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EDC targets energy storage projects to be finished by 2025

LOPEZ-LED Energy Development Corp. (EDC) is targeting to complete in the next two years its battery energy storage systems (BESS), which have a combined capacity of 40 megawatts (MW).

“Geothermal is still our main thing. And then, in addition, we are completing our binary projects,” EDC Assistant Vice-President Allan V. Barcena told reporters in a recent interview.

EDC is completing BESS projects in Leyte, Negros Island, and in Bacon-Manito (BacMan) in Sorsogon. “We hope to have them online to supply additional capacity.”

In October, EDC signed a contract with First Balfour, Inc., the engineering and construction arm of the Lopez group, for the BESS projects.

First Balfour will undertake engineering, procurement and construction works for the plant and connection assets of the BESS facilities.

EDC’s BESS facilities will be used to store excess power from its geothermal plants and deliver the stored energy when and where it is needed.

“I think storage will continue to be an opportunity to capture additional energy capacity, whether in hydro, solar, or geothermal,” Mr. Barcena said.

EDC is also expanding its geothermal power generation capacity by exploring new geothermal concessions.

“We also have recent additional geothermal concessions, mga dalawang bago (two new),” Mr. Barcena said referring to the new concession explorations in Laguna.

“We got a concession, one in Guimaras. But this remains to be like reserve projects of the company,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Barcena said the company is looking into putting up solar energy systems within its geothermal projects.

“We’re considering solar within our geothermal project sites so ‘di na kami lumalayo tutal may space naman sa (we are not going far since there is a space in our) geothermal project sites,” he said.

“We’re looking at how we can maximize some small solar facilities inside geothermal,” he added.

EDC has an installed capacity of 1,480.19 MW of renewable energy, of which 1,185.40 MW comes from geothermal sources. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Agri dep’t enlists LGU support to boost hog repopulation drive

REUTERS

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said it has enlisted the support of local government units (LGUs) in providing qualified farmers with the facilities to revive hog populations after the African Swine Fever outbreak.

According to memorandum circular (MC) no. 54, signed by Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel, Jr., LGUs have been tasked to help farmers with project implementation and finding land.

It added that the DA will fund the construction of biosecure facilities and animal housing, as well as feed and biologics and the procurement of piglets under its Integrated National Swine Production Initiative for Recovery and Expansion (INSPIRE) program.

Qualified beneficiaries without existing facilities can avail of a P10-million funding package for a biosecure facility and 300 piglets, or P5 million for a conventional animal housing and 100 piglets.

“The minimum project package… can be availed of by organized and active (farmer cooperatives and associations or FCAs), and LGUs who desire to undertake modernized swine raising… using the community swine clustering model, “ the DA said.

It added that LGU recipients should not exceed 20% of the total number of targeted beneficiaries per region.

Additionally, MC 54 also allowed Regions 2, 3, 4-A, and 7 the authority to provide budgetary assistance to qualified FCAs.

“Considering the sizeable decrease in the breeder base population (in the regions) and considering (their) proximity to the National Capital Region, it is imperative to restore the region’s flourishing pork production to ensure adequate pork supply,” it said.

The DA earlier projected a 10-day deficit in pork supply due to the increased demand during the end-of-year holidays It is also considering more imports to add to the domestic supply.

The areas targeted for support are being counted on to establish multiplier and production farms aimed at creating “genetically superior gilts and finisher animals.”

Qualified FCAs would need to have vacant farms, a minimum capacity of 300 sows and possess a biosecurity level two rating.

“The recipient shall pay the (DA) the equivalent amount in terms of breeders provided and distributed to other identified FCAs,” it added. — Adrian H. Halili

Seaoil holds Lifetime Free Gas promo for PriceLocq users

Seaoil endorser Anne Curtis — PHOTO FROM SEAOIL

SEAOIL rolls out its familiar Lifetime Free Gas (LFG) promo specifically for PriceLocq users, the brand’s “fuel-saving” mobility app. Three motorists stand to win a lifetime supply of fuel. Also up for grabs are 15 Honda Beat Playful motorcycles and P10,000 worth of PriceLocq fuel vouchers.

