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- Everything around you is alive.
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We live in a world
where the palette
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is overwhelmingly gray on blue.
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If you're lucky, you get
a sporadic smudge of green.
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Here you can see
the world breathe.
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Highways are replaced by streams,
cars by canoes.
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Your eyes think that
you're surrounded by land,
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but it's a trick.
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Underneath the growth,
more water,
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a quiet resistance.
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You follow one path today,
and by tomorrow it's gone.
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There is no place
in the Philippines
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that carries more mystery
than the Agusan Marsh.
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Some people see these wetlands
merely as ecosystems
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and important biodiverse areas.
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Others see them
as big bags of cash,
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land to be turned
into highly efficient farms,
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but a few people see them
as a home.
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And this is their story.
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The Agusan Marsh Wildlife Sanctuary
stretches across
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40,000 plus hectares
of wetlands,
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roughly the size of Manila.
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It's one of the biggest
in Southeast Asia
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and one of the most vital
in the Philippines.
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A Ramsar Site, globally recognized
but barely talked about.
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It's all interconnected by lakes,
rivers, marshes and ponds.
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It acts like a giant sponge
during typhoon season,
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absorbing flood waters
for the entire Agusan River Basin.
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Without it, who knows
what would happen
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to neighbor towns like Butuan?
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It's home to rare birds,
floating villages,
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and indigenous communities
who've learned to live
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with the rise
and fall of the water.
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But it's under threats.
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Pollution and climate change
are slowly choking it.
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- Life cannot simply exist
without the Agusan Marsh.
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The marsh protects everything here.
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When you talk
of the Agusan Marsh,
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you got to take into account
the bigger picture
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of the Agusan River Basin.
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Technically, that's the third
largest river system
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in the Philippines,
encompassing Regions XI and XIII—
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that's Davao and Caraga.
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What you have here in our town,
your catch basin.
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And come to think of it,
everything revolves
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around this catch basin.
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They say that life begins here.
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There can never ever be
an Agusan del Sur
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without the Agusan Marsh.
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- What's that, Datu?
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- Walking stick.
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Datu Artemio was selected
as one of the leaders
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due to his Lumad lineage.
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The Lumad are some
of the first wave of people
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to settle in the Philippines,
specifically around Mindanao.
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Their ancestral land
is often highly sought-after,
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making them one
of the most vulnerable
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ethnic groups in the country.
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They are also one of the few groups
that have held on
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to their pre-colonial culture.
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As in most areas
in the Philippines,
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where there is
a strong indigenous ancestry,
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most people with roles to play
in the community also happen
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to have official
government positions.
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Datu was previously
an LGU official and now his son
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is barangay captain.
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They both lead the people
in Caimpugan and its peatland,
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one of the many parts
of the Agusan Marsh Wildlife Sanctuary.
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The relationship
between indigenous religions
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and the Catholic Church
is complex,
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marked by both historical tensions
and reconciliation.
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Indigenous religions,
often rooted in animism
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and oral traditions,
are distinct from the church's
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codified beliefs and practices.
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Just like when we were colonized,
one culture doesn't
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usually completely erase
the other,
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parts of it are indigenized.
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So you'll find people praying
to the Catholic God
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alongside other entities.
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Where people live with the land,
these are still
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a common practice.
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Most of the people here
are Catholic,
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but their own Lumad culture
is still very strong,
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as it should be.
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These rituals are carried out
to ensure safe passage
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and acceptance
into the community.
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- What we have here
within the Augustan Marsh
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Wildlife Santuary
is the Caimpugan peatland.
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The peatland, it covers just 3%
of the Earth's surface.
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But according to the ICUN,
they believe that peatland
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conserves 30%
of the world's carbon,
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and that is twice as much
carbon sequestered
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as compared to all
the rainforests combined.
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The conservation of wetlands
is crucial because it mitigates
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the impacts of climate change.
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If it is damaged,
it releases tons of CO2
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far greater than anything.
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- The people here with us, for now,
are controlled
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because we’re already here
as Bantay Danao.
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Unlike before when people
kept coming in and out.
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- In order to uplift
and protect our wetlands,
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The Society for the Conservation
of Philippine Wetlands
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mobilizes advocates
across the Philippines
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in the world
to facilitate conservations
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and pioneer technical assistance.
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Together with them
is the Protected Area
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Management Office, or PAMO,
which manages
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the overall conservation
of the Agusan Marsh.
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One of their efforts
includes marshaling volunteers
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across all communities
to guard the marsh,
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birthing the fearless group
called Bantay Danao.
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- When we were kids,
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on days when we didn't have classes
in elementary school,
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we would come here and play.
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We would pick fruits from the trees—
kandiis (a sour fruit)—
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and eat them.
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We'd see monkeys here.
Also wild pigs, and deer.
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Because back then,
this whole place
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was still flat and untouched.
