Thursday 2 August 2018

Manila, Philippines, July 2018


“It’s more fun in the Philippines!” – this is actually a tourism slogan well thought out. Surely there is a range of reasons why you could have fun here, including beaches, crystal clear waters and the like. I didn’t have time to explore all this, sadly, as I came for just (4!) days through a work trip. But I did get to experience what must be one of the main reasons why this country is enjoyable: the Filipinos.

Well-known for their friendliness and kind-hearted nature, they make you feel good about being here. Like Joel, my Grab (the Philippines version of Uber) driver, who shows me in passing the “best place to see the sunset of the sun”, tells me that this is his full-time job, and when I ask whether he enjoys this work, he says “Yes, I enjoy it. Like right now, I enjoy talking to you.”.

Or like Ellen, who flies in as my guardian angel, after I had been roaming through the old town of Manila, Intramuros. Trying to get back to my hotel had proven more challenging than I had expected. For about an hour already, I had been trying to get a taxi, but they were all either full or refusing to take me to my hotel on the other side of town, as it is rush hour and Manila is notorious for traffic jams. The taxi drivers prefer to get several shorter rides rather than one long one during which they end up being stuck in the jam forever. Slightly exasperated, as well as exhausted from the humid heat and the fumes, I ask a security guard in front of one of Intramuros’ colonial buildings whether he can help me hail a taxi. He proves to be no more successful than I was on my own. Enter Ellen: She sees my peril, decidedly insists on taking me to a Starbuck’s down the road, ignoring all my objections. Even Grab drivers are difficult to get during rush hour, but Ellen keeps on re-sending the request to the app on her phone and stays with me until a car finally pulls up in front of the coffee shop 45 minutes later.

 









Another Filipino trait: Resilience. The Manila Cathedral was rebuilt 8 (!) times.

A day before, during the workshop for which I am here, I had learned what “it’s more fun in the Philippines” also means: three young women who work for the organization that hosts the meeting perform a karaoke song (“Colours of the wind” from the Disney Pocahontas movie – since we are in a meeting on nature conservation!) to motivate the delegates (government representatives from 7 countries, by the way…not boy scouts) during the final stages of a group exercise. Wouldn’t happen in this way in Switzerland, I dare say…

It’s not all fun and games in the Philippines. I get a glimpse of that as well, even without visiting army prisons, remote rural areas, or the red light district. Another driver, this time I am on the way from the hotel to the airport. He asks where I am from, then tells me that he almost went to Switzerland last year: One of his high school class mates works in Zurich, and had invited the whole class to come for a week. He committed to provide for all expenses. Eight of them went, but not my driver. “Why not?”. “Because I had to work.”. He tells me that the hotel doesn’t give him any vacation to recover from his 12 to 15 hour working days, apart from 1 day off each week. So he missed the opportunity to visit Europe. I ask him what he likes about his job, remembering my conversation with Joel. He says “I get to see so many places all the time. I could not sit in an office all day long.” He didn’t see Switzerland, but he contents himself with seeing the different neighborhoods of Manila.

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