The LFG campaign for PriceLocq is ongoing and will run until Jan. 15, 2024. Participants must be 18 years old and above with a valid Philippine driver’s license. To earn a raffle entry, motorists must purchase SeaoiI fuel, Lubeserv products, or avail of Lubeserv-on-Wheels services at Seaoil stations that accept PriceLocq as a mode of payment.

Every P200 spent using the Pay with LocqPay or Pay with Liter Balance feature will earn motorists one raffle entry. The same rule applies for Lubeserv purchases or Lubeserv-on-Wheels services using the Pay with LocqPay option. Meanwhile, users who have a VIP account connected to PriceLocq only need to spend P100 on fuel or Lubeserv services to earn one raffle entry. Winners of the first raffle draw will be announced on Dec. 18, while the remaining winners will be announced on Jan. 16, 2024.

The PriceLocq app is available for download in the App Store and the Google Play Store, and can be used in over 400 Seaoil stations nationwide.

PHL must further deepen capital markets

FREEPIK

THE PHILIPPINES needs to further deepen its capital markets as relying heavily on banks as the economy’s means of financial intermediation is not sustainable, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) chief said. 

“Our heavy reliance on bank financing works — until it doesn’t,” BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. said during his presentation at the 119th meeting of Capital Market Development Council last week.

The country should “open the corporate bond market to single-A and triple-B borrowers” as all bonds in the Philippine corporate bond market are triple-A or double-A, he said.

The Philippine bond market’s growth picked up in the third quarter amid more issuances from the government and the central bank, an Asian Development Bank (ADB) report released last month showed.

The local currency bond market grew by 1.8% quarter on quarter to P11.66 trillion or $210 billion in the July-September period, ADB’s Asia Bond Monitor report showed, faster than the 1.3% expansion seen in the second quarter. Year on year, the bond market grew by 6.5%.

Outstanding corporate bonds contracted by 2.4% quarter on quarter to P1.6 trillion amid reduced issuances.

Corporate bond issuance declined by 38.8% quarter on quarter and 68.5% year on year, the ADB report showed.

Firms’ disclosure of material information should be prompt to improve market activity and deter insider trading, Mr. Remolona added.

“Sometimes, a listed firm’s stock price shows no reaction to the public release of significant news. This would suggest that insiders had already traded on the news before its release,” he said.

The BSP chief cited a study from Utpal Bhattacharya, a finance professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, that said 87 countries have insider trading laws, but only 38 economies were found to be enforcing those laws.

The cost of equity financing was also found to be significantly lower in those 38 countries, he said. 

Moreover, Mr. Remolona said he hopes the Philippines could join the global shift to equity index and emerging market bond exchange traded funds (ETFs). 

“Philippine markets are not included in any of the major global equity ETFs or emerging market bond ETFs,” he said.

Currently, the three largest index fund managers are BlackRock, State Street Global Advisors, and the Vanguard Group.

Due to the popularity of index funds and ETFs, these asset managers are now some of the biggest owners of US public companies. Together, they have the largest shareholdings in 88% of S&P 500 firms.

Meanwhile, Mr. Remolona said the top three emerging market bond ETFs are JPMorgan, Barclays, and Invesco. — K.B. Ta-asan

Revolutionizing land ownership: How blockchain is changing the game

ANTONELLA VILARDO-UNSPLASH

In the dynamic landscape of technological innovation, the marriage of blockchain and land registry is reshaping how property transactions unfold. This transformation isn’t just about efficiency; it carries profound implications, especially for Indigenous Peoples (IP) in the Philippines seeking to secure their ancestral lands.

Traditional land title registries, often fraught with complexities and vulnerabilities, encounter a revolutionary upgrade with the infusion of blockchain technology. Blockchain, a decentralized digital ledger, offers the virtues of transparency, security, and efficiency, presenting a paradigm shift in the management of property transactions.

Historically, land transactions grappled with challenges stemming from paper-based processes, intermediaries, and the omnipresent threat of fraud. Blockchain emerges as a potent solution, addressing these age-old issues through its decentralized architecture.

