowering paradigms being developed and
refined if Lambat-Liwanag were unable to grow beyond being a small group of
people who have already been, and continue to be super-busy in their respective
offices even without this task. You
are the ones breathing more life into this network. You have come to this
Conference and will shortly discuss and validate the paradigm outlines, in the
process starting to enrich it. The handful of people, all super-busy with other
concerns, has now drastically expanded into a much bigger team of more than 50
people, all super-busy with other concerns!
That is a very big expansion. After the work of this Conference and of
the paradigm-specific conferences we will hold next year shall have been done
and documented and popularized Lambat-Liwanag will not merely have a very big
expansion, we are going to have no less than an explosion! If it were to have
sound, fans of Einstein might also consider calling it another “Big Bang”!
Building a synergy of minds even just among
five people is very difficult even if also very rewarding, especially the very
intelligent brains that we gathered to form the initial core.
In building synergies of minds, and more so in optimizing them, we have
to have everyone given the full opportunity to contribute original ideas, as
well as ideas that agree or disagree with those of the others. And it has not
helped any that we’ve had hectic schedules and therefore big limitations on
collective quality time for meetings. We
managed to do what we have been able to do so far, and that has started our
growth and expansion. How do we now endeavor to build a synergy of minds not
only of five people but of fifty? Or of a thousand people scattered all over the
country with varying degrees of commitment to participate?
We will use many various ways, a synergy of channels of communication and
discourse, and we will manage as well. Wala
na tayong atrasan dito sa ating “big bang”!
We just have to keep in mind our basics:
our firm commitment to human empowerment and harmony; our sense of
intellectual honesty and the rigors of scholarly discourse; our commitment to
academic freedom and basic mutual respect for one another’s ideas; synergy in
the entire effort. We are determined to eventually mainstream in the academe
–and in society as a whole – those paradigms that empower and harmonize the
people. We will not waver or even
drag our foot on this endeavor, but neither are we going to hurry and take
shortcuts that will compromise the quality of our output.
We will do this the cooperative way, the saniblakas way, the sanib-galing
way! Let each of us do one’s share, let each of us express one’s views keep
our expectations proportional to our readiness and ability to contribute to this
synergy.
SanibLakas
decided in September 2000 to launch the light-sharing program based both in the
academe and on profound sharings of personal experiences. By February of 2001,
or five months later, the founding network council of Lambat-Liwanag was born;
today, or less than nine months after February, we are holding this First
Lambat-Liwanag Conference on
Empowering Paradigms. SanibLakas
Foundation can only be overjoyed, even as it braces itself for more work here
and in other programs. And you have come to join us in working celebration: The
LightShare explosion for full human dignity and harmony is about to begin right
here. Right now!
Keynote Address: -------------------------- |
WE
ARE the LAMBAT-LIWANAG Network of Centers for Empowering Paradigms a network
of light-gatherers and light-sharers, committed to help empower our fellow
humans by freeing them from those divisive and gravely self-limiting patterns of
thinking and behavior. These old paradigms have gone unchallenged for centuries
but we are now bringing them up for reexamination under the glaring light of
reason and inspiration.
‘Lambat’
is the Filipino word for network; and ‘Liwanag’
our word for Light. This network,
mainly academe-based, was convened by the synergism-oriented SanibLakas
Foundation under its overarching program thrust for Human Development and
Harmony (HDH).
This network embraces research centers and equivalent entities in different universities and schools, mostly in Manila, with definite plans for nationwide expansion. The five founding centers, all in the City of Manila, are:
Social Science Department, Philippine Normal University (PNU); Social Research Center, University of Sto. Tomas (UST); University Center for Research, Seminars and Conferences, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila (PLM); Manila Studies Program, University of the Philippines-Manila (UP-M); and the Human Rights Office, Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP)
We have recently been joined by the Philippine Science and Technology Center (PSTC) in Baguio City and the Applied Cosmic Anthropology Program of the Asian Social Institute (ASI). Efforts and processes are underway for us to be joined by equivalent entities within the Philippine Christian University (PCU), Adamson University (AU), De La Salle University-College of St. Benilde (DLSU-CSB), Sta. Isabel College, Letran College, Assumption College, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Pasig, and the Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU).
For
a much broader reach within the Academe, we have started establishing close
contacts with such wide groupings as the Education Network (E-Net) and
Environment Education Network (EEN), Philippine Association of Schools, Colleges
and Universities (PASCU), and the Catholic Education Association of the
Philippines (CEAP), as well us with key officials of the Department of Education
(Dep Ed) and the Commission on Higher Education (CHED).
Beyond
the Academe, we have already enlisted the participation and support of various
non-government organizations (NGOs), especially with their respective
paradigm-shifting advocacies in the fields of human rights, sustainable
development, health, justice, peace, gender relations, families, technology,
aesthetics, governance and economics. Entities
that seek to participate on account of only one or a few of the paradigms are to
be considered “outer core” members, with their own consultative councils to
be set up.
Lambat-Liwanag will embrace as inner-core network members all the academe-based, and some non-academic entities, that will each commit to work on most, if not all, of the paradigms, and recruit as outer-core network members or network partners all other entities that will each commit to work on any one or a few of the paradigms.
