1. BRIEF BACKGROUND ON THE
GPH-CPP/NPA/NDF PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
ï± Insurgency problem has been with us for 42
years
ï± Negotiations have spanned 24 years and 4
presidencies.
ï± This is the fifth Panel to conduct the
negotiations.
ï± Over 40 rounds have been completed since
1992.
ï± More than 10 Agreements and Joint
Statements signed by the Parties, including
the CARHRIHL
ï± 13 interruptions due to contentious &
prejudicial issues (i.e, sovereignty, JASIG,
2. RWC-SER OF GPH AND NDF
(L-R) Prof. Fernando Aldaba (GPH), Mr. Randall Echanis (NDF);
Ms. Juliet De Lima (NDF-SER Chair) Mr. Ednar Dayanghirang (GPH-SER Chair);
Mr. Rafael Baylosis (NDF); & Fr. Albert Alejo SJ (GPH)
6. Challenging âMajority-Minorityâ Habit of Thinking
1. The majority now has not been the
majority in the beginning.
2. Christians form the majority in the
Philippines, but we are minority in the
rest of Asia.
3. While Christians feel we are the majority
in the country, actually, in some places
like Basilan, Christians are a minority.
7. 84 million Philippine population
Catholic Church = 83%
Other Christians = 9%
Muslims = 5 %
Indigenous and other Religious Traditions = 3%
Catholic
Church
83 %
Indigenous
and other
Religious
Traditions
3 %
Other
Christians
9%
Muslims
5% Catholic Church
Other Christians
Muslims
Indigenous and
other Religious
Traditions
Catholic
Church
85%
Indigenous
and other
Religious
Traditions
1%
Other
Christians
9%
Muslims
5%
Catholic Church
Other Christians
Muslims
Indigenous and
other Religious
Traditions
Source: www.nationmaster.com
8. Mindanao Population
âą 18 Indigenous groups 8.9%
âą 13 Islamized tribes 18.5%
âą âKristiyanosâ/âsettlersâ 72.5%
15. Trigger:
How do religions get into
conflict?
Islam is a religion of peace. Christianity is a religion of
love. But why do we witness so much fighting among
Muslims and Christians? Why the deep and persistent
prejudices hurled against each other? And this despite
the many interreligious and interfaith dialogues?
Presuming that religion is not the main culprit, how is
religion ârecruitedâ as it were into this friction? And to
what extent are we part of this?
16. Could it be the link
between religion, culture,
and history?
Faith-based peace activists must understand the
dynamics of religion, culture and conflict. E.g. Religion
initiates individuals into a community. Community
building, however, builds not just identity but
boundary. Identity markers both define who is in and
who is out. Formation of identity involves oppositional
identity. This distinction, when taken too sharply, or
too exclusively, can lead to fundamentalism or
chauvinism.
19. Working on Prejudices
A study reveals that both Muslims and
Christians have developed prejudices
against each other, but that Christians
seem to have stronger prejudices against
the Muslims.
One problem is the prevalent lack of training
in dialogue. Much of education is
monologue, or debate---which often is
nothing but a clash of two monologues.
20. We need to engage in
Intra-Faith Dialogue
Existing peace initiatives are closing the gap
between âdialogue Christiansâ and
âdialogue Muslimsâ. But it is not clear
whether we are closing the gap between
the âdialogue Christiansâ and the
âprejudiced Christiansâ, or between the
âdialogue Muslimsâ and the âarmed
Muslims.â
21. Bishops-Ulama Conference, 35th General Assembly,
Jolo, Sulu, November 18-21, 2008
âą While we continue with interfaith activities,
we shall also pursue authentic intrafaith
dialogues among our own communities.
We hope that through this open
communication, we will find a way to face
our own share in the prolonged problem in
Mindanao as well as discover how we
could go beyond our hurts and biases.
Perhaps this holds a key to more creative
solutions to the impasse in our peace
process.
24. Corruption and Violence
Corruption is violence. Corruption kills. It destroys
the environment. If destroys institutions. It
destroys hope. Corruption makes people angry.
Corrupt people refuse to accept that actions have
consequences. My actions affect other people.
And my bad decisions for the sake of my
immediate benefit may destroy othersâ dream in
the future. Corruption snatches away hope. That
is why corruption breeds conflict and war.
25. Integrity as Peace
If we want peace, we need to live a life of integrity.
Integrity means you are not deceiving other people.
Integrity means you are not taking away what is
not yours.
Integrity means not feeding your family with what
you have stolen from other peopleâs family.
Integrity means you are not getting rich or powerful
through illegal and immoral means.
26. Gold
âą Money speaks âŠ
a) patronage for the campaign, for
network-building
b) vote-buying and other illicit practices
c) political advertising [often in violation
of the laws that place limits on media
exposure], and other such activities.
27.
