MANILA, Philippines – In 1986, Dr. Jaime Aristotle B. Alip, along with Dolores Torres, Lorenza Benitez, and other rural development workers founded the Center for Agriculture and Rural Development Mutually Reinforcing Institutions (CARD MRI) to assist landless rural women working on the coconut plantations of Laguna province. With a start-up fund of P20 and his “magic” typewriter for writing proposals, the group set to work.
Taking a page from Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunis, who in 1976 provided small loans to women in Bangladesh through his Grameen Bank, Dr. Alip applied the Grameen micro-credit model, and has since transformed the lives of millions in his home province and beyond.
Today, CARD MRI is a group of mutually reinforcing institutions with a total outreach of more than 1.3 million women clients that is dedicated to ultimately empower the less fortunate by upholding the core values of competence, culture of excellence, family spirit, stewardship and simplicity.
As its founder and managing director, Dr. Alip has received many prestigious awards for his program, most notably the 2008 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service. Other citations include the Prize for Excellence in Community Economic Development by the Southern New Hampshire University in 2007, the People Power Recognition Award by former President Corazon Aquino in 2005, the Global Excellence for Microfinance by Grameen Foundation USA in 2003, and Flame of Excellence Award given by USAID in 2000.
Although he now sits as an adviser for the Grameen Foundation, USA, and has had extensive international experience as adviser, expert and consultant in the field of microfinance and rural development in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, China, Myanmar, Bhutan, East Timor and Indonesia, Dr. Alip’s roots remain in his hometown of San Pablo. Here, he takes us on a visual tour of the city where he was born, grew up, and one of the first places he launched his trailblazing program. This is his San Pablo, this is his SM.
San Pablo City is so close to nature, with its lush vegetation, rolling mountains and seven lakes. Sampaloc Lake with its azure sky and calm waters would be my next destination for my guests. Going around the lake, by foot or car, will be a pleasant way to while away the time
I would bring my guests to lunch at Clydenjosh Restaurant, with its treehouse that offers an excellent view of the lake and its surroundings. A seafood menu would be great.
Life was simple growing up in San Pablo eating street food, swimming in the river, going to church every Sunday. We were not exactly rich, but I knew there were people who had less than what we had. I wanted to make life more abundant for them.
If I would bring guests around San Pablo I would opt for developmental tourism. First on the list would be a CARD center meeting where visitors can meet and converse with card clients so that they will understand what CARD does, and how it touches people’s lives. Next would be a visit to the business sites of successful entrepreneurs engaged in stuffed toy making, landscaping, food processing, among others. A visit to CARD MRI Bank offices is a must since CARD Bank is the first microfinance-oriented rural bank in the country.
I enjoy watching movies at SM, and eating afterwards at Pizza Hut. It is the one place in SM that offers a selection of salads and seafood, which is good for my meatless diet.
Villa Escudero in the adjacent town of Tiaong gives guests a rare glimpse of rural Philippine life with its carabao cart ride, cultural show, museums and man-made falls.
SM is a one-stop shop, a very convenient place to buy all the things one might need. It enables people to keep up with the new trends at a price that is affordable even to ordinary people. It gives families a safe and enjoyable place for bonding, and allows me to meet CARD MRI staff and clients outside the work environment.
To cap a day in San Pablo, I would bring guests to dinner in Sulyap, where one can enjoy Spanish-inspired dishes such as beef salpicao and pastel; Filipino dishes with a twist like kulawo (banana heart cooked in burnt coconut milk); and the vast antique collection of the restaurant owner.
While the city is rapidly urbanizing, its people have not forgotten old-time values like respect for elders, close family ties, honesty, hard work, faith in God. When in SM, I bring my granddaughters to the playroom where they simply enjoy interacting with other kids immensely in a safe environment. It also frees us to do our shopping.