Among all these institutions, organizations and agencies in the Philippines, and even well beyond our shores, we are utilizing the Internet to bring us in close touch with academic and other relevant entities throughout the Philippines and around the world. We are also preparing to launch a quarterly journal publication, called LightShare, to serve the entire light-sharing network.
The
Lambat-Liwanag Network envisions a society with total human development and
harmony as encouraged and enabled by the mainstreaming of unitive and empowering
frameworks (paradigms) of thinking and
behavior.
As
a project organization of the synergism-oriented SanibLakas Foundation, the
Lambat-Liwanag Network takes up the mission of rigorously developing and
effectively promoting the empowering paradigms as a distinct contribution to the
full attainment of human development and harmony.
Lambat-Liwanag
has now stood up as a bright beacon of seeking and sharing the empowering light.
As chairperson of the Lambat-Liwanag founding network council, and coming
as I do from the century-old Philippine Normal University, which has the
responsibility to be the institutional teacher of the country’s teachers, I
dare declare this call addressed to all, whether within or outside this hall:
Let us all be seekers of empowering light, and let us all be light-sharers. Let
us all be students, and let us all be teachers, more appropriately to be called
learning facilitators! Be with us, stay with us, in the way most suitable
to your nature, priorities and capabilities, as we all research, refine,
discuss, validate, propagate and mainstream the paradigms of thought and
behavior most helpful for the full flowering of the human potentials, for
individual self-actualization and the continuing collective evolution of the
human civilization.
Dare
to be pioneers with us in this wide-eyed quest deep into the new and yet
uncharted waters of new millennium. Come
to the beacon of seeking and sharing the empowering light!
Be part of this beacon!
Network Formalization: ---------------------------------- |
MEMORANDUM of Agreement (MOA), which was studied and agreed upon prior to the Conference, was signed before the assembled participants of the First Lambat-Liwanag Conference on Empowering Paradigms. Signing on each of the three pages of eight copies of the document were Dr. Noemi A. Medina for PNU-SSD, Prof. Enrique D. Torres for PUP-HRO, Prof. Ernesto R. Gonzales for UST-SRC, Prof. Bernard Karganilla for UPM-MSP, and Engr. Faustino Mendoza Jr. for PSTC-Baguio.
Prof. Ed Aurelio C. Reyes, Lambat-Liwanag Network convenor, who drafted the document, signed as witness.
(The document was signed immediately after the Conference by the two other Network Council members who were not present at the Conference, namely, Dr. Mina Ramirez, President of the Asian Social Institute and director of its Applied Cosmic Anthropology Program, and Dr. Romeo M. Barrios, Head, University Center for Research, Seminars and Conferences, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila.)
The
signatories to the MOA committed to uphold the following points:
1. The Lambat-Liwanag Network of Centers for the Empowering Paradigms shall be mainly Academe-based. Entities that are based in school institutions or are clearly identified as extensions thereof shall comprise the majority of signatories to this Memorandum of Agreement. Withdrawal of Academe-based signatory-entities from this Network shall necessitate its replacement with an equal number of such entities if such withdrawal causes the Academe-based signatories to become the minority, the necessary number of “last-in” non-academic signatories shall be made to temporarily inhibit themselves from voting during the Network Council meetings until a sufficient number of new Academe-based signatories shall have joined the Network.
2. Each member-entity of “Lambat-Liwanag” shall (a) be known as a “Bahay-Liwanag,” with prominent public display of its identification as such, with proper signage and an actively used and publicly accessible bulletin board on its own and of the Network’s activities; (b) locate and reproduce holdings of existing literature pertaining to the “Empowering Paradigms” for display in a special “shelf” or section of its own existing library or mini-library and for sharing with equivalent libraries or mini-libraries of the other member-entities; (c) encourage the generation of new materials to promote consciousness about these paradigms and continually refine them; (d) conduct conferences, symposia and seminars in coordination with the other member-entities; and (e) actively participate in publishing and circulating the LightShare Journal by subscribing and by promoting subscriptions especially among libraries, units and organizations within its sphere of influence. Each signatory-entity shall conduct formal education and encourage informal education on the paradigms among all its personnel, focusing on those that are most relevant to their personal concerns and patterns of behavior.
3. Heads of entities with general concern for all or most of the “Empowering Paradigms” shall form the Lambat-Liwanag Network Council, with a chairperson, a vice-chairperson, a secretary-general and a treasurer to be elected by and from among the Council members for a term of one year. Heads of entities with concern for only one or a few of these paradigms shall constitute the outer core of the Network, and join consultative and coordinative paradigm-specific cluster councils.
4. As funds permit, “Lambat-Liwanag” shall create and operate fellowships, professorial chairs, special researches, book-publishing and other projects to promote the collation and dissemination of materials on the “Empowering Paradigms.”
5. As funds permit, “Lambat-Liwanag” shall hire personnel for regular work, and sub-contract work on special projects. Prior to its having its own juridical personality, the convenor organization, namely SanibLakas Foundation shall undertake the hiring and sub-contracting processes.