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But now, it's different.
Because of the heat.
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The weather isn't the same anymore.
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And there are people
abusing the land.
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- People never mind talking
of climate change
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in its first inception
before that Kyoto Protocol
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way back 2005.
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But people began realizing
the true value of its protection
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because we had a number
of extreme river flooding
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like never before.
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We had an extreme
river flooding in 2014,
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followed by an extreme
river flooding in 2017
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and just recently in 2024,
February 6th last year.
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By having seen it
and experienced it firsthand,
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this Agusan Marsh serves
as nature's kind of dam,
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protecting the adjacent localities
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on all those places downstream,
more so Butuan City.
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Believe me,
without the Agusan Marsh,
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there wouldn't be any place
called Butuan City at all.
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People realize that we get
to change something
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for the better.
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For if not, there would be far
more extreme river flooding.
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within Agusan del Sur.
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- Our peatland area is so vast
that even with regular patrols,
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we can't cover the entire place
in just a month.
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There's a huge difference
between before and now.
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Different types of grasses
are growing now.
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It's not like before where even
from far away,
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you could already see clearly.
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Because the floods brought seeds
from over there
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and carried them here,
and now they're growing.
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It used to be much cooler
than now.
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That's why now our peatland
has problems—
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because it catches fire.
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Before, the weather was cooler.
Now it's different.
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There are about 4 to 5 months here
that are very hot.
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Even a small problem here
in the forest
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can easily spark a fire
because of the heat.
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This is what burns—
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when a small piece of wood cracks,
it sparks and catches fire.
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There's not much we can do.
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By the time we get here,
the fire is already big.
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We just take pictures
and call the local government for help.
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Because the firemen
can't get inside here.
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Sometimes we bring tools to try
to beat the fire down.
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Like here, if it burns here,
we hit it to try to stop it—
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but when the fire surrounds you,
it's impossible.
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All you can really do is pray.
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- Experience is the greatest
teacher of us all.
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Come to think of it,
the Agusan Marsh is overseen
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by six localities as well.
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When you talk
of the Augustan Marsh
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Wildlife Sanctuary,
Talacogon is not alone.
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The LGUs of San Francisco,
Rosario, Bunawan, Loreto, La Paz,
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engages in the protection
and the preservation
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of the peatland.
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It is just a common thing
that everybody is obliged
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to do their part
because this is their way of life,
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this is our way of life.
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- The Panlabuhan floating village
is home to the Manobo tribe,
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families who've lived here
for generations,
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moving with the rhythm
of the water.
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Their homes rise and fall
with the marsh—
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tethered but never fixed.
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You've probably heard
of floating villages before.
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You're picturing houses on stilts
where the home
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is elevated enough
that the water rarely touches
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the bottom.
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They are made to never meet—
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not here.
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The houses are built on anchored
floating bamboo platforms.
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When a typhoon hits
and the water volume increases,
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the houses and everything
around them simply swell with it.
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The water level can vary
as much as 10 meters
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and is highly unpredictable
as the flooding season
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has become erratic.
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- The Agusan Marsh is everything to me.
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I'm going to speak honestly,
no holding back—
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I was born here.
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Without the marsh,
I wouldn't even be married.
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No woman would've agreed
to be with me,
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because we had no wealth
to show.
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What I proudly offered my wife
was the marsh—
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this is our treasure.
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It's the gold I can present
to my family and my child.
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- This is the kind of place
where you have no boss—
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you are the boss here.
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You go out to fish,
and by the next day,
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you already have your catch.
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- Fishing is life here.
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They set their fish cages
in the morning,
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leave them for the day,
and return at dusk,
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hoping that the river
has provided.
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Once caught, these are dried
for consumption
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and to be sold.
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They've also dealt
with an increase
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of an invasive
water hyacinth species
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that clogs their passageways
into the marsh
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and harms their livelihood.
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Daily, they fight
for their way of life.
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Marites Babanto,
the local tour guide,
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remembers a time
when the marsh felt endless,
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but now it's getting smaller,
drying up,
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and the storms
are getting stronger.
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- When I became aware,
around six or five years old,
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this really looked like a vast sea.
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And what I remember most
is seeing what looked like
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a truly virgin area—
nothing destroyed yet,
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the water still clean, drinkable,
and there were still
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plenty of fish.
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Because during that time,
our ancestors were still here.
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- The Agusan Marsh
started making headlines
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when Lolong, the world's
largest crocodile in captivity,
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was caught here.
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At 6.17 meters, he broke records
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and then, just over a year later,
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died in a cage too small
for his legend.
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But long before Lolong,
this place was already home.
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Datu recalls that his grandparents
fled here to hide
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from the Japanese soldiers
in World War II
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seeking refuge in the swamps.
