MUNTING NAYON
32 years
of
Community Service
News and Views
of the
Filipino Community Worldwide
Munting Nayon (MN), an online magazine, is home to stories and news about our Filipino compatriots scattered around the world.
MN is operated by Eddie Flores.
Last Update: Fri May 14 2021
MUNTING NAYON
32 years
of
Community Service
News and Views
of the
Filipino Community Worldwide
Munting Nayon (MN), an online magazine, is home to stories and news about our Filipino compatriots scattered around the world.
MN is operated by Eddie Flores.
Last Update: Fri May 14 2021
MUNTING NAYON
32 years of Community Service
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Theresians, Sydneysiders in first-ever COVID-19 Anthology


 
By Evelyn A. Opilas
Sydney-Australia
March 29, 2021
 


Top row: Susan Tuvera Agullana, Erlinda Belgica Alabanza, Maydelene Zamora Agustin Ancheta, Elizabeth Panlilio Aquino, Maria Teresa Arcenas, Maria Imelda Argel, Erlinda  Caramancion, Susie Orden Cornell, Myrna Torio Elcano, Lutgarda Porciuncula Espiritu

Middle row: Maria Victoria Ayap Flores, Esther Owen Fernandez Garana, Rose Guevara, Michelle Manodon, Josefina Cervantes Musa, Fe Villanueva Nolasco, Rachel Opilas Oberes, Evelyn A. Opilas, Yvonne Agullana Opilas

Bottom Row: Angelina Orden, Roslyn Montesclaros Rajasingam, Linda Geronimo Santos, Aurora A. Saulo, Maripaz Nespral Shaw, Daisy Villanueva Soriano, Norma Carnay Vargas, Dorothy Ann del Villar, Eleanor Nelle White, Maria Victoria Ledonio Yao


Sydneysiders and Theresians are among those who shared COVID-19 experiences in a first-ever collection of essays I compiled and edited, providing a glimpse into how they faced the unexpected turn in their circumstances.

Front cover ‘A Filipina Collection of COVID-19 Essays’


Entitled ‘A Filipina Collection of COVID-19 Essays’ launched 27 March 2021,

the anthology consists of narratives from 29 women leaders from the Philippines, Timor-Leste, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Australia during the early months of the 2020 pandemic.

The contributors to the compilation are:

Australia – Maria Imelda Argel, Erlinda Caramancion, Lutgarda Porciuncula  Espiritu, Maria Victoria Ayap Flores, Rose Guevara, Michelle Manodon, Josefina Cervantes Musa, Rachel Opilas Oberes, Yvonne Agullana Opilas, Roslyn Montesclaros Rajasingam, Linda Geronimo Santos, Norma Carnay Vargas, Dorothy Ann del Villar and myself;

The Philippines – Erlinda Belgica Alabanza, Maydelene Agustin Ancheta, Elizabeth Panlilio Aquino, Maria Teresa Arcenas, Myrna Torio Elcano, Eleanor Nelle White, Maria Victoria Ledonio Yao;

Timor-Leste – Esther Owen Fernandez Garana;

United Kingdom – Susan Tuvera Agullana, Susie Orden Cornell, Angelina Orden;

United States – Fe Villanueva Nolasco, Aurora Saulo, Maripaz Nespral Shaw, Daisy Villanueva Soriano

Eleven of us share St. Theresa’s College, Manila or Quezon City, as part of our formative years, eight with whom I celebrated the Emerald Jubilee of our High School Class 1966 during STCQC’s first Virtual Homecoming 30 January 2021 – Erlinda Alabanza, Elizabeth Aquino, Maria Teresa Arcenas, Fe Nolasco, Maripaz Shaw, Aurora Saulo, Eleanor White, Maria Victoria Yao.

(Three of us received the prestigious STCQC Alumnae Association’s Teresa’s Achievement Award during the Virtual Homecoming – Dr Aurora A Saulo for Science & Medicine, Maria Teresa L Arcenas for Justice & Peace, Evelyn A Opilas for Media. Batchmate Lourdes Catacutan de Mesa also received the award for Parish/Community Service. Four of the nine 2021 TAA awardees belonged to our HS’66 batch.)

Professor Emerita Dr Aurora Saulo of the University of Hawaii at Manoa wrote the anthology’s centrepiece article.


Professor Emerita Dr Saulo of the University of Hawaii at Manoa provided the centrepiece to the anthology with her insightful perspective on COVID-19 infection rates and public health.

Members of the Australia Philippines Services League show their support for the anthology, from left: Mae, Lorna and Michelle Manodon, Norma Vargas, Linda and Rey Caramancion, Chris Pilao, James Vargas.


“Isolation is the same measure recommended for those who are sick with other contagious illness,” Dr Saulo aptly pointed out.

Readers would find a mix of loving, humorous, reflective, inspiring chronicles, with most of the writers finishing their stories in an apparent Filipino trademark – trust, faith, reliance on an Almighty God, and among Catholics, His Blessed Mother, steadfast in their gratitude and in their hope for better tomorrows.

These amazing women accepted, adapted, adjusted to the changes that the unknown, unwelcome, infectious virus imposed, including the dicta of regular hand washing, social distancing, self-isolation, and use of face masks.

Compiler-editor Evelyn Opilas thanks Blacktown Library’s Multicultural Librarian Joelmon Zungar for his assistance during the book launch.


While most lamented the closure of places of worship, they welcomed Masses, prayer groups, Bible studies into their homes through live streaming platforms. Technology became a great tool for religious observances, for connecting with family, relatives, friends, for studying, for working.

Compiler-editor Evelyn Opilas hands Rosana Guevara a copy of the  anthology for her daughter, Rose Guevara.


They shared their stories openly, aware that beyond their shores, other Filipina women have their own memorable, valuable, insightful reflections of COVID-19.

For further information on, and availability of, ‘A Filipina Collection of COVID-19 Essays’ , contact .

Opilas, Evelyn A. ed. (2021). A Filipina Collection of COVID-19 Essays. Wetherill Park NSW: Bright Print Group.
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Erlinda Belgica Alabanza
Mariveles, Bataan, Philippines
Saturday 3rd of April 2021

Our bodies may be confined but our minds and hearts are free. Covid 19 has turned our world upside down. It is a challenge to everyone , young and old, insignificant or great, or even to the indifferent .This compilation accomplishes what in the new normal csnnot otherwise do as well... it reaches out to the world the many varied thoughts we of different circumstances shared so that our fears, doubts, attitudes towards this pandemic are dxposed anx we realuze we are not alkne but together jn thid. In some mysterios way this horrific Pandemic is somehow leading humankind towards a cleansing that could eventuslly bring about the unity and peace we all wish snd desire for.
MN