Friday, August 23, 2013

VOH Child Wins at Swimming Meet

“I was determined to give it my all and I succeeded,” says Visions of Hope (VOH) child Angelica Zafe, 15, in Filipino describing her swimming victory at the 2nd Nikki Coseteng Motivational Splash. “Unlike a few others who stopped in the middle of their laps because they thought they were losing, I kept going.” 

Angelica placed third in the extra heat of the 50 meter freestyle for girls and bagged second place in the final round of the same category. The meet, held at Diliman Preparatory School on May 12, 2013, was organized by the Philippine Swimming League (PSL) and was a gathering of more than 400 PSL-trained beginner teams from different parts of the country.

Angelica Zafe (in black shirt) celebrates with other members of the
Center for Community Transformation (CCT) Swimming Team.
Others 
 from CCT-VOH who won in the extra heat round were 
John Mark Torres
, Jervie Magat, Rico Meras, John Paulo Caparas, 
and Jennylou Lumbang.  
Her interest in swimming, Angelica says, began while growing up in the densely populated district of Tondo in Manila where she used to sneak out of the house to swim with friends.

Angelica and sister Angelina have been in the care of VOH for over a year now. Their father, a janitor, and their mother, who does occasional domestic jobs, did not earn enough to provide for the family. Though the Zafe siblings were able to go to school, they constantly worried about not being able to submit school projects. Starting late 2011, the family resorted to collecting recyclable waste from the street. But still, that was not enough. They were evicted from their rented house, and the siblings had to drop out of school.

Tears well up in Angelica’s eyes as she describes four months of living in Luneta Park. Flattened cardboard boxes served as their bed. A thin plastic mat under these kept water from seeping through. When it rained they would sit close with their few belongings between them, holding another plastic sheet over their heads. “At night I would try to stay awake as long as I could to keep watch,” Angelica says.

Looking back, Angelica realizes how precious a full night of sleep is, something she is able to experience at VOH Rose of Sharon House of Friendship (ROS) in Bay, Laguna. She is thankful for food that is more than enough as well. In the eighth grade at nearby Masaya National High School now, she has grown healthier and fit for sports training.

From April 1 to May 12 this year, Angelica and other VOH children were trained by PSL coaches. The crude strokes she learned when she was younger were corrected and made suitable for competition. “Swimming for three and a half hours five days a week was not easy,” she says, “But all the hard work paid off when I joined the swimming event.”

Angelica looks forward to more swimming training at ROS. She also wants to try out for her school’s swim team soon.

A coach from PSL closely checks VOH children's strokes. 

VOH children learn to swim laps in ROS's six-lane pool.

The CCT Swimming Team warms up before competing at the
2nd Nikki Coseteng Motivational Splash.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Development Practitioners Visit VOH Boarding School

Development practitioners, many of them executive directors and managers of faith-based organizations, got a chance to see how the Lord has been working in the lives of children who used to live on the streets of Metro Manila during an exposure trip to the Rose of Sharon House of Friendship Boarding School.  The visit was part of a two-week modular course titled Spirituality and Culture in Transformational Development  run by the Institute for Studies in Asian Church and Culture from July 29 - August 11, 2013.

Children rescued from Manila's streets sing about
God's love.




Rose of Sharon House of Friendship Boarding School
children with Dr. Grace Dyrness, executive director of the
Institute for Transnational Research and Development,
Institute for Urban Initiatives... 

...with Dr. Melba Maggay, president of the
Institute for Studies in Asian Church and Culture (ISACC)

...and with Mac Broadshaw, co-founder of ISACC.