Indonesia

After Lando: A call for help for the children of Casiguran

Jerome Balinton

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These children need immediate assistance to help them recover from this calamity. They need temporary learning spaces and basic school materials, so that their classes could resume at the soonest possible time

After days of fighting the scorching heat and muddy roads, our team finally reached the Agta community in an island barangay in Casiguran, Aurora — the area where Typhoon Lando first made landfall on October 18, 2015. While the team prepared the relief supplies for distribution, I saw a group of children seated on chairs in the middle of a damaged pavement. I was curious at what they were doing so I approached them.  

As I drew nearer, I saw pieces of roof all over the ground, a table set on a muddy patch of grassland, and books soiled and scattered everywhere. And as I moved closer to the children, I finally realized that I was standing in what used to be a community school.

When I said hello, shy eyes stared back at me. Suddenly, my attention was caught by the book that they were reading — a grade school English book that they were all reading together. I couldn’t help but feel mixed emotions upon such sight, because it is always amusing for me to see children like them enjoying reading, but not in a situation like this — under a roofless and wall-less classroom.

What further broke my heart was their response when I asked them why they were opting to stay under a shadeless coconut tree. Altogether, they replied: “Because we miss going to school.”

Save the Children distributes lifesaving relief supplies in Casiguran Aurora and aims to reach 8000 families in its emergency response

If not for Typhoon Lando, these children would have been in school today. Typhoon Lando has flattened hundreds of houses in Casiguran, Aurora, and community facilities like schools and classrooms severely damaged — leaving children and their families without access to quality education. 

These children need immediate assistance to help them recover from this calamity. Among others, they need temporary learning spaces and basic school materials, so that their classes could resume at the soonest possible time.

These children need us in situations like this — they need you. Help us bring the needed assistance to them. – Rappler.com

Jerome Balinton is the Emergency Communications Officer of Save the Children. He is currently deployed in Casiguran, Aurora as part of the organization’s humanitarian response. 

Save the Children is one of the first organizations to respond immediately after Typhoon Lando hit. Our staff on the ground are distributing kits containing lifesaving relief supplies for families in some of the worst-affected communities in Casiguran, Aurora, where the typhoon first made landfall. Relief supplies include water purification tablets so that people have safe drinking water, tarpaulins to serve as emergency shelter, basic household kits containing kitchen utensils, mosquito nets and sleeping mats, and household kits with soap, towels and toothbrush.

To know more about Save the Children’s work for #LandoPH, visit 

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