Purple walis tambo for women empowerment
I bought a purple-colored broom or walis tambo at the Baguio City Public
Market in solidarity with the women
vendors during the celebration of the International
Women’s Day last
May 8.
The Baguio public market has been a cultural symbol of the
city since it was established in 1913.
Located at the lower end of Session Road along Magsaysay
Avenue, this traditional market is a
sensory experience with a maze of shops
selling souvenir items like colorful
native handwoven bags, textiles, wood carvings, walis tambo, specialty foods and the buzz of bargaining
between vendors and shoppers.
With a total land area of about 3.25 hectares, the market
has been a major trading center for more than a hundred years for products from
the Cordillera region, including vegetables, fruits, meat, flowers, and coffee.
The market is made
of six postwar structures finished with the same Baguio stone used in the
earlier market buildings, which were inaugurated in April 1952.
It survived bombings in World War II, but several
destructive fires in 1960, 1970, 1992 and 2008.
have gradually diminished the old market.
The redevelopment plan
or “mallification” of the
historic trading center has been the subject of debate for the past years.
The controversial SM Prime Holdings redevelopment
project involves public-private
partnership (PPP) proposal to build a P4.5-billion multilevel facility that
include the construction of a four-story building that would have
accommodated all 4,000 vendors currently selling meats, vegetables, fish,
clothes and other goods, along with an eight-level parking building.
The vendors would be relocated to a temporary market site
in the Slaughterhouse Compound.
Several protests were held that highlighted concerns over vendor displacement, rent hikes, loss of livelihood,
market ownership and threats to the traditional culture of the market while
also calling for transparent and locally led redevelopment.
Critics stressed that modernization process should not only
benefit corporations but should serve the people and preserve the city’s
cultural and economic heritage.
National Artist for Film and Broadcast Eric “Kidlat
Tahimik” de Guia said in a letter that
despite the market’s need for redevelopment, he warns that corporations prioritize profit over people.
Kidlat said that corporations are focused on “super efficiency just to get
quick cash in, cash out. But the very
colorful market vendors, human beings, will lose their place.“
The Baguio City government recently cancelled the controversial SM Prime Holdings
redevelopment project following strong opposition from local vendors and
residents.
“This is not the end. Our fight has just begun. We have
proven that we can push back a giant corporation through our unity,” said Sofia Villanueva, president of the Women
Vendors Association.
I was present last March 8 during the gathering at the public market Block 4 in celebration
of International Working Women’s Day.
Proclamation No. 227 (1988) declared March as Women’s Role in History
Month, while Republic Act No. 6949
established March 8 as National Women’s Day, both aim to acknowledge the valuable
contributions of women in society and promoting gender equality .
The venue was graced with people wearing purple to symbolize solidarity with
women’s rights and struggles, with discussions featuring women leaders and
representatives from various sectors, including market vendors, advocates, and
youth organizers.
Performances were complimented with discussions on various pressing issues affecting women and
the broader Filipino public, including the market’s mallification, the rising
prices of basic commodities, privatization of essential services such as water
and electricity, and calls for accountability against corruption.
I emphatize with them as my mother was a market vendor
herself when she was young.
When we were growing up, I remember times when Mama scolded
us, “Buti nga kayo di nyo naranasan ang magtinda ng kamatis sa palengke.” Then
she would cry. Perhaps, this was her way of saying that whatever the benefits
we were enjoying then were due to their hard work. This is something that
children have to realize: that parents will sacrifice a lot for the future of
the kids.
The public market issue was also the focus of the recent
28th Word Cup Philippines National Journalism Conference in Baguio attended by
more than 200 campus journalists nationwide.
Speakers include the
author and former members of College Editors Guild of the Philippines
(CEGP) Nonnette Bennet, Eugene and Ana
Marie Calapit, and Jennifer Lee
Bonto.
The conference focused on the importance of fact-checking
and contextual reporting on issues that shape communities with a call for young journalists to use their
platforms to report responsibly.
(Peyups is the moniker of the University of the
Philippines. Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the Seafarers’ Division of the
Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan Law Offices. For comments, e-mail
info@sapalovelez.com, or call 0908-8665786.)
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