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Marites says her grandfather,
Lolo Pidong,
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eventually decided
to settle here,
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who came with their families,
attracted by the peace
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and bountiful fishing
the marsh provided.
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Their ancestors used to live
in tree houses,
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but no matter how high
the houses were,
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their dwellings always
got swamped during floods
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and typhoons.
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That's when they had
the thought of building
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a house on rafts.
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Three generations later,
their descendants are still here.
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The times have changed.
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Their ways need to adapt
to commercial interests,
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erratic weather
and outside influences,
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but this is still their home.
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- We looked for a way for us
to be seen here,
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for the problems here
to be known.
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That’s when it started—
we were oriented
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by Tuklas Katutubo Balik-Tribo
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that we should fight
for our tribe.
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That they said no one else
can help us but ourselves.
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So since then, they heard it,
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they saw what our problems were.
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- For me, as an IP
(Indigenous Person),
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they say IPs don't reach school—
but if that's true,
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it's only because of how hard
it is for us to get an education
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and finish school.
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All I wish—for myself
and for our children—
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is that they get to reach
at least elementary,
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even just high school.
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What's important is
that they learn how to read.
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Because even for me,
I won't hide it—it's hard.
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I struggle to read English,
I struggle to speak Tagalog.
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What we do is just offer kindness
from the heart.
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What matters most is that
you live honestly and do good
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in this world, so that life
won't be as hard on you.
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From what I've observed,
this Catholic chapel
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has truly been a blessing.
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I'm deeply grateful
to all those who offered help
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and donated materials.
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Because our livelihood really depends
on the seasons.
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- What caused the damage
was soil erosion,
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climate change,
and abuse by some people.
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When there’s flooding,
when the water rises,
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the Agusan Marsh gets damaged.
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The other lakes here...
it’s like this is the only one left—
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Kaningbaylan Lake.
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Because the place we passed—
Dagon Creek—is man-made.
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When the water rises,
especially during Typhoon Pablo,
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all the wood, everything,
all the trash comes in here.
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That’s because of the abuse
by others.
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If something still can be done,
it must be done right away.
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- So when you talk
of climate changes,
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by all means
the national government
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has told us to do
what we could,
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respectively, for the protection
of the peatland
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on the Talacogon Lake.
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But even as we speak,
the national government
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has yet to reconcile
what would we be doing next
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so as to effectively secure
these areas as a protected zone
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within the Agusan Marsh
Wildlife Sanctuary.
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Nothing is permanent
in this world but change.
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We just hope that people
would recognize more
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or people would be inclined more
of its protection
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and conservation
rather than exploiting it
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for commercial use.
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- What we fear most here
as a community is that
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this place will disappear.
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If it reaches here, it’ll be land.
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Over there, it’s already land.
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We’re really afraid—
it would be such a waste.
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- Being a Datu—it's something
that makes you think twice
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about acting recklessly.
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Being a Datu means
being a parent, too.
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You're expected to teach
your children the right values,
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to lead by example.
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That's why if I were to pass
on this responsibility,
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I'd only give it to someone ready
to carry the weight.
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because all the problems
of the community feel like
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they rest on your shoulders.
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I've come to realize that yes,
the role is difficult—
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but it's not as hard
when the community stands together.
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- People realize that
there is far more to gain
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by protecting it
rather than exploiting it.
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Without this Agusan Marsh,
extreme river flooding
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would somehow inundate
all of the localities here.
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So it is managed by the DENR
and the local government units
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as well, six of it.
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Now the PAMO serves
as a foot soldier
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to check everything
if all is well.
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- There have been improvements
because the LGU supports us
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and helps us with whatever problems
we face now.
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The LGU even said
they would install
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an emergency water pump here,
so we'll have something
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to use when fire breaks out.
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We've been trained
in rescue operations.
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That's what we need
to protect the area.
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If we didn't care,
none of this would exist.
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It would all go to waste.
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So now, the kids would say,
"Dad said there used
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to be monkeys here,"
but they don't see any—
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because the place
has already been abused.
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That's why we have to protect
our peatland.
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We won't let it be neglected.
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We keep reminding others here
not to abuse the land too much.
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It shouldn't just be us
taking care of it—
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it should be everyone.
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What's really important
is that everyone in our barangay
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knows and follows the rules
we have here.
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These were taught to us
during the training we received
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from PAMO and the LGU.
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We locals don't want
to abuse the peatland.
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- Why sir?
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- We're already the fifth generation
living here,
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handed down from our ancestors—
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it really hurts to see it
being destroyed.
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We're thankful to PAMO
for organizing us into Bantay Danao.
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So we can protect
the environment here
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in our peatland.
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We don't want it to disappear.
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- That is why we get
to contribute, respectively,
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for its protection.
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Well, God is still
the greatest architect of us all.
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This land may seem idle,
but everything has its purpose.
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- We hope everyone sees the value
of what the Lord has given.