28. Corruption destroys the
environment
Soil erosion-
inappropriate agri system
Landslides
Flooding & Flashfloods
Irresponsible Mining
and extractive industry
Logging and tree cutting
Drought
29. Risk: Climate Change
(Temperature)
Mindanao is generally Agri-based and considered
high risk if there is an increase in temperature.
Very High Risk Areas:
Maguindanao
Sulu
Basilan
31. Possible Areas of Corruption
in the School
Establishment
of School
Approval
Employment
Educational
Activities
Curriculum
Library
Textbooks
Uniform
Students
Examinations
Report
Card
Teacher &
Staff
Task
Allocation
Personnel
Matters
Work
Time
Disciplinary
Actions
Financial
Administration
Requests &
Liquidations Appropriations
Taxation
32. The Overdue Challenge:
Localization of Corruption
The different facets and manifestations of corruption in the campus:
ï„ Cheating
ï„ Plagiarism
ï„ Cutting classes
ï„ Bullying
ï„ Loitering
ï· loafing
ï· bumming
ï· tambay
ï„ Bribery
ï„ Stealing
ï„ Vandalism
ï„ Habitual
tardiness and
absences
ï„ Faked diplomas
ï„ Campus election frauds
ï„ Deceptive campus election campaigns
ï„ School funds mismanagement
ï· annual yearbook
ï· school paper
ï· club funds
ï„ Campus sports anomalies
ï„ Rampant solicitation
âą annual yearbook
âą club t-shirts
âą Christmas parties
âą construction of fences
âą field trips
ï„ Other malpractices and malfeasance
Slide 17
35. Catholic Schools
âą âMany graduates of Catholic schools have
been successful economically and
politically but they have also contributed to
the dismal economic and political
imbalances existing in our countryâ
(Plenary Council of the Philippines II, no.
267)
37. V. CONFESSION OF SINS COMMITTED IN ACTIONS AGAINST
LOVE, PEACE, THE RIGHTS OF PEOPLES, AND RESPECT FOR
CULTURES AND RELIGIONS
(POPE JOHN PAUL II, DAY OF PARDON, MARCH 12, 2000
âą âLord of the world, Father of all,
through your Son
you asked us to love our enemies,
to do good to those who hate us
and to pray for those who persecute us.
Yet Christians have often denied the Gospel;
yielding to a mentalĂty of power,
they have violated the rights of ethnic groups and
peoples, and shown contempt for their cultures
and religious traditions: be patient and merciful
towards us, and grant us your forgiveness!
We ask this through Christ our Lord.â
38. CANADIAN OBLATES OF MARY
IMMACULATE (1991)
âą âWe apologize for the part we played in the
cultural, ethnic, linguistic, religious imperialism
that was part of the mentality within which the
peoples of Europe first met the aboriginal
peoples and which consistently has lurked
behind the way the Native peoples of Canada
have been treated by civil governments and by
the Churches. We were, naively, part of this
mentality and were, in fact, often a key player in
its implementation.â
39. Jesuits confession in GC 34:
Intuition and alienation
âOur intuition is that the Gospel resonates with what
is good in each culture. At the same time, we
acknowledge that we have not always followed
this intuition.
We have not always recognized that aggression and
coercion have no place in the preaching of the
Gospel of freedom, especially in cultures which
are vulnerable to manipulation by more powerful
forces.
We have often contributed to the alienation of the
very people we wanted to serveâ (90-92)
40. FRANCISCAN PROVINCE OF SAN
FELIPE DE JESUS TO THE MAYAN
PEOPLE (MANI, YUCATAN 2009)
We ask forgiveness of the Mayan people for not
having understood your world view and your
religion and for having denied your deities;
for not having respected your culture and for
having imposed upon you for many centuries a
religion that you did not understand;
for having demonized your religious practices
and for having declared in word and writing
that they were works of the devil and that your
idols were Satan incarnateâŠ
41. Considering Forgiveness
During a number of sessions on clan conflict
and interfaith dialogue, forgiveness was
mentioned both by Muslims and
Christians. While nobody thought it was
easy, nobody seems to claim that it was
impossible. A few testimonies proved it
was necessary.
42. Testimony of DatuTotoPaglas
As a young boy, he witnessed the murder of
his father. He was old enough to
remember, but too young to fight. When
he grew up, his relatives told him to
revenge. But Toto Paglas refused.
Later, his younger brother was killed. Again,
he decided not to be like his brotherâs
murderer. When another brother was
killed, his relatives volunteered to take
vengeange into their hands.
Toto stopped them, saying that if he killed
another person, the family of that person
will take another life back, and the cycle
will not stop.
43. FromArms to Farms
âI believe that real peace is in education and
livelihood. If people are not educated, then the
only pride they have is to own and use a gun.
If the people are hungry, they can not think
properly; they fight for their family. So I
converted our land into a plantation. I hired
the members of the family that killed my father
and my brothers. Now I can walk even without
a body guard. I am at peace.ââToto Paglas