6. These agreements shall be binding on the institution being represented by signatories hereto. A signatory institution may formally withdraw its signature to this Memorandum of Agreement for substantive reasons submitted in writing to the Council chairperson or vice-chairperson for publication in full with comment by the Council. Substantive reasons shall not include changes in the appointment of the head of the entity. The Council may, on the other hand, decide by majority vote to ask a signatory-entity to withdraw its signature herefrom on the basis of a documented pattern of non-compliance with these agreements and publish in full the comment from the entity concerned if such comment is submitted to the Council chairperson or vice-chairperson not later than ten (10) calendar days from receipt of such request for withdrawal.
After the signing ceremony during the Conference, three school representatives declared their respective schools’ decisions to formally join the Lambat-Liwanag Network as member-entities, thus bringing up to ten the number of actual members, with these three pending formalization. These were the Philippine Christian University and Colegio de San Juan de Letran, both in Manila, and College for Community Health Development and Management in Tanay, Rizal.
|
||
Chapter 3
Conference-Proper |
. | |
Lambat-Liwanag Process as Conference Context: ------------------------------------ |
AS
CLARIFIED in the earlier talk, the Lambat-Liwanag Network exists for
..developing, refining, popularizing and
mainstreaming the empowering paradigms. These are paradigms for thought and
action that would unite people and give them options to freely choose among, and
help enable them to implement their individual and collective choices. This will
have to entail having to face a challenging mountain of tasks that I shall now
present to you in an organized manner.
This can only be a participatory process
all the way, in deciding things, in making plans, in actually working to pursue
our objectives. But while the participatory nature of our work cannot give this
network the option to reverse these aims, such participatory process will allow
us to collectively choose what method or combination of methods would best carry
forward this advocacy.
There will be efforts to continually expand
the base of participation and to continually refine the technologies of
participation. The present locus of wisdom we now endeavor to seek is the hearts
and minds, the very experiences, of the ordinary Filipinos.
They are actually the undocumented and grossly underrated scholars and
experts on life, with both their positive and negative experiences.
When we say “WE CAN DO IT!” we are conscious of the very expandable
meaning of the word “WE”. Dadami pa tayo! We started in a meeting of a mere
handful of people at PNU last Valentine’s Day, we are now more than 50 in this
hall, and therefore definitely we are now more than just a handful.
Our Conference this afternoon is itself a
process, which will be explained to us a little later by Prof. Bernard
Karganilla. Then, today’s general conference will be followed by a whole lot
of paradigm-specific conferences.
And all these conferences, with the publication of their documentations,
will be but part of a long process. It
is very important to situate this Conference clearly within the context of this
long and broad process.
This whole Lambat-Liwanag process will
revolve around the following general and specific tasks, which will involve
various types of entities, and various forms of discourse, all to be bonded
together under the rigorous requirements of intellectual honesty and the
commitment to emancipate our people from all shackles of divisive and
disempowering ways of viewing and doing things.
After
hearing it all , we will
have to take a deep breath, soul-search a little, and then convincingly tell
ourselves: kaya natin ang lahat ng ito! Basta’t sama-sama tayo, napakahirap
man ay kaya rin nating gawin! I
say this now so we would not be overwhelmed or intimidated by the immensity of
the work ahead.
To
collate existing academic, policy and other literature related to each of the
empowering paradigms and of their specific points, and to generate new
literature on them.
To
develop a user-friendly, academically-rigorous, modular, and comprehensive
presentation effectively promoting each of the empowering paradigms against
divisive and disempowering paradigms.
To
disseminate widely the empowering paradigms and mainstream them among the
academic, policy-making and other public communities.
1.
Survey of physical and electronic collation of books, book abstracts,
monographs, excerpts, etc. promoting or describing, or arguing for or against,
any or all of the empowering paradigms or their counterparts in dominant or
other belief systems.
2.
Building up of bibliographical data-bases and reference systems for all
items.
1.
Encouragement of new writings (like researches, etc.) for the Empowering
Paradigms especially from persons and institutions active in the respective
fields of these paradigms, and inclusion of all these in a special collation.
2.
Conducting surveys, interviews and field experiments and documenting
these for inclusion of all these the same special collation.
3.
Convening of conferences on each of these paradigms to generate position
papers, reaction papers, and publication of proceedings and eliciting further
responses, and inclusion of all these in the same special collation.
1.
Physical and electronic reproduction of all physical holdings for the
Empowering Paradigms shelf in the libraries of each of the Lambat-Liwanag
Network institutional members and for the Network’s web site.
2.
Development of index and cross-reference systems on all pertinent
holdings of network members that have not been physically collated, with faxing
and hyper-terminal systems for bilateral sharing transactions.
3.
Development of password-secured web pages for inter-member sharing and
free-access web pages for much broader public sharing.
1.
Development of a web site for public sharing and promotion
2.
Publication of a periodical journal possibly in tandem with the
SanibLakas CHOSEN Sites Project
3.
Convening of symposia, public lectures, and the like.
4.
Development of training and study modules.
5.
Development of communication and media plans.
6.
Development of plans for lobbying with government and other
policy-formulation bodies, for mainstreaming and adoption purposes.
Lambat-Liwanag will expand to work together
in developing the paradigms and mainstreaming these both in education and in the
formulation of public policy. But
all this work can only be given full significance with the growing number of
common people who shall have started adopting these paradigms and living them in
their own daily lives.
