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Above, volunteers are digging out the foundation for a new home. Photo courtesy of Michael Consul

Service trip helps build bonds in the Philippines

By 
  • February 20, 2015

TORONTO - Adrian Durlej, 17, was handing out toys, toiletries and food to underprivileged children in the Philippines over the Christmas holidays when one child鱿鱼视频app choice fuelled Durlej鱿鱼视频app passion for helping others.

The boy was about seven or eight, he recalls, and had a variety of toys to pick from, including an action figure. To Durlej鱿鱼视频app surprise, the boy chose a can of Spam. Durlej asked why, to which the boy replied, 鈥淪o my family can eat today.鈥

鈥淚 was just thinking about how lucky we are in Canada. I would never have picked that when I was younger,鈥 said Durlej, a Grade 12 student at Toronto鱿鱼视频app Don Bosco Catholic Secondary School.

This incident and his overall trip taught Durlej about the family oriented nature and struggles of the Philippines, his mother鱿鱼视频app homeland, and gave him perspective on his goals.

鈥淚鈥檝e always had the passion for helping people and I guess this is my way of putting a foot in the door because I want to go on to international development in university,鈥 he said. Even 鈥渟mall things make a huge difference.鈥

The Toronto Catholic District School Board organized Durlej鱿鱼视频app Philippines Service Leadership trip. For four years in a row, Michael Consul, a teacher at Fr. Redmond Catholic Secondary School, has taken a diverse group of students from various backgrounds to volunteer and experience Filipino life and culture. The students raise funds to help cover the cost of their trip.

From Dec. 26 to Jan. 7, 21 TCDSB students visited villages and orphanages in a country where Consul says 44 per cent of the population lives on less than $2 a day. The students cleaned communities, taught dance, gave gifts, played games with kids and built houses side-by-side with those who would be living in those houses.

鈥淚t gives kids the opportunity to put their faith into action... We really want to make the curriculum come to life, so we teach religion from K to 12. This really allows you to live out your faith and model Jesus who served the poor,鈥 said Consul, whose parents emigrated from the Philippines to Canada. 鈥淥ur board has various service trips to Africa, to India and to Mexico. However, we didn鈥檛 have one to the Philippines. A lot of our students are of Philippines鈥 descent. So I saw a need there to serve people in that country.鈥

On the very first trip Consul organized, he says that 鈥渆ven though we were there to build houses, what was more important was building relationships with those in the community, especially with the kids, and we鈥檇 always take time to play with the kids, teach them games that we play here in Canada, get to know them on a personal level as well as learn from them.鈥

What most of the students say after the trip or in their reflections is that they are 鈥渟hocked鈥 by how happy Filipinos are though they have so little, 鈥渁nd it puts everything in perspective with regards to their own life. They always feel a much greater sense of gratitude for what they have and then a sense of responsibility grows because of that.鈥

The Philippines has had a lasting effect on students like Emily Palaganas, 17, whose parents moved to Canada in the late 1980s.

鈥淲hen I first got there, even though there was poverty there, I know the people there were so happy. It really surprised me how welcoming and inviting everyone was... In Canada, even though we have more than ideal living conditions, our attitude towards each other can sometimes feel sort of cold. It鱿鱼视频app still polite and stuff, but it doesn鈥檛 feel the same,鈥 she said. 鈥淥verall, the whole atmosphere in the Philippines is so inviting, so welcoming that you don鈥檛 want to leave ever.鈥

For information on upcoming TCDSB trips, e-mail Consul at michael.consul@tcdsb.org.

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