If We Lit Up the Youth

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#nofilter, Activism, Advocacy,  If We Lit up the Youth  Youth Empowerment, Awareness, Community, Creative, Creativity, Dance, Filipino, Youth, Selfie Generation, Millennials, Ballet, Fire, Catalyst

FUEL TO FIRE
        There are three necessary components to start a fire – heat, oxygen, and fuel.
        A material, if exposed close enough to a source of heat, especially if there is fuel to serve as a catalyst, will undergo a chemical reaction called combustion. The sustained visible portion of this chain reaction is called the flame. Altogether, this burning substance would then be able in itself, to release heat, light, and even have the potential to cause other combustible material in proximity to erupt into flames.
        The youth is a good example of a highly combustible material, but of course not in the literal sense. We all have the potential to ignite a spark within us, to light a fire against adversity, to blaze a trail towards empowerment. But some of us lack fuel – a drive to make a change, some lack heat – an urgent calling, and the harsh reality is that most of our country’s young lack oxygen – the bare necessities to survive.
        Heat, oxygen, and fuel - all three elements are vital to start a fire. How can you light up the youth when even just its components are so hard achieve?

#nofilter, Activism, Advocacy,  If We Lit up the Youth  Youth Empowerment, Awareness, Community, Creative, Creativity, Dance, Filipino, Youth, Selfie Generation, Millennials, Ballet, Fire, Catalyst

SPARKS AND EMBERS
        The Philippines has one of the youngest populations in Southeast Asia, a large majority of our country’s citizens falling between the ages 5 to 24 years old. This has been equated as a major economic advantage moving forward, with a growing young labor force, the Philippines has great potential for economic growth and development. Rizal’s famous words – “the youth is the hope of the fatherland” – seems almost like a prophesy waiting to be fulfilled, except that the latest statistics point the other direction. An increased unemployment rate for fresh graduates has been reported for 2015, and a significant rise in the incidence of poverty in our country leads you to question if we truly are progressing.
        Though we, the youth, make up more than half of the Philippine population, labelled the hope our country and the supposed driving force that will lead our nation forward, we have very little say in the affairs and endeavours of our country. Our politicians have done very little to represent the youth sector in the government, with a select few lobbying for bills that truly benefit us students and the underprivileged out of school youth.
        Education, a right of all Filipino citizens as mandated by the 1987 Constitution, has become a privilege. Marred by corruption, commercialization and an underfunded Department of Education, many are deprived of the right to enrol and learn. The international UNESCO standard is that at least 6% of a country’s Gross Domestic Product should be allotted for Education. The Philippines fall short of this, at 2.9%, barely amounting to half of what is ideal to subsidize public education for all.
        It’s estimated that 1 in every 8 Filipino youth is deprived of schooling. With 36.23% of Filipino’s aged 6 to 24 declaring themselves as out of school youth, most citing insufficient family income as a barrier to education. It’s not difficult to deduce why the power of the Filipino youth remains largely untapped, when even their basic right to education is denied.
        How can the youth spark change when they are weighed down by poverty, a lack of education, and a lack of involvement?

#nofilter, Activism, Advocacy,  If We Lit up the Youth  Youth Empowerment, Awareness, Community, Creative, Creativity, Dance, Filipino, Youth, Selfie Generation, Millennials, Ballet, Fire, Catalyst

BLAZE THE TRAIL
        The collective fire of the Filipino youth is weak. We’ve been sidelined and relegated to the outskirts of nation building for so long that it almost seems like we’ve all but lost the potential to be the hope of our fatherland.
        Rizal once compared our freedom to fire, saying “The divine flame of thought is inextinguishable in the Filipino people.” We have somewhat proven our hero’s words true - as a nation, overcoming years of struggle and emerging even stronger from the ashes every time. But the fire that burns within us all has been stifled by decades of corruption, oppression, and poverty.
        It’s in times like this one should remember - a light that goes out can be rekindled by a spark from another person. Much like how a single burning candle can spread embers like wildfire if given a chance, even a lone youth can make a difference in this world, advocating greater progress, urging his peers stand for their rights, blazing a trail for generations to come.
        One should be vigilant when lighting up the youth, watchful of the elements that are being forged together to raise them. At first, with great care, like shielding a candle’s flame with one’s hand to protect it from the occasional gust of wind, but then gradually fanning the flames encouraging them spread. After all, the youth is the hope that will bring light to the world, holding our country’s greatest potential to achieve its goals. It’s high time we take matters into our own hands and begin the change ourselves.
        Hope and change can be likened to a growing fire – first a feeble spark, next a flickering flame, then a mighty blaze, ever increasing intensity and power as more feed its blaze. Let’s light up the youth and start the chain reaction.

#nofilter, Activism, Advocacy,  If We Lit up the Youth  Youth Empowerment, Awareness, Community, Creative, Creativity, Dance, Filipino, Youth, Selfie Generation, Millennials, Ballet, Fire, Catalyst

Photos by Chalcedon Sañor

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