Of course, the immediate challenge is for
us here to start living these paradigms in our own personal lives. Let us not
only gather the light from mind to mind and let us not only spread the
light from mind to mind. Let us
BE the light, the empowering light, by our own day-to-day empowered and
harmonized lives.
When we say “WE CAN DO IT!” we are conscious of the very expandable
meaning of the word “WE”. Dadami pa tayo!
We are also conscious that to “DO IT” is to BE it, to LIVE it.
The Conference Process: ------------------------------------ |
GOOD
AFTERNOON! I am tasked to explain what we will do now, exactly how we are going
to accomplish the very significant first step we have set for today in the long
process of gathering, sharing and spreading the Light of the empowering
paradigms.
During the registration period each
participant already chose which paradigm to focus on. That already accomplished the first step for the workshop
session of this Conference. We are now going to break up into paradigm-specific
workshop groups. So, all
participants will look for their respective groupmates, those with the same
numbers as theirs on the nametags we issued based on the individual choices. We
will now designate specific areas in this hall for the workshop discussions, and
turn the chairs for group members to face one another. Those who cannot find their groupmates, please approach us so
we can integrate you into another group, either of the paradigm most related to
the one you chose or to the paradigm of your second choice.
You may also present, as an individual participant with no groupmates, a
response and resolution on the paradigm of your original choice.
Once assembled, each group will choose who
would facilitate and who would document. The
main guide for discussion is the list of bullet points enumerated under the
paradigm title. Please try to
respond as a group to each of them, try to ascertain whether or not the points
are valid and whether or not they are relevant to the paradigm itself. For most
of the paradigms, we were also able to provide paradigm-specific handouts. They
are with you to enrich your discussions.
You will also be provided with a
standardized draft resolution for the conference to approve in principle the
paradigm title and bullet points as written now, to suggest to the
Lambat-Liwanag Network Council to add specific bullet points arising from your
discussion, and to modify the styling of one or a few of the existing bullet
points. It’s up to the group what it would report to the plenary session. But
since we are not deciding things with finality, we suggest that you report both
the consensus points and the minority views, indicating them as such, and
explaining the basis of each.
During the plenary session, a
representative of your group will summarize your discussion, present your
proposed resolution and move for its adoption by the body. Before this
Conference closes, a synthesis will be presented to this body by me and my
colleague, Engr. Faustino G. Mendoza Jr. who heads the Philippine Science and
Technology Center in Baguio City and represents that school in the Lambat-Liwanag
Network Council.
After
this First Lambat-Liwanag Conference, the workshop groups which will be
transformed and later on be expanded as Lambat-Liwanag paradigm groups.
Such paradigm groups will play a vital role in preparing and convening
the paradigm-specific conferences, within the long process earlier explained by
Eric Torres. If there are any further questions. Please approach us or Ding
Reyes, the Lambat-Liwanag Network convenor representing the
SanibLakas Foundation.
.
Workshops and Resolutions: ------------------------------------ |
Plenary Session was suspended and the
workshop groupmates sought out and found one another in their designated areas
of the hall. While participants
from the same schools or organizations spread
themselves among various paradigm groups, a group of students from UST, who had
been called to be walk-in participants by a poster they saw in their college
building, decided to stay together and focus on synergetic leadership and
empowering organizations (paradigm 11).
The biggest groups were those who had
chosen to focus on gender sensitivity, equality and harmony (paradigm 8),
associative economics, social capital and sustainable development (paradigm
10),
and light-seeking and light-sharing education (paradigm 7). In contrast,
no participant signed up to focus on civics and democratic governance (paradigm
5), culture and community creativity (paradigm 6), appropriate
technology (paradigm 12), or mutual enrichment of families and
friendships (paradigm 13). Some
participants found themselves to be alone in choosing their respective paradigms
and they were absorbed by the workshop group with a paradigm focus closest to
theirs, or they joined the group with a paradigm focus of their second choice.
One participant stuck it out with alone with her chosen paradigm, and two
participants got themselves absorbed in other groups not knowing, until the
reporting period that they had chosen the same paradigm.
Workshop group discussions were allotted an
hour and a half, and most groups found this length of time comfortably adequate
for familiarization and initial discussions on the paradigms, to have enough
basis for endorsing these paradigm titles and bullet points adopted by the
Conference as written, with some suggested additions and refinements from them.
Resolutions at Plenary Session
AT
THE resumption of the plenary session, Prof. Bernard Karganilla of UPM-MSP
and Engr. Faustino Mendoza Jr. of PSTC-Baguio presided over the reporting of
discussions and proposed resolutions hammered out by the workshop groups.
One by one, the groups presented and moved for the body’s approval
their resolutions based on the prepared draft resolution that carried this text:
“Whereas, the title and bullet points of
empowering paradigm no. ___, titled, _____________________, has been
initially discussed by a specific workshop group of individuals from ___
academic and ____ non-academic entities, and have been found by consensus to be
generally sound, logical, unitive and empowering, subject to further development
and refinement that may be done after this initial conference,
“BE IT RESOLVED, as it is hereby resolved
by the First Lambat-Liwanag Conference on Empowering Paradigms, in plenary
session assembled, that this Conference mandates the Lambat-Liwanag Network to
undertake a wider promotion and consultation process on the paradigm title and
bullet points as presently worded;
“BE IT RESOLVED, FURTHER, that this
Conference mandates that the Network Council hold more discussions on them and
on proposed adjustments; and
“BE IT RESOLVED, FINALLY, that the
paradigm-specific consultative conferences be held by the Network jointly with
concerned academic and non-academic entities.”
