The process of building a
Bangsamoro region has started in Congress, but literacy advocates on Friday
said one of the government’s crucial problems in the transition from the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) to a new region is an illiterate
work force.
Investments are expected
to flood Mindanao when peace is achieved, but entrepreneurs may end up getting
workers from other provinces or regions because many adults in the ARMM still
cannot read, write or count, said Amina Rasul Bernardo, managing trustee of
Magbassa Kita Foundation Inc., during this year’s national literacy conference
at Teachers’ Camp.
Citing a recent study by
the foundation, Bernardo said 38 percent of ARMM’s voting population (or
715,288 of 1.88 million voters in 2010) are illiterate.
“If you are a businessman
building a hotel, who will you hire? Will it be the illiterate natives or the
literate workers from outside ARMM? Once Tagalogs, Ilonggos, Ilocanos and
Cebuanos land jobs and benefit from a peace agreement that should be enjoyed by
the local communities, would that improve our conflict situation or will it
create another issue of conflict?” said Bernardo, who represented her mother,
former Sen. Santanina Rasul, in the conference.
Bernardo said literacy
champions have included education in priorities being drawn up for a Bangsamoro
master plan. She said the Bangsamoro development plan has targeted 600,000
adults in ARMM for literacy training.
Bernardo said Mindanao educators are hopeful they would be able to
teach functional literacy to these adults before the transition process begins.
“The business sector
tells us peace is key to economic growth. But key to peace is business
investments and development, which is why ARMM’s productivity is low and its
poverty [incidence] is high. There is no peace, few investments, few
businesses. It is a vicious cycle,” she said.
“But it is a chicken and
egg situation,” Bernardo said.
“How can you have
inclusive growth in the most conflict-plagued area of the Philippines if one
third of your adult [population is] illiterate and cannot avail of the
dividends of peace [such as] opportunities for employment [and] opportunities
for increased income that will become available when the passage of the
Bangsamoro Basic Law brings a surge of investors in the region?” she said.
Bernardo said government
educators and nongovernment organizations could improve the literacy rate in
ARMM provinces in three years.
Bernardo’s mother, former
Senator Rasul, a teacher, had pioneered phono-syllabic teaching in the Philippines in
the 1960s. This is an adult literacy teaching method which helps students
recognize the alphabet by introducing the sound each letter makes when these
are formed into words.
Bernardo said 63,751
adults in ARMM have graduated from literacy classes given by Magbassa Kita
(which is Tausug for “Let us read”).
The foundation had also
used the phono-syllabic process to introduce concepts like peace and autonomy
to communities, she said.
Adults willing to sit for
months in village assemblies to learn how to read, write and count, responded
well when teachers used concepts like “peace” or “kapayapaan” in lessons.
“We introduced concepts
like ‘human rights,’ and even ‘autonomy,’ although that was a hard concept to
absorb,” Bernardo said.
She said many Filipinos
assume that separatists characterize the peace and order crisis in Mindanao , when it is criminality and clan wars that
define violence there.
Many of the graduates
were women, Bernardo said, which comprise the highest volume of illiterates in Mindanao .
Many of these women are
mothers who may impart lessons about peace and human rights to their children,
she said.
The foundation’s
graduates have also formed bonds, enabling the government to organize them into
economic cooperatives or organizations, she said.
Bernardo said a survey of
their former pupils has established that many pursued reading or counting
lessons so they could vote properly, handle their financial transactions and avoid
being duped, and to be able to send text messages instead of make expensive
calls using their mobile telephones.
She said some ARMM
beneficiaries of the government’s conditional cash transfer program complained
of being shortchanged because they could not operate an automated teller
machine (ATM).
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/639632/bangsamoro-task-715228-illiterates
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