In a blockchain system, a digital ledger accessible to all parties involved in a property transaction is maintained. Each transaction is securely recorded in a block, creating an immutable chain of information resistant to tampering.

A standout feature of blockchain is the introduction of smart contracts — self-executing agreements with terms encoded into code. This innovation automates and enforces the terms of a property agreement, diminishing the need for intermediaries and streamlining the entire process.

In the Philippines, a country confronting challenges in land ownership, the adoption of blockchain in land title registry is gaining momentum. The objective is clear: digitize land titles and anchor them securely on the blockchain, promising a simplified, more transparent, and secure approach to property transactions.

The cryptographic features of blockchain play a crucial role in securing property transactions. Once recorded on the blockchain, a transaction becomes an immutable part of the ledger, establishing a clear and transparent chain of ownership.

Importantly, the adoption of blockchain in land title registry holds significant promise for Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines. By decentralizing the system, blockchain empowers IP communities, granting them direct control over their land records and reducing dependence on intermediaries. This shift towards democratization fosters a sense of ownership and security among Indigenous communities.

The benefits of utilizing blockchain in land registry in the Philippines are:

1. Transparent Ownership: Blockchain ensures a transparent and unalterable record of land ownership, reducing disputes and safeguarding the rights of Indigenous communities.

2. Security Against Fraud: The cryptographic nature of blockchain provides an unprecedented level of security, virtually eliminating the risk of fraudulent land transactions.

3. Empowerment Through Decentralization: Indigenous communities gain direct control over their land records, reducing reliance on external authorities and intermediaries.

4. Efficiency in Transactions: Smart contracts automate and streamline property transactions, reducing bureaucratic hurdles and ensuring swift, reliable processes.

5. Preservation of Ancestral Heritage: Blockchain’s transparent and secure nature helps in preserving the ancestral heritage of Indigenous Peoples, ensuring a lasting legacy for future generations.

However, as with any transformative technology, challenges persist. Upgrading technical infrastructure, adapting legal frameworks, and increasing public awareness are vital steps in ensuring successful implementation.

Innovative strategies can be employed to seamlessly integrate indigenous rights and protective measures into the fabric of a blockchain-based land registry:

1. Empowering IPs with Veto Rights: Granting IPs the authority to veto specific land transactions within the registry ensures their direct involvement in decision-making processes. This empowerment goes beyond mere consultation, placing IPs as active guardians of their lands.

2. Transparent Resource Tracking: The registry can serve as a transparent mechanism for tracking the movement and utilization of resources extracted from indigenous ancestral lands. This ensures not only fair compensation for the resources but also empowers IPs with valuable insights into resource management.

3. Community Support Funds: Establishing a dedicated fund within the blockchain infrastructure, sustained by nominal fees or voluntary contributions, can serve as a financial reservoir for supporting indigenous communities. This fund can be directed towards education, healthcare, and projects aligning with the aspirations of the community.

In conclusion, a blockchain-based land registry, when thoughtfully designed and executed, can transcend its technological essence to become a potent tool for the preservation of indigenous rights and the protection of ancestral lands. The combination of blockchain’s security, the efficiency of smart contracts, and the promise of a transparent registry marks a significant step towards a future where property ownership is not just a legal process but an inclusive, technologically empowered experience.

For Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines, it represents not just a technological leap but a pathway to empowerment and security in their ancestral lands.

 

Dr. Donald Lim is the founding president of the Blockchain Council of the Philippines and the lead convenor of the Philippine Blockchain Week. He is also the Asian anchor of FintechTV.

Actor Ryan O’Neal, star of Love Story and Paper Moon, 82

RYAN O’NEAL and his daughter Tatum in a scene from the 1973 film Paper Moon. — IMDB
RYAN O’NEAL and his daughter Tatum in a scene from the 1973 film Paper Moon. — IMDB

LOS ANGELES — Actor Ryan O’Neal, the 1970s Hollywood heartthrob who starred in such films as the smash-hit tearjerker Love Story, screwball comedy What’s Up, Doc? and Paper Moon, the movie that also launched his daughter’s movie career, died on Friday at age 82.

