Terrain and weather

by Jose Ma. Montelibano

PBBM conducts aerial inspection in Rizal floodway | Photo via PCO

The Sona is over, but the rains and floods are just starting. After a special report card day with a lot of clapping and cheering, it is back to the streets—and the roads are very wet.

I used to remember as a kid that we had longer rain months 70 years ago than today. Either the La Niña phenomenon occurred quite often then, or global warming has generally shortened the annual periods of rain. Because of that memory in the 50s and 60s, I am less worried about the frequent rains than the longer hot months.

Pagasa today would describe our climate as six months wet and six months dry. This ratio is not at all when I remember, and not also how our climate was described decades before. Maybe Wikipedia has a better description than Pagasa because it can trace global climate records back in time. Wikipedia claims we have three seasons instead of two, and I think I understand and accept why.

The three seasons are hot and dry from March to May, rainy from June to November, and cool and dry from December to February. If I recall correctly, a powerful typhoon visited my hometown early in December 1951 and devastated Bacolod City, among other cities and towns in Central Visayas. The whole roof was blown away, and we had to abandon that house.

I do not need to recall the names of other typhoons that hit the Philippines in December, January, and February. That means the excellent, dry season described by Wikipedia is too often visited by rain and strong typhoons. Perhaps because of my later advocacy against poverty, I had personally participated in relief and rehabilitation work when typhoons hit from December to February (mainly in the Visayas and Mindanao).

Terrain and weather are the most critical factors in historical warfare. They are matters of life and death that can cause victories or great defeats. However, they remain crucial factors in our daily lives as Filipinos. Between El Niño and La Niña and the pattern of typhoons, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions we experience, I am puzzled why our national and local governance does not give terrain and weather the importance they hold over our daily lives.

It is no surprise that we suffer the same consequences of disasters that are already part of our national cycle. If we do not put terrain and weather front and center in our daily and annual planning, we will get hurt—not the terrain and weather. And the poor among us, many more than the official numbers used by the government, suffer the most.

Since this pattern has happened since our independence from the USA, the cumulative damage to lives, property, and our way of life is shocking. More than that, it is almost criminal negligence by both national and local governments. Most reactive actions have ended up as band-aid solutions to recurring threats. Over the last several decades, I have seen many sea walls put up as evidence of what appears to be more than just short-term interventions.

“As a result of modernization, when those with land titles began to find greater value as real estate rather than producers of agricultural products, millions of Filipinos were restricted or evicted from lands where they and their ancestors had lived.”

It is sad to say, but I have to, not as a way of blaming the elite, that the country’s rulers, including the government, never cared enough for the poor majority. The evidence is how we treat disaster victims, not just after a calamity but after that.

Landlessness was a root problem because of this elitist consciousness in society, as though there was no recognition and appreciation of a divine plan that created a sacred relationship between man and land. For such a God-fearing people, or so claimed by many, a fundamental mandate of survival was belittled, as though the vast majority without wealth or influence can live like birds on a tree or fish in the water.

Man is a mammal, and from a scientific point of view, man is also a mammal that is part of the animal kingdom of the species Homo sapiens. In other words, man needs land and cannot exist without that land as part of his environment. He needs water and air, too, of course, but so far, his need for land to survive and develop as a human being is most threatened, restricted, or denied.

The Filipino poor have been so undervalued in my lifetime, or since operational independence in 1946, that control and accessible use of land has been denied them. Most Filipinos were settlers, unable to get titles to land where their ancestors had been born, lived, tilled, and died for centuries. A document overtook the value of human beings and disregarded their natural rights to their ancestral lands because others, a century or more later, titled lands they had never possessed initially.

As a result of modernization, when those with land titles began to find greater value as real estate rather than producers of agricultural products, millions of Filipinos were restricted or evicted from lands where they and their ancestors had lived. Displaced Filipinos had to go to valueless seashores, upland slopes where the rich had no interest, and riverbanks and canals deemed unbuildable areas.

Then came the storms, the floods, the droughts, the earthquakes, and the volcanic eruptions. Those living along seashores and upland slopes were forced by hunger to move to urbanized areas in town centers and cities where they could beg or find menial work. Because of the terrain and the climate, plus the shortsightedness of greedy businessmen and corrupt government officials, Metro Manila and similar cities absorbed refugees from calamities and witnessed slums grow.

We pay for disregarding natural and social laws, violating our higher cultural values and norms, and succumbing to personal interests over the common good.

Yes, the Sona is over, and Typhoon Carina just jolted us back to reality.

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