At the bottom of the draft, for
presentation to the plenary body but not as part of the proposed resolutions,
are printed these words: “The
Workshop Group submits the following points (suggested additions, deletions,
rewordings) to the Network Council for immediate consideration in the further
development and refinement of this paradigm:”
Based on the workshop discussions, the rapporteurs of the groups wrote
below these lines in their resolution sheets the ideas from their group members,
mostly validated by the group members by consensus.
All these sheets were collected by the
Conference Secretariat after the resolutions were presented and adopted. Here
are the suggestions, per paradigm.
Paradigm
1-- Total Human Development Through Synergism: add
the psychological aspect to the point on biological and clarify its relation to
the latter; include the family under “social basics”; add technology as
product of human creativity; humanize use of technology to free people from work to
focus on total human development. (Group
members: Prof. Ed Aurelio C. Reyes, ASI;
Henri Vasallo, ASI; Dr.
Aurora P. Asanza, CCHDM; and Prof. Sofia E. Guillermo, PUP)
Paradigm
2-- Holistic Health: incorporate
the study of indigenous healing in medical studies curriculum; support
alternative schools focusing on community health development that render medical
services and undertake social activities for the communities; develop
encompassing programs for athletes, going beyond physical training to also cover
sports psychology, medicine and wellness, and holistic health care; develop
every individual’s ability for self-healing to avoid overdependence on medical
professionals. (Group
members: Virginia Nuestro, UPM-MSP; Dina Remulacio, UPM-MSP; Mellie Ducusin,
CCHDM)
Paradigm
3-- Deep Ecology: add that
ecology is biodiversity; define deep ecology as a life-centered
system; assert that the center of all life forms is God;
highlight eco-spirituality, especially action-oriented eco-spirituality,
like in community-based projects and in documentation and promotion of
successful ecological projects. (Group members:Prof. Ernesto R. Gonzales, UST; Vic O. Milan, CLEAR; Luis Gorgonio,
SanibLakas Foundation; Arlene Natocyad, ASI; Gina Arenas-Yap, ASI; Ray Hilot,
FSGPF; Jesus M. de la Crin, FSGPF)
Paradigm 4-- Sense of History and Mission: use the “3-D view” of history as a remedy to the fragmented teaching of our nation’s story; build a liberating outlook on our citizens’ consolidated journey; build a holistic consciousness of our collective experience; and promote the discernment of our collective mission as a nation to contribute to the betterment of humankind. (Group members: Prof. Bernard Karganilla, UPM; Prof. Corazon P. Coloma, PUP; Leny C. Morada, CCHDM; Jeanette V. Loonzon, UST-SRC, Jose Eduardo Velasquez of Kamalaysayan and Museo ng Pasig)
Paradigm
7-- Light-Seeking and Light-Sharing Education:
promote the roles of the stakeholders in decision-making; insure access to
information with skills for critical thinking; work for the preservation of
indigenous and national culture; democratize communications; highlight the
holistic approach; and highlight the dignity of the individual beyond the human
rights framework. (Group
members: Prof. Enrique D. Torres, PUP; Prof. Raem Mendoza, Letran; S. M.
Vallesteros, CCHDM; Sr. Marietta P. Demelino, PUP-IC; Judith Polo, Family Farm
School; Guillermo Q. Roman Jr., PNU; and Romero Royo, PNU)
Paradigm
8-- Gender Sensitivity, Equality and Harmony:
Banner theme-- “Gender Equality: Women and Men as Stakeholders and
Beneficiaries of Development”; recognition of women’s contributions in both
the private and the public spheres, and valuation of women’s labor in both
productive and reproductive areas; assert women’s rights as human rights; seek
promotion and institutionalization of genuine respect between the sexes; promote
equality of opportunities; work to eliminate all physical, cultural and
philosophical/religious justifications for discrimination against women; and
seek the attainment of equality. (Group
members: Dr. Noemi A. Medina, PNU; Prof. Flora Arellano, PUP; Daisy Mae Diaz,
Linkstaff Services; Prof. Norma Tinambacan, Assumption College; Monina Geaga,
Sarilaya; Emilie Tangonan, PCU; and Maria Gamoras, PCU)
Paradigm
9-- Reconstructive/Restorative Justice:
need for further development of criminal law in the Philippines; need to study
different philosophies underlying the criminal law system; seek out and promote
restorative justice models; there is need to refine the fundamental principles
of restorative justice. (Group
member: Prof. Zenaida H. Brioso, PNU and DoJ)
Paradigm
10-- Associative Economics, Social Capital and Sustainable Development: need
for cultural development in terms of self-reliance, starting from family life,
and supporting local suppliers of raw materials; need for mainstream education
to highlight Filipino cultural values and cooperative values; temporarily enter
global tieups but ownership and management should be in Filipino hands;
government should formulate pro-people economic policies and programs in both
industry and agriculture. Summary: Tangkilikin ang sariling atin at
isaalang-alang ang quality production, hanapbuhay, tao, kalikasan, kapital,