The performer’s death was announced by his son Patrick O’Neal in an Instagram post. No cause of death was given.

Mr. O’Neal, also known for his long-time relationship with the late actress Farrah Fawcett, revealed in 2012 that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer, though he said then that he was expected to make a full recovery.

Mr. O’Neal, a Los Angeles native who trained as an amateur boxer before taking up acting, made his showbiz breakthrough in 1964 when he landed the role of Rodney Harrington in the hit ABC prime-time television soap opera Peyton Place.

The actor is perhaps best known for his Oscar-nominated star turn opposite Ali MacGraw in the 1970 romantic drama Love Story, a box office sensation adapted from Erich Segal’s popular novel of the same title.

A key line of dialogue from the film became one of Hollywood’s most memorable catch phrases: “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.” It spawned a poorly received 1978 sequel, Oliver’s Story, co-starring Mr. O’Neal and Candice Bergen.

Ryan also scored a major success in the 1972 romantic comedy What’s Up, Doc? co-starring Barbra Streisand and directed by Peter Bogdanovich, who also directed Mr. O’Neal in the 1973 hit Paper Moon, which co-starred the actor’s then-young daughter.

Her debut role in the Depression-era drama as a precocious, cigarette-smoking orphan earned Tatum O’Neal an Academy Award at the age of 10 for best supporting actress.

She appeared with her father again in the 1976 Bogdanovich comedy Nickelodeon, along with Burt Reynolds.

Tatum O’Neal and her younger brother Griffin ended up living with their father after their parents divorced in 1967 and their mother, the actor’s first wife, Joanna Moore, lost custody due to alcohol and drug abuse.

‘HOPELESS FATHER’
But Tatum O’Neal claimed in a 2004 memoir, A Paper Life, that she suffered years of parental abuse and fits of jealousy from her father, and that he introduced her to drugs as a youngster, leading to an estrangement of nearly 25 years.

According to Tatum O’Neal, she and her brother were left to care for themselves when her father moved in with Fawcett, the Charlie’s Angels television star.

In February 2007, the elder O’Neal, then in his 60s, was arrested after a fight with his son Griffin that ended in gunfire. Prosecutors later decided to not to file charges.

Although he acknowledged in a 2009 Vanity Fair magazine interview, “I’m a hopeless father,” Mr. O’Neal disputed his daughter’s claims of abuse and neglect. The two eventually reconciled and appeared in a biographical docuseries together in 2011 called Ryan and Tatum: The O’Neals.

Patrick O’Neal, who announced his father’s death, was the actor’s third child, born to his second wife, Leigh Taylor-Young.

The actor’s fourth child, a son named Redmond from his relationship with Ms. Fawcett, also struggled with substance abuse and was arrested on several occasions in 2008 and 2009 for drug offenses leading to jail time.

Still, Mr. O’Neal’s relationship with Ms. Fawcett proved to be his most enduring. They were together from 1979 until 1997. Then, after a break-up of several years, they reunited in 2001 until her death in 2009, following a long battle with cancer.

Mr. O’Neal’s film career cooled after the mid-1970s. He starred in Stanley Kubrick’s historical drama Barry Lyndon, a movie that took more than a year to make before opening in 1975 to mixed reviews and a mediocre box office.

Near the end of his career, Mr. O’Neal had a recurring role from 2005 to 2017 on Fox television’s police procedural series Bones, playing the father of the show’s title character, a forensic anthropologist portrayed by Emily Deschanel. — Reuters

GMA appoints new chief executive officer as Gozon retires

GMA Network, Inc. has appointed a new chief executive officer (CEO) as Felipe L. Gozon retires from the role, the company said.

In a media release, the company announced the appointment of Gilberto R. Duavit, Jr., its current president and chief operating officer as Mr. Gozon’s replacement effective Jan. 1, 2024.

This comes after Mr. Gozon announced that he is stepping down.

