Filipina Pea TV β€” Your Guide to the Philippines, Relationships, and Travel
← Back to Home

STORIES FROM THE SURVIVORS of SUPER TYPHOON RAI (Odette) IN THE PHILIPPINES - Negros Oriental

πŸ“… 2021-12-28⏱ 16:43
πŸ“… 2021-12-28 Β |Β  ⏱️ 16:43 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 41.6K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 3.7K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 951 comments

Pea spends her Christmas weekend organizing and executing a relief expedition to typhoon-devastated communities on her home island of Negros. She purchases over half a ton of rice, hundreds of water jugs, and canned goods, then drives with her brother Chan and friend Lucy toward the hardest-hit areas β€” first targeting Bais City and then the remote Dewey Island. The video features firsthand survivor interviews and documents the on-the-ground reality of communities still reeling days after Super Typhoon Rai (Odette).

Pea decides she can't sit idle during the Christmas weekend knowing people are in crisis ​

  • The city of Bais, north of her on Negros island, was "virtually obliterated" by the typhoon
  • A small community on Dewey Island, east of Bais, is even more remote and reportedly not receiving any supplies
  • She plans a relief expedition carrying as much food and water as she can transport
  • She's unsure if the road to Dewey Island is even passable β€” communications are out, so she won't know until she tries
  • She plans to bring Lucy and her brother Chan, and hire security if possible

The supply-buying operation ​

  • First task: negotiate the best price on enough rice to feed 100 families
  • At the grocery store, they wait nearly an hour in a massive queue; Lucy held their spot in line
  • No water available for purchase, so they buy empty bottles to fill
  • Pea and Chan spend Christmas Day repacking canned goods, noodles, coffee, and milk
  • Final haul: 100 five-kilo bags of rice (over half a ton), 100 jugs of water, plus canned goods and other supplies
  • Vehicles are packed so tightly there's barely room to sit; Pea worries they're overweight

The drive toward Bais ​

  • About an hour into the trip, they're passing through Tanjay City approaching Bais
  • Road conditions are unknown β€” they're hoping the bridge to Dewey Island will be passable
  • As they get closer, the destruction becomes obvious: entire families standing in front of wrecked homes begging passing vehicles for help
  • Signs reading "Ayuda" (help) are posted everywhere β€” in yards, on trash cans, on signposts
  • Pea observes it's hard to imagine how these people can pick up their lives anytime soon

The aid distribution chaos in Bais ​

  • A truck carrying water and food is being "swarmed by residents like a pack of piranhas"
  • This scene is exactly what Pea was worried about when planning her own distribution
  • She goes to the police station to ask about the bridge to Dewey Island
  • Police redirect her to the ICS (Incident Command System) office to coordinate the relief and get help distributing aid
  • They pass a government-provided phone charging station where residents are lining up to charge their phones for free

Dewey Island is unreachable β€” Plan B activated ​

  • The concrete bridge to Dewey Island was destroyed by the storm
  • Only a temporary wooden footbridge remains β€” no way to get trucks across
  • Pea wonders how people on the other side are getting supplies, but there's nothing she can do
  • She decides to redirect to a fishing village farther north that she heard was "virtually wiped off the map"
  • Before heading there, she wants to document the conditions in Bais firsthand

Interview with Nanay (elderly woman) β€” firsthand survivor account ​

  • During the typhoon, floodwater rose rapidly through her house: kitchen level, dining room higher, sala (living room) even higher
  • Her daughter urged her to get out because the water was dangerously high
  • She and three others nearly drowned β€” "the current was very strong"
  • They couldn't escape upstairs because the wind had blown away the rope (access) and the upper level was already soaked with no roof
  • She saved nothing β€” lost everything
  • Government aid distribution was based on a pre-existing list of names; her name wasn't on it, so she received nothing
  • She calls the system "unfair" β€” in other areas, government workers went house-to-house recording names and distributing rice, but not in her area

Interview with a roadside family ​

  • Found a family having lunch who invited Pea to eat with them
  • Their house was devastated; they saved nothing but themselves
  • They're living in a makeshift shelter beside the road with no proper cover
  • They received 10 kilos of rice from the government a week ago (last Sunday)
  • They're surviving on bits of aid from passing relief efforts
  • Living conditions are a health hazard, especially for the children β€” dusty roadside location
  • Their biggest hope is getting help to rebuild their houses
  • Pea notes: "Even though they have so little, they are very thoughtful people" β€” they invited her to share their meal

Interview with Kuya Jeffrey β€” young father ​

  • Has two kids; house was destroyed in the typhoon
  • Saved nothing except his wife and children
  • Went to the evacuation center but it was at full capacity
  • His family ended up staying in the bathroom of the evacuation center
  • Most urgent needs: food, water, and building materials (coco lumber) to rebuild
  • Has lived in the area for 8 years; this was his first experience with a super typhoon
  • His makeshift shelter is just tarp and rope β€” a friend gave them 300 pesos so they could afford the tarp

The emotional reality of Christmas in a disaster zone ​

  • The Philippines is known for having "the longest Christmas in the world" but people in Bais can't feel the season at all
  • Pea describes it as heartbreaking β€” families with nothing trying to survive during what should be a celebration
  • Despite the devastation, a separate relief effort arrives to distribute rice, noodles, sardines, and coffee while Pea is there

Strategic decision on aid distribution ​

  • Pea could have distributed her supplies in Bais, where at least some help was already getting through
  • Instead, she decides to push farther north to the isolated fishing village of Tankulugan to find communities in even worse shape
  • The video ends as a cliffhanger: "What I would find there was a scene of tragedy and desperation, but also one of hope β€” join me next time"

πŸ“Ί Watch the full video on YouTube

πŸ”” Subscribe to The Filipina Pea