komunidad, at pamilihan, dahil ang lahat ng bagay ay magkakaugnay. (Group members: Prof. Ma. Socorro P. Calara, UST; Prof. George Llaguno,
UPM; Zeni Mique, Sarilaya; Prof. Angelita Sumaway, PUP; Tony V. Cruzada,
SanibLakas Foundation-CES; Ranulfo B. Bueno, Kaakbay Coop; Engr. Faustino
Mendoza Jr., PSTC-Bgo; Diosdado Luna, Bayan News; and Pinky Serafica, SanibLakas
Foundation-CES and Bayan News)
Paradigm
11-- Synergetic Leadership and Empowering Organizations:
at the end of the title, add “and individuals”; broaden 4th bullet point,
because the given types are not the only personality-centered organizational
practices which should be repudiated, and there are other concerns in
organizations which must be repudiated such as sexual harassment, discrimination
of women in terms of rank and salary; and exploitation of women in the
organization. (Group members: Ferdinand Limbo, Sarah Jane P. Lopez, Angelus
Angeliza, Irish, Kay J. del Valle, and Nina P. Reyes)
Paradigm
14-- Human Dignity and Harmony: ‘Human Rights and Peace’:
recognition of human rights as inherent, basic and universal; study the anatomy
of human rights violations; study the basis for social harmony, synergy and
peace; promote the human rights of women, children, indigenous groups,
fisherfolk, farmers and laborers; and add to the second bullet point the context
of community support in terms of exercise and enjoyment, and the dimensions and
endeavors. (Group members: Antonio Villasor, PhilRights, Prof.
Araceli Siva, PNU; and Paradigm 1 Group)
Paradigm
15-- Aesthetics Without Boundaries: ‘Art From the Heart’:
need more discussion on all the bullet points; “aesthetics without
boundaries” is the study of personal and cultural transformation through
aesthetic education as manifested in daily life, and it is to live life to the
fullest. “Isabuhay ang kaganapan bilang tao, ang buhay at ang paglikha. (Group
members: Frederick Rey, ASI; Celia Gregorio, CCHDM; German Caniete, Salika; and
Joydee C. Robledo, SanibLakas Foundation)
In the case of the paradigms that were not
discussed by the workshop, it was decided that the Conference was not in a
position to adopt any resolutions on them, and they remain mandated only by the
Network Council.
After the consideration and adoption of the
main resolution concerning the empowering paradigms, there were also special
resolutions proposed by various groups and individuals and adopted by the body.
These were:
Special Resolution No. 1:
Conference condemns all acts of terrorism and violence from any which side of
the ongoing conflicts, and calls on all advocates of peace, human rights and
civilized society to desist from echoing justifications from the warhawks and
from taking partisan sides.
Special Resolution No. 2:
Conference criticizes the content and process of the ongoing curriculum reform
under the Department of Education, and mandates the Lambat-Liwanag to demand
democratic participation in the process, and to seek to involve itself in this
process.
Special Resolution No. 3: Conference pays
tribute to all teachers on the occasion of World Teachers’ Month.
Special Resolution No. 4: Conference calls
for immediate halt to all forms of violence on, and oppression of, women,
children, indigenous peoples, the elderly, and other vulnerable sectors of
society.
PROF.
Bernard Karganilla and Engr. Faustino G. Mendoza teamed up to give the working
session synthesis which was a recap of the process and a summary of the contents
of the resolutions, and the expression of gratitude to all the groups and all
the group members for having significant output and successful initial
familiarization with the empowering paradigms within a very limited time
allotment.
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Chapter 4
Challenge Raised and Taken |
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New Millennium Challenge: --------------------------------------- |
Harmony
and understanding,
Sympathy
and trust abounding.
No
more falsehoods or derisions—
Golden
living dreams of vision,
Mystic
crystal revelation,
And
the mind’s true liberation…
I stand before you once again, this time to
represent Dr. Mina Ramirez, President of the Asian Social Institute where I have
been teaching since last year, because she could not come to be with us here
physically. ASI was founded a few years before the song Age of Aquarius became
popular, and I am proud to say that through all the decades since that time, ASI
has been resonating with this dawning, even contributing to the hastening of
this dawning. The role assigned to
ASI this afternoon is thus appropriate: to
challenge us all to do the same in the coming years and decades.
It may be difficult for the youth of today
to even imagine life at the time that song was popular— no computers, no
Internet, no cellphones or texting, no faxes, and no cable TV. (And may we
add— no need for bottled water, no flash floods, no red tide, no ozone hole,
no…) Things have really changed.
And all that change did not happen in just a few years. It’s part of the movement of history that is as slow as the
creeping of the glaciers but also as powerful as glaciers that have redesigned
entire mountain ranges. This is the very gradual dawning of the glorious
sunshine for us to let in so it could chase away darkness and shorten all
shadows in our lives.