Mr. Gozon will retain his position as chairman of the board and an adviser to the corporation, GMA said in a statement.

The company credited Mr. Gozon for his “transformational leadership” after growing the company as a broadcast network, GMA said.

Mr. Duavit joined GMA’s board of directors in 1999 and was named as the company’s executive vice-president and chief operating officer in 2000 before being elected as its president in 2010.

He also serves as the chairman of the board of GMA Network Films, president and chief executive of GMA Holdings, Inc., RGMA Marketing and Productions, Inc.; and chairman, president and chief executive of Group Management and Development, Inc., and Dual Management and Investments, Inc. He is the vice-chairman of GMA Ventures, Inc.

To date, the company has expanded into a network of 106 TV stations and 21 radio stations nationwide, reaching more than 73 customers in the Philippines. 

At the local bourse, shares in the company gained one centavo or 0.12% higher to end at P8.25 apiece on Friday. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Commodities traders pledge at COP28 to protect South American grasslands

REUTERS

DUBAI — Eight of the world’s top commodities traders have pledged to stop buying soy from farms that ruin South American grasslands, adding to previous commitments to shun growers that clear forests, a sector group said on Saturday on the sidelines of the COP28 climate summit.

The move could bolster conservation for Brazil’s Cerrado, the world’s most biodiverse savanna, at least half of which has already been destroyed for agriculture. Farming, forestry and land use account for more than a fifth of planet warming-emissions.

The firms, including Archer Daniels Midland, Bunge, Cargill, and Louis Dreyfus Company, agreed that by the end of the decade they will longer buy soy from farms that destroyed any non-forest natural vegetation in the Amazon rainforest, Chaco dry woodlands or the Cerrado, said Petra Tanos of the Tropical Forest Alliance.

The commitment adds to the sector’s pledge last year to eliminate deforestation by 2025.

Tanos said the move is most consequential for the Cerrado, Brazil’s most rapidly expanding agricultural frontier that includes large stretches of grassland. In 2023, Cerrado destruction hit its highest point in eight years.

The Tropical Forest Alliance is a World Economic Forum initiative that works with commodities firms on environmental commitments.

Beyond the United States, the largest soy exporting nations are in South America, where natural vegetation is typically cleared to make way for farms.

In the lead up to United Nations COP28 climate change summit in Dubai, some of the companies announced even more aggressive commitments. Last month, Cargill announced it would eliminate deforestation and land conversion from its supply chains by 2025 in Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay.

Archer Daniels Midland committed to eliminating land conversion among its direct suppliers by 2025 and indirect suppliers by 2027 across sensitive South American biomes.

But the industry has a history of failing to meet past commitments. In 2010, hundreds of consumer brands pledged to reach “net zero” deforestation by 2020, but failed to meet the goal. — Reuters

GSIS net profit up 117% at end-Oct.

GSIS FACEBOOK PAGE

THE GOVERNMENT Service Insurance System (GSIS) saw its net income more than double in the first 10 months, driven by higher earnings from financial assets.

The state pension fund’s net income rose by 117% year on year to P80 billion at end-October from P37 billion in the same period last year, GSIS said in a statement on Sunday. This made up 66.67% of its P120-billion net income target for 2023.

The profit surge came amid a 344% jump in income from financial assets to P29 billion.

Income from investment property rose by 142% to P8 billion amid revaluation gains from about 12,000 accounts. Earnings from general insurance activities likewise went up by 7% to P6.2 billion.

Social insurance premiums also grew by 8% to P10 billion amid increased membership and salary adjustments.

Meanwhile, GSIS’ expenses went down by 8% to P8.2 billion.

“In fact, during the first 10 months of 2023, the pension fund’s expense loading was at 3.4%, way below the 12% Charter limit,” GSIS President and General Manager Jose Arnulfo A. Veloso said.

GSIS’ assets stood at P1.6 trillion at end-October, higher by 4.4% year on year.

Its fund life was also extended to 35 years or until 2058, five years more than the last assessment in 2021.

