(I found this in my archives. It's an unpublished version of a piece I did for Starweek. I forgot writing about this but I'm posting it here because I think I like it more than the published piece. But why I chose to submit the other version remains a puzzle).
A scissors, a
chair and a cloth to cover falling hair; there is little boy and a lanky
barber, his hair grown thick as well. This is a pop-up barber “shop” in an
empty alley in downtown Manila. There really is no shop with the trademark
helix of red, blue and white, the barber pole that dates back to the medieval
times. There is
There is a woman,
she with long hair cascading down her shoulders sitting alone appreciating art
inside the Oarhouse Pub on Bocobo Street, described as one of the last remnants
of Manila’s colourful past.
In a mass grave in
Leyte in the southern Philippines, the names of the dead, they who perished
when Haiyan came, are cast in stone and etched in gold, remembered forever.
In a town of water
lilies, in the middle of cornfields, there is a woman covered in blue. She is
the wife of a dead rebel, she is the mother of an infant son and four other
children, now without a father.
Welcome to the
Philippines where little boys get their hair cut anywhere, anytime, in empty
streets or in crowded barber shops, where children roam fishing villages in
Snow White costumes, where town elders read the livers of freshly butchered
pigs in fog covered mountains in the northern Philippines and where cornfields
become massacre sites.
A country of 94
million people, the Philippines is a storied place. Surrealism runs through the
daily lives of people. And the stories are endless as they are varied; every
place is a cartographic reality; age-old traditions exist alongside the
ephemeral and yet the Philippines is as real as it can get.
There is more to the Philippines than just
poverty and politics and this is what Everyday Philippines, an Instagram
project put up by three Filipino freelance photojournalists, Tammy David (tammydavid.com),
Veejay Villafranca (veejayvillafranca.com) and Jes Aznar (jesaznar.com).
All three said that EverydayPhilippines, an
account on photo-sharing site Instagram seeks to show the Philippines and not
just the usual stories of poverty and corruption that the country is sometimes
synonymous with.
The Instagram project joins the
growing global Everyday movement inspired by EverydayAfrica, which started in
2012 initially as a Tumblr Blog by photographer Peter DiCampo and writer Austin
Merill.
EverydayAfrica
inspired similar Instagram accounts put up by mostly professional
photographers: EverydayIran, EverydayBronx, EverydayUSA, EverydayEasternEurope,
EverydayMyanmar and also to non-geographic issues such as EverydayClimateChange
and EverydayIncarceration, among others.
EverydayPhilippines
officially started on Jan. 1, 2015 and joins this global movement as it aims to
break the visual stereotype of the Philippines being just another Third World
country mired in deep poverty.
The
goal is to break these stereotypes, says David, who is also a video journalist
and whose works have appeared in both local and foreign publications including
the Wall Street Journal.
Villafranca,
a photographer represented by Getty Images, said it has become difficult to
pitch stories about the country because some Western media’s preconceived
notions of what the Philippines is.
“The
Philippines on its own is very rich (but) when you pitch (stories) to the
Western media, there are a lot of misconceptions,” says Villafranca.
And
yes some people zero in on the country being just another Third World nation.
Aznar,
whose works appear on the pages of the New York Times, thought of coming up
with the project so he suggested it to his two friends Villafranca and David,
who in turn, happen to have the same idea, inspired by EverydayAfrica’s
success.
The
rules are simple. The project is open to other photographers and the
photographs must be, as much as possible, phone-camera captured, visually
stunning and must provide contexts.
“There
are many photographs and stories but what is important is to put the context,”
Aznar says.
Photographers
can then post their photos on their individual Instagram accounts and use the
hashtag #EverydayPhilippines and from this, the three proponents then curate
the photographs that appear on this hashtag search before reposting these on
the EverydayPhilippines account.
And
true enough, the result is a visually stunning tapestry of vignettes of life in
the Philippines that entices the audience to take a closer look at a nation
whose daily life is so rich in history, culture and magic realism.