There definitely has been this dawning of a
new human consciousness that loves all life, prefers celebration to competition,
chooses appreciation before intellectualization, consciously breathes in the
divine spirit, earnestly stands for honesty, mutual respect and equality,
democracy, pluralism, gender harmony, intergenerational responsibility, deep
ecology, and the synergy that is dynamically based on healthy diversities among
species, among races, and among cultural or belief-based groupings. Such synergy
now confronts, for example, the “millennium monster” that is globalized
greed. People all over have seen through the exploitative designs of the World
Trade Organization (WTO), created by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade,
which was once quite prophetically described as “The Ten Commandments of the Golden
Calf.”
All over the world, people coming from
various races are getting spiritually magnetized by kindred frames of mind and
action that empower and not shackle, frames of mind that unite people instead of
turning them against one another, paradigms that would tear down walls and
build bridges.
People have started, in the words of a
poem-prayer, Earth Synergy, to
“stand in reverence before the rest of the bio-diverse citizens and
elements of our living planet Gaia, to take full responsibility for past and
present environmental destruction, and to lovingly commit a conscious synergy of
efforts to rescue and heal, conserve and exalt out Mother Earth.”
The poem (now translated into a dozen or so languages) calls this “a giant leap for
Humankind,” not towards the moon or anywhere else in the outer space, but “right
back to the bosom of our home planet.” This
would be a strong metaphor for every human to start “going home” to oneself,
and rediscovering one’s real individual and our collective identity.
The development of consciousness of the human race has come a
long way from the command regimentation that stressed faith and righteous
behavior (Old Testament) while downplaying comprehension and free will . We have
had more than two thousand years of enhanced free will and the admonition to
love one another (message of Christ), where the beginnings of comprehension
(physics and other natural sciences) completely sidelined spiritual faith as by
then misrepresented by dogmas of divisive religions. Through this period, the
use of free will was often leading to disastrous consequences of intolerance and
bigotry, oppression and exploitation, greed and tyranny.
And we are now gradually moving into a new
period where human consciousness would really blossom in unconditional love and
unconditional peace. We will fully be enjoying free will but matured enough,
after centuries of experiential education, to freely choose love and synergy
over alienation, separation and antagonism. Faith will still be there but no
longer blind. Individual human dignity will be there but no longer as separative
ego. Comprehension will be there, well beyond present-day conventional physics,
but intellectualization will be underpinned by love, honest humility and
spiritual discernment. Righteousness will be there in each of us but based on
maturity and no longer externally commanded.
The conscious synergy of Humankind and of
all Creation will emerge, a real and embracive unity, no longer an artificial or
exclusive one. That will be the real age of the full Pentecost, where a
fast-increasing number of people, not just a dozen apostles, will now feel the
tongues of fire lighting up their souls from within, souls that would reach out
to embrace one another and draw in more and more people into their informal
families.
You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not
the only one. I hope someday you will join us. And the world will live as one!
But you cannot say that to me in all earnestness. That would be more
appropriately addressed to Lennon of those days, not to me or to ASI or to
groups like the SanibLakas
Foundation or Lambat-Liwanag Network of today. We all have reason to declare
having joined Lennon in his dream, and that more people are joining us, more and
more people like us are joining up with all the rest.
And we can all say, or rather sing with more feeling than we or our
parents ever sang in the 60s—the Age of Aquarius has already dawned.
The bright sunrise of enlightenment for real peace and love has come!
The empowering paradigms are seeds of
light. They resonate with the innermost whispers of our spirit. They are seeds
of light that we can gather to plant deep within our hearts and minds, in all
our talk, in all our walk of all our talk, and plant in the heart-minds of many
others. Are we all ready to pledge
upon our honor to help gather, spread and cast far and wide these seeds of
light? Are we all ready to make
extra efforts to contribute to the hastening of this glorious sunrise in the
history of Humankind?
Are we ready to make the commitment on that
Panata in your kits that I had earlier asked you to read immediately?
Are you? I’m almost sure I
already know your answer, and so, slightly ahead of hearing your response to this
challenge, let me just say this…
Congratulations!
Collective Pledge: -------------------------- |
KAMING narito ngayon / na pawang mga kalahok / ng First Lambat-Liwanag Conference on Empowering Paradigms / ay naninindigang harapin at tanggapin / ang hamong patuloy na pagyamanin, / malawakang ipalaganap at itaguyod, / hanggang sa malawakang maisabuhay / ang mga balangkas ng pag-iisip at pagkilos / na makapagbubuklod at makapagbibigay-lakas / sa Sambayanan / sa bawat Pilipino at sa bawat tao, / ngayong pumapasok na kami / sa isang bagong milenyo / na dapat sumaksi / sa ganap na pag-unlad at ganap na pagkakaisa ng mga tao. //
Gagawin
namin ito / sa kaparaanan ng pagsasanib-lakas / namin at ng paparami pang aming
hihimukin / na maging mga kapanalig / ng Lambat-Liwanag Network. //
Ito
ay taimtim na panata naming lahat / na isasabuhay sa abot ng makakaya / sa
ngalan ng aming karangalan / bilang mga taong matapat. //
Kasihan nawa kami / ng Bathalang Maykapal, / Mapagmahal na Pinagmulan, / at Dakilang Kabuuan ng lahat ng Pagsasanib / sa buong Sanlibutan. ///
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Addendum |
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Paradigm Handouts: |
BASED on the specific paradigms chosen by the participants during the registration, they were given handouts to go with their general kits. The paradigm-specific handouts were full reproductions of certain articles, excerpts of articles and materials existing before the formation of the Lambat-Liwanag Network, and some other materials, like the fully written-out draft Paradigm Declaration for Light-Seeking and Light-Sharing Education (Paradigm No. 7) and the detailed outline of point headings and content entries for Synergism in Total Human Development (Paradigm No.1), preparatory to writing the first draft of the Paradigm Declaration for this.