“A longer fund life enables us to fulfill our responsibility of delivering benefits to our members and retirees on time. As a financial institution, our primary focus is to increase the contributions of our members by seizing strategic investment opportunities,” Mr. Veloso said.

GSIS’ total investments in the real estate, infrastructure, food, energy, and mining sectors amounted to P1.3 billion in the first 10 months of 2023, up by 11% from the same period last year.

Meanwhile, global investments stood at P185 billion, up by 5% from the same period last year.

“GSIS remains committed to support the four key sectors known as the ‘4Ps’: pabahay (housing), power (energy), pagkain (food), and pagamot (healthcare),” Mr. Veloso said.

“These sectors are fundamental to the government’s socioeconomic agenda. Investing in them equates to a direct investment in the welfare and future of our nation and the Filipino,” he added. — A.M.C. Sy

Gogoro presents battery-swapping plans for electric vehicles

PHOTO FROM GOGORO PHILIPPINES

ELECTRIC MOBILITY and battery-swapping technology firm Gogoro Philippines recently rolled out its so-called Energy Plans in the country in time for its commercial launch this month. Gogoro presented its Swap-and-Go subscription plans, which coincide with the commencement of Smartscooter sales and the activation of the company’s battery-swapping GoStations across the metro.

“We are now witnessing a key turning point in the quest for sustainable and intelligent urban transportation in the Philippines,” said Gogoro Philippines President and CEO Bernie Llamzon in a release. “With the Gogoro Energy Plans, we are not only providing a convenient and eco-friendly solution for refueling but also embracing a lifestyle change that benefits our community and environment. We are proud to lead this charge and offer a glimpse into the future of mobility.”

The Gogoro ecosystem allows riders to swap out depleted batteries with newly charged ones in seconds — solving, said the company, range anxiety and long charging times of traditional electric vehicles. The Gogoro Energy Plan, accessible via the Gogoro app, comes with two tailored monthly subscription options: Plan 799: 300Ah (Ampere hour) or up to 420 kilometers of travel distance, and Plan 999: 500Ah or up to 700 kilometers of travel distance.

Ah, a unit of electric charge, is the basis for the Energy Plans’ allocation. This measurement is converted into maximum kilometers, allowing riders to estimate their travel range easily. The conversion is based on comprehensive studies conducted in Taiwan and pilot programs in the Philippines, ensuring accuracy and reliability for riders. Offers do not have a lock-up period, allowing subscribers to switch plans anytime through the Gogoro App, with changes taking effect in the next billing cycle. The flexibility ensures that customers can choose the one that best suits their individual needs and riding habits.

Gogoro Philippines has activated four GoStations across the metro: The Globe Tower, 32nd Street corner 7th Avenue in Bonifacio Global City, Taguig; Puregold Parañaque, 113 Ninoy Aquino Avenue, Sto. Niño, Parañaque City; Puregold Makati, 35 Dr. Jose P. Rizal Avenue, Makati City; and Phoenix Gas Station, Shaw Boulevard, San Antonio, Pasig City. Two more Gogoro GoStations will open in Quezon City — at the Uptown Mall in Diliman, Quezon City and another at Bellitudo Building, Katipunan Avenue near White Plains.

Two more GoStations will open in the first quarter of 2024: Ayala Malls Feliz along Marcos Highway in Dela Paz, Pasig City, and Paseo de Magallanes Commercial Center in Makati City.

Gogoro Philippines is a collaborative effort among Globe’s 917Ventures, Inc., Ayala Corp., and Gogoro. This partnership leverages the expertise of all involved to build a smart electric transportation network in the country.

For more information about Gogoro Energy Plans and to reserve a Gogoro Smartscooter, visit the Gogoro Experience Center on the second floor of Greenbelt 4, Ayala Center; or check out www.gogoro.com/ph.

The Fiddler on the Roof

The Fiddler on the Roof is a 1964 drama-musical by Joseph Stein, a Jewish-American writer, with music by Jerry Bock and lyrics by Sheldon Harnick. The story is based on “Tevye and his Daughters” (or “Tevye the Dairyman”) and other tales by Sholem Aleichem. Fiddler (both theater and film versions) has won many prestigious awards and is one of the most replayed and remembered musicals for over 55 years, until the COVID-19 pandemic closed all theaters in 2020. It was the same start of the Russian attack on Ukraine, a conflict which has escalated to today.

