Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Philippines 17th most generous country in the world

It would appear that Filipinos have taken to heart the words of that classic Christmas carol that goes, “at magmula ngayon, kahit hindi pasko ay magbigayan.”

According to the World Giving Index 2012 by British organization Charities Aid Foundation (CAF), the Philippines is the 17th most generous country out of 146 countries included in the study, with a world giving index score of 45 percent.

The World Giving Index ranked countries based on three "giving behaviors:" donating money to a charity, volunteering time for an organization, and helping strangers.The Philippines shared the ranking with Finland, who also had a score of 45 percent.

Meanwhile, Australia was ranked the most generous country with a score of 60 percent.

Ireland, Canada, New Zealand and the United States rounded out the top five most generous, all ranking high in terms of donating money.

Filipinos, meanwhile, got a relatively low score of only 32 percent when it came to money donations, but ranked fifth overall in terms of volunteering, with a score of 44 percent.

This score is the highest of any other country in Southeast Asia.

As for helping strangers, Filipinos got a score of 58 percent.

The CAF report said that the country's world giving score has exceeded its five-year average.

However, it also said that there was a general decline in charitable acts in recent years, noting a decrease in participation in all three giving behaviors all over the world.

"According to our report, hundreds of millions fewer people have helped others than was the case last year," said CAF Chief Executive John Low in the report's foreword.

"This has inevitably resulted in a dramatic reduction in charitable support for millions of vulnerable people the world over," he added.

The World Giving Index 2012 was compiled using data collected throughout 2011 and surveyed over 155,000 people.

Countries featured in the World Giving Index in previous years that were not surveyed in 2011 do not feature in the 2012 Index.

Fieldwork was conducted by the market research firm, Gallup. This is the third edition of the World Giving Index. — DVM, GMA News


Monday, December 24, 2012

Pre Colonial Artificats to be Exhibited in Paris

As you rush through the last-minute holiday preparations, take a moment to daydream about Paris in April. 

From the Eiffel Tower, you walk down the banks of the Seine until you arrive at the Musée du Quai Branly. At the entrance of the museum, you are greeted by an archival photograph of rice terraces. 

As you go in, you are met by more than thirty bululs. The rice divinities are followed by a section dedicated to the mumbaki, the Ifugao priests. Here you will see objects used for divination, healing, and other rituals. 

Next is a section featuring the "poetics of daily life"—spoons, baskets, and other objects that are needed for daily life in the Cordilleras. 

A section featuring the kadangyan showcases textiles, ornaments, gongs, special jars, and the hagabi, a bench symbolizing the kadangyan's high Ifugao status.
The making of this bench is very elaborate and costly, explained anthropologist Corazon Alvina, co-curator of the grand exhibition of pre-colonial Philippine artifacts called "Philippines: Archipel des echanges" (Philippines: An Archipelago of Exchange). 

"This is one opportunity where we are not only encouraged to be proud of what we have but also gives us an opportunity to look at our ancestry, to look at where all of these impulses, artistic and creative, come from and perhaps we can use that knowledge to further our development as a people," Alvina said during a press conference on December 20. 

The exhibit will include ornaments from the highlands such as beads and necklaces, as well as warrior objects like axes, shields and other weaponry. 

Separate spaces feature artifacts from the Maranao highlands, the Maranao and Maguindanao sultanate, and Palawan. Across the textiles of Mindanao is a spectacular exhibit of gold artifacts. 

Before exiting, there will be pottery such as terracotta burial jars and urns used in Cotabato for secondary burial. 

"Exchange is the core idea of the concept of this exhibition, and the notion of exchange could be translated in material, cultural, and commercial exchange," said co-curator Constance de Monbrison, who is in charge of the Insular Southeast Asia Collections at the museum.
The exhibit runs at the Quai Branly Museum from April 9 (Araw ng Kagitingan) until July 14, 2013, which is also Bastille Day or French National Day. 

"The arts of the Philippines are little known in France and rarely shown in their entirety and diversity. Through these unique objects, each of which conveys a particular meaning, we pay homage to these multiple artistic expressions," Quai Branly Museum president Stephane Martin said in a press release.

The exhibit will feature art from various collections in the Philippines, United States, Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and Austria. 

French Ambassador Gilles Garachon said they expect around one million visitors during the three-month exhibition. 

"This will be an exceptional occasion and I think maybe one of the most important exhibitions abroad ever of Filipino art, and an exceptional occasion to discover this wonderful wealth and heritage of the Philippines," he said at the press conference.Philippines: An Archipelago of Exchange will feature art from various collections in the Philippines, United States, Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and Austria. 

Garachon added that the exhibit is one way of strengthening Franco-Philippine relations in culture and the arts, one of the core areas of cooperation highlighted by President Benigno Aquino III and French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault during the latter's visit to the Philippines last October. 

"This visit was very special," Garachon said, as "no member of the delegation knew about the Philippines prior to the visit.

"At the end of the visit they told me it was an absolutely a wonderful country, and they don't understand very well why European countries are not more present in the Philippines. This is what it's all about. We have to understand each other much better to exchange more," he said. 

Garachon said the exhibit promotes understanding through culture, and hoped that not only the French, but other European people will be able to see the exhibit.
Representing DFA Secretary Albert del Rosario, Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs Laura del Rosario said the exhibition marks a first in the relations between France and the Philippines. 

"It will put the Philippines on the cultural map and radar of France," she said. 

Apart from the artifacts, parallel activities will also be held, like workshops, traditional Filipino dances, language classes, exhibition of classic and contemporary Filipino films, demonstration of Filipino cuisine, and traditional martial arts. 

There will also be forums meant to provide avenues for exchanges of ideas on Philippine and French culture. 

Outside the museum, there will also be side events such as "Alliances en resonance," which features music, photography, and cinema, at the Fondation Alliance Francaise in Paris.Meanwhile, 22 Filipino artists will participate in an exhibit in Southern France co-curated by French artist Herve di Rosa and Filipino artist Manuel Ocampo. The Philippine Embassy in Paris will also organize a Filipina Fiesta. 

"As we move as a nation towards economic prosperity, there is truly no better time for our cultural heritage to come into sharp focus for the world to see," said Mariles Gustilo, director of Ayala Museum. 

There will also be an exhibit catalog published in French and English. 

"Not everybody can go to Branly, and not everyone can go to Paris. So we thought it would be a good idea that the Philippines would have a copy of the catalog in English," said Senator Loren Legarda, adding that the catalog may be translated to Filipino later on. 

The catalog will be given for free to state universities and colleges. Legarda also suggested that a video of the exhibit be made available online. The exhibit is held with the support of the National Museum, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, and the Ayala Museum. — BM, GMA News

via GMA News Online