Other materials for specific paradigms were prepared for the Conference but copies made of them were insufficient in number due to some technical difficulties. All these materials, however, are carried in this section of the book. The Conference organizers tried to provide handouts from a variety of sources on each paradigm, and due to our limitations we are able to provide only a handful of documents that were well within our immediate reach, especially from writings of the lead convenor that were already in his computer hard drive and other materials in his personal library.
The inclusion of any which material here does not signify that we are endorsing its assertions. We are simply recommending that you read them to stimulate and/or enrich your thoughts on the paradigms. We would appreciate any comments, positive or negative, from you about these handouts, as well as recommended additions to them, for consideration by the forthcoming series of Lambat-Liwanag Paradigm-Specific Conferences.
Following, alphabetically by surname, are the authors of the materials here: Ruth Benedict; Teresita Camacho; Bill Cane; Maraya Chebat; Tony Cruzada; Dorothy Dobbins; Esperanza Dowling; Edcel Lagman; Nelson Mandela; Federico Mayor; Noemi Medina; Drunvalo Melchizedeck; Kenneth Murrell; Nicanor Perlas; Mina M. Ramirez; Betty Reardon; Ed Aurelio Reyes; Joydee Robledo; Serafin Talisayon; Alvin Toffler; Enrique Torres; Judith Vogt; Neale Donald Walsch; Ian Winter; Karol Wojtyla (Pope John Paul II); and Marz Zafe; plus the following entities (also alphabetically): CBCP-NASSA; Earthlite Sparks & Reflections; Philippine Human Rights Information Center; Philippine Movement for Press Freedom; Salika; SanibLakas Foundation; and the United Nations General Assembly.
(For full texts of paradigm handouts as carried in the documentation book, please click here.)
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Appendix: Participants |
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General Profile: |
From the Academe --- 27
--Formal Members of Lambat-Liwanag 18
--Other Academic Institutions 9
Non-Academe --- 16
Unable to register -- 9
Total -- 52
Specific Profile: |
FROM THE ACADEME --- 27
Formal Members of Lambat-Liwanag -- 18
Asian Social Institute - 5
Arlene Natocyad
Frederick Rey
Prof. Ed Aurelio C. Reyes
Enrique Vasallo
Gina Arenas-Yap
Philippine Normal University - 5
Zenaida H. Brioso
Dr. Noemi A. Medina
Dr. Guillermo Roman Jr.
Romero Royo
Araceli Siva
Phil. Science and Technology Center-Baguio - 1
Engr. Faustino Mendoza Jr.
Polytechnic University of the Philippines - 7
Prof. Flora Arellano
Dr. Ester Bagsic
Dr. Corazon Coloma
St. Marietta Demalino
Sofia Guillermo
Prof. Angelita Sumaway
Prof. Enrique D. Torres
University of the Philippines-Manila - 4
Prof. Bernard Karganilla
Prof. George Llaguno
Virginia Nuestro
Dina Remulacio
University of Sto. Tomas - 6
Angeliza Aziza V. de los Angeles
Prof. Ma. Socorro P. Calara
Sarah Jane P. Gomez
Prof. Ernesto R. Gonzales
Kay J. del Valle
Jeanette Loonson
Nina P. Reyes Irish
Other Academic Institutions -- 9
Asumption College - 1
Norma Tinambacan
Colegio de San Juan de Letran - 1
Prof. Raem Mendoza
College of Community Health Development and Management (Tanay) 4
Dr. Aurora P. Asanza
Nellie Ducusin
C. Gregorio
Leny Morada
S. M. Vallesteros
Philippine Christian University - 2
Marie Gamoras
Emilie Tangonan
Family Farm School (Mindoro) - 1
Judith Polo
NON-ACADEME --- 16
Bayan News - 2
Diosdado Luna
Pinky Serafica
Communicators League for Environmental Action and Restoration (CLEAR) - 1
Vic O. Milan
Kampanya para sa Kamalayan sa Kasaysayan (Kamalaysayan) - 1
Jose Eduardo Velasquez
Filipino Solidarity and Green Productivity Foundation - 2
Ray Hilot
Jesus M. de la Crin
Kaakbay Entre-Workers Cooperative- 1
Ranulfo B. Bueno
Kasikap Cooperative- 1
Tony Cruzada
Linkstaff Services - 2
Daisy Mae Diaz
Ferdinand Limbo
Philippine Human Rights Information Center - 1
Antonio Villasor
Salika- 1
German Caniete
SanibLakas Foundation - 2
Luis B. Gorgonio
Joydee C. Robledo
Sarilaya - 2
Monina Geaga
Zeny Mique
CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT
Gudelia Jimenez
Ma. Carmelita Santos
..
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