The Gertrude C. Ford Center for the Performing Arts relates the historical background of Fiddler:

“Fiddler on the Roof is the story of life in a small Russian shtetl in 1905, when Russia was still an empire, ruled by Tsar Nicholas II, head of the dictatorial Romanov dynasty. While much of Western Europe was becoming more free and democratic, Nicholas was determined to hold on to ‘absolute autocracy’ in his words. This, coupled with his seeming lack of common sense as his country stumbled through crisis after crisis, would eventually lead to the downfall and destruction of the Romanovs.

“Along with other abuses of human rights, Nicholas’ administration involved itself in anti-Jewish propaganda, which incited fear and hatred of Jews among many non-Jewish citizens, and often led to violence. The three-year period from 1903 to 1906 (the timeframe of Fiddler) was a particularly terrifying time for Russian Jews, as one pogrom after another raged in Western Russia. (A pogrom is defined as the ‘organized killing of a minority.’ Some dictionaries actually include a reference to tsarist Russia in their definition.)

“There were many pogroms in Russia in the second half of the 19th century, including 166 in the year 1881 alone. In 1905, the year in which Fiddler on the Roof begins, there were at least six pogroms in Imperial Russia, occurring in such major cities as Kishinev (capital of present-day Moldova), Odessa (in present-day Ukraine and the site of a catastrophically huge massacre of Jews in WWII), and Minsk (capital of present-day Belarus). In all, these pogroms claimed the lives of no less than 1,500 Jewish citizens, a total of four for each day of that year.

“Most of these pogroms occurred within an area referred to as the Pale of Settlement, the area of Russia in which Jews could legally settle. Shtetls such as Anatevka, the fictitious village in Fiddler on the Roof, began to disappear as discriminatory laws against Jewish citizens forbade them from living in rural areas, or in towns of less than 10,000 people. Indeed, as Fiddler begins, the people of Anatevka have just received word of the Tsar’s edict, which will shortly evict them from their homes. By the musical’s end, the people of Anatevka are packed up, some moving to America, many others to Krakow (in modern-day Poland), for what they hope will be a new and better life.”

The story of ethnic cleansing and the ousting of the Jews from their land in Fiddler likewise comes to mind, when on Oct. 7, 2023, the Palestinian Sunni Islamist group Hamas (an FTO or foreign terrorist organization according to the US) led surprise attacks against Jewish Israel from the Gaza Strip by land, sea, and air (crsreports.congress.gov, Oct. 17, 2023). In the violent retaliation of Israel, “more than 15,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since Oct. 7. In Israel, the official death toll stands at about 1,200” (aljazeera.com, Dec. 1, 2023).

David Byman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) said, “Part of what Hamas wanted involved revenge for what it saw as past Israeli attacks and the constant Israeli occupation of the West Bank, arrest of Hamas leaders, isolation, and bombing of Gaza… Hamas leaders may have believed they were losing popular support (as revolutionary governors) in Gaza as they were unable to guarantee basic necessities for its citizens, let alone dent the consistent 45% unemployment rate in Gaza. Since the implementation of a semipermanent siege on Gaza in 2007, Israel has controlled much of the electricity, food, and water to the enclave. Gaza has spent half of its day without power since 2019, with a sustained gap in electricity supply. Gaza has also suffered from chronic water shortages, with its outdated or destroyed water infrastructure, 97% of the water in Gazan homes is unfit to drink. The economic situation is equally dire, with over 70% of families in Gaza dependent on NGO and international aid for their basic needs” (csis.org. Dec. 6, 2023).

Notice the ironic role reversal from the Jews in 1905 being held down by the Russians, to the present-day Israel Jews having the upper hand over the Palestinians, as revealed in the intimidation through the curtailing of basic human needs and rights, and the economic retardation in the Israeli-controlled Gaza strip, as earlier suggested by the CSIS analysis.

