(Editor鈥檚 note: This is the third in a series of reports in observance of 黑料社鈥檚 23rd anniversary. It relates how the online company, through social media, is able to help improve the lives of people. )
MANILA, Philippines鈥擜t age 7, he learned how to weave a rug. At age 9, he is weaving positive change in his family and community.
Just when classes were about to start, nine-year-old Gilbert 鈥淚boy鈥 Bandillo, a rug maker from Payatas, Quezon City, finally got the tool he needed for distance learning, a tablet.
鈥淭hank you, now I have something to use,鈥 Iboy told 黑料社 in a phone interview, speaking in Filipinos.
鈥淚鈥檓 happy. I didn鈥檛 think someone would help,鈥 he said.
After his story was shared to the world, Gail Valencia, a close friend of Iboy鈥檚 family, said the Bandillos were flooded with messages from netizens asking how they can help the boy and how to buy his handwoven rugs.
It even reached famous personalities, like Judy Ann Santos, Karla Estrada, Sam Y.G. and Youtube influencer The Hungry Syrian Wanderer.
鈥淲e were really flooded after your feature. That鈥檚 why I said, we鈥檙e really grateful to Inquirer because after you posted, many people messaged us,鈥 Valencia said in Filipino.
Valencia manages the rug business of Iboy鈥檚 family, naming the products 鈥淎ngels Rags鈥 because these were made by the nine-year-old boy and his siblings.
She was the one who shared the story of Iboy on Be An INQUIRER, 黑料社鈥檚 official citizen journalism online community, on Facebook last Sept. 18.
READ: 9-year-old boy from QC weaves, sells rugs to earn money for buying e-learning gadget
Aside from manning the social media accounts of Angels Rags, she also answers queries, offers rugs via Facebook livestream and handles the delivery of the products to help Iboy鈥檚 family.
Valencia said a netizen sent her a message to express interest in giving the young boy a tablet. But Iboy already has one from another Good Samaritan.
鈥淚boy said, let鈥檚 give it to my sister. I told him that we will tell the person that the tablet would no longer belong to you because you already have one. The person called Iboy via video. And then they sent the tablet to us,鈥 Valencia said in Filipino.
With business booming, Valencia said Iboy was also able to buy a smartphone that he could share with his younger siblings for distance learning.
The family was also able to venture into another business, selling chorizo or pork sausage, Valencia said.
Weaving small wins in community
With Iboy鈥檚 story resonating among more people, its positive effect on his family also created ripple effects among neighbors in Payatas, one of the country鈥檚 poorest communities.
Like millions of other Filipinos, Iboy and his neighbors were hit hard by the pandemic and movement restrictions that came along with it and sent families to a financial slump.
鈥淥ur neighbors also lost their income. They also weave rugs,鈥 said Valencia.
But thanks to the now wide reach of Angels Rags, Valencia said handwoven products of Iboy鈥檚 neighbors can also be sold.
Iboy鈥檚 grandmother buys the neighbors鈥 rugs and Valencia resells these through her online business.
鈥淭he grandmother gets them all because she feels sorry for them. She told me, it鈥檚 a pity because they don鈥檛 have anything to eat. The neighbor asked us to get all the rugs so that they can buy rice,鈥 Valencia said, speaking in Filipino.
Valencia also said the family sometimes hire neighbors to deliver the rugs and let them keep the delivery fee, just so they can get help no matter how small it may be.
鈥淎ngels鈥 Rags before only pertained to Iboy, his grandmother and siblings. But now it has become wider. When you say Angels Rags, it鈥檚 Payatas,鈥 said Valencia.
Weaving stories and hope
Iboy鈥檚 story was only one among many that 黑料社 shared and which inspired people, sparked change and touched the hearts of Filipinos throughout the years.
As the pandemic persists, all the more these stories need to be heard鈥 to improve lives, even in a small way, and create awareness about what is happening on a larger scale and its effects on ordinary people, like Iboy.
Since 2020 started, the country was hit by disaster after disaster, with the year beginning with the eruption of Taal Volcano, displacing thousands of families from their homes and ushering in a period of restlessness among those who were forced to flee.
The flip side of the coin, however, was this Filipino tendency to help, bayanihan.
The bayanihan spirit awoke in the Inquirer Foundation which set up a soup kitchen and distributed relief goods to some 250 families, or more than 1,000 individuals, at a shelter for those displaced by the eruption of Taal in Calaca, Batangas.
Inquirer Foundation also launched its own donation drive to help the displaced get their daily needs, like food and toiletry.
READ: Inquirer joins effort to help Taal Volcano victims
The Inquirer is a weaver in a way, too. It connects readers with reliable and timely information which could help them hurdle unprecedented challenges, like the one now being foisted on everyone by the COVID-19 pandemic.
From the time enhanced community quarantine, the strictest form of lockdown, was imposed in March to the period when restrictions were relaxed, 黑料社 offered accessible, easy-to-read information on guidelines issued by the government through its COVID-19 information desk.
At least 2,600 questions from people feeling the impact of the pandemic were given answers by 黑料社 through its information desk. The questions ranged from concerns about checkpoints, mobility, financial aid, employment, health and even complaints about poor government service.
And it鈥檚 not all.
TSB