Israel’s rise to recognition and power started with the British 1917 Balfour Declaration, which unilaterally called for the establishment of a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine, despite the fact that Jewish people made up less than 15% of the population there at the time (vox.com, Oct. 19, 2023). “The Allied powers in the war backed the declaration, and after the war, the newly created League of Nations gave Britain a mandate to temporarily rule Palestine until the Jewish state could be created. The British thereafter adopted immigration policies that encouraged more than 100,000 Jews to immigrate over the next two decades,” Vox recounts.

After World War II, tens of thousands of Holocaust survivors began moving to Palestine, encouraged by the Zionist movement. The United Nations agreed to partition Palestine into two states, one for the area’s Jewish population and another for the Arab population, with the city of Jerusalem to be governed by a special international entity. However, local Arabs and Arab countries objected to the plan.

Following a period of extreme violence before, during, and after the war — particularly on the part of Zionist militias — British forces withdrew from Palestine, and Israel declared its independence on May 14, 1948.

That started the first Arab-Israeli war, in which Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria — opponents of Israel’s declaration of independence — invaded the country. Though the US immediately recognized the new provisional Israeli government, it did not get involved in the conflict militarily. Israel won the war and with it, 77% of the previous Palestinian mandate territory, including land that the United Nations had intended to allocate to the Arabs.

Since 1948, Israel and Palestine have been fighting each other for territory — for Israel to keep its preferred and advantageous possession and control of Palestine, and to get more of Palestine; and for Palestinian Arabs to get back the land which they had won in war with the emperor Heraclius in 636 A.D. Palestine, and indeed all of Syria, was then in Muslim hands.

The story of “the Pale” — the boundaries that kept the Jews monitored and controlled in Anatevka — is replicated in boundaries fiercely guarded today in the partitioned Palestinian land majority-owned by Israel. In 2015 a displaced persons camp southwest of Kyiv named Anatevka was built by Chabad Rabbi Moshe Azman to house the Jews fleeing the 2014 Russian invasion of Ukraine (Liphshiz, Cnaan, July 21, 2015. “Fiddler on The Roof Shtetl To Become Real-Life Refuge For Ukraine’s Jews”).

The story of Tevye and his neighbors being driven out of Anatevka ends with the local fiddler standing on the roof of an empty home, playing an almost comical jig as the Jews move out to new, foreign places for a new life.

Hope — that is the meaning of The Fiddler on the Roof.

Christmas is nearing, and for Christians, the fiddler on the roof might well be the angels singing on the roof of the humble stable/shed where Jesus Christ the Redeemer was born. Hope for peace and harmony among all people.

 

Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.

ahcylagan@yahoo.com

Chanel’s Manchester fashion show draws celebrities and protesters

MANCHESTER, England — French luxury label Chanel took its annual Metiers d’Art runway show to a rainy northern England street late Thursday where an international fashion crowd viewed a special collection highlighting the brand’s craftwork. (See the show here: 2023/24 Métiers d’art CHANEL – Manchester Show | CHANEL )

Guests including actors Tilda Swinton, Hugh Grant, and Kristen Stewart, model Alexa Chung, and British rapper Aitch gathered on a stretch of Manchester’s Thomas Street under a transparent canopy, where they snacked on mulled cider and mini cheese toasties as pro-Palestinian protesters chanted.

Music soon drowned out the protest chants and models with 1960s inspired hairdos marched down the pavement in girly renditions of the label’s signature tweed ensembles in bright pink, orange, and green, with low-heeled Mary Jane shoes.

The annual event showcases lace, embroidery, and other crafts produced at Chanel’s complex of specialty workshops on the northern outskirts of Paris.

Chanel on Friday was to release a film for the collection by Sofia Coppola featuring images by British photographer Jamie Hawkesworth and music by New Order.

Manchester’s link to fashion dates to the 18th century when it was the center of Britain’s textiles industry. The city is known for its contributions to British pop culture, sports, and fashion. — Reuters