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Friday, July 18, 2025

Rooty the Young Tree Dreams of Umalohokan Fest 2025: A Seedling’s Wish for a Greener Tomorrow at the World Trade Center Manila


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Rooty is not your usual hero. She’s not a person, or a leader, or even someone with power or influence. Rooty is a young tree — a tiny seedling just beginning to stretch her roots into the soil and reach her fragile leaves toward the sun. She’s not yet tall or mighty. But she dreams. Oh, how she dreams.


One gentle morning, as Rooty swayed in the breeze, she overheard a whisper from a nearby phone screen, tuned in to WazzupPilipinas.com. It spoke of a hopeful event — not yet real, not yet confirmed — called the Umalohokan Fest 2025. A vision, really. A dream whispered by humans who still believe that something beautiful and life-giving can rise for the sake of the Earth.


And Rooty, in her little patch of land, dared to believe it too.



A Dream Waiting to Take Root


Umalohokan Fest 2025 is imagined as a grand gathering of hearts and minds, a celebration of Green Environmental Advocacy, to be held — if the stars align and the support blossoms — at the World Trade Center Manila this December 2025.


Organized by WazzupPilipinas.com, alongside aspiring partners and sponsors who may share the same love for the planet, this festival is envisioned to awaken Filipinos to the power of collective environmental action.


But like Rooty, this idea is still young — a sapling of a plan. It needs sunlight, nurturing, collaboration, and belief to grow into something strong.


Reviving the Ancient Voice of the People


In ancient times, the Umalohokan was the town crier — the one who echoed the voice of the leaders to the people. But in this modern dream, the Umalohokan is not just a messenger. It’s a movement. A revival of community spirit. A call to listen — not just to leaders or laws, but to the Earth herself.


This festival, if realized, would become a living embodiment of that call. It would be a place where voices — of the youth, the elderly, the artists, the farmers, the scientists, and yes, even trees like Rooty — are heard and honored.


A Modest Wish for a Majestic Future


Rooty imagined what the event could look like:


Children learning how to plant and protect.


Students presenting their ideas for cleaner cities.


Artists painting murals of forests and oceans.


Indigenous elders sharing wisdom passed down through the winds of time.


Sustainable businesses offering solutions that honor, not harm, the land.


All these would be possible — but only if enough people believe in the dream.


Rooty’s Plea: “Let Me Grow”


As a young tree, Rooty understands more than anyone the delicate balance of survival. Without care, without community, she knows she may not reach her full glory. But with just enough love — enough water, enough sun, enough protection from harm — she can grow strong and give shade, fruit, and life.


The same goes for Umalohokan Fest 2025.


It is not yet funded. It is not yet finalized. But it is full of heart.


Founder Ross Flores Del Rosario, a passionate advocate for both media and the environment, humbly shares this dream with the world — not as a grand production, but as a wish worth working for. A gathering that could bring the country together in the name of sustainability, culture, and climate hope.


Will You Help Rooty Grow?


Rooty doesn’t ask for much. Just for us to notice. To listen. To care.

To believe that this dream, fragile though it may be, could bloom into something life-changing — if watered by compassion and action.


And if, come December 2025, Umalohokan Fest does bloom at the World Trade Center Manila, Rooty hopes she will be there — just a little taller, a little stronger — watching as thousands join hands to protect the very Earth that raised them.


Because in the end, Rooty knows: every mighty tree once started with a dream and a drop of faith.


Do you believe in Rooty’s dream? Learn more or lend your support by visiting www.WazzupPilipinas.com or following @WazzupPilipinas. Together, we might just help this dream take root. 

From Witnesses to Warriors: Mindanao Youth Rise as Climate Champions in Camiguin


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Camiguin, Philippines — July 15, 2025


On the volcanic island of Camiguin, where mountains meet the sea and typhoons brush past with quiet fury, 40 young hearts from across Mindanao came face-to-face with the silent emergency gripping the planet—climate change.


For ten days, from May 30 to June 7, the Climate Science Youth Camp (CSYC) 2025 transformed high school students and teachers into environmental warriors armed not just with scientific knowledge but with a deep, soul-shaking understanding of what it means to fight for the future.


“Lumaki kami sa kwentong puro doktor, pulis, o firefighters ang bida. But what we didn’t realize until this camp was that there are other heroes, too—those who silently worked behind the scenes. They understood the climate, protected the oceans, and cared for our future.”

— Sylldhea Jaireh B. Bayud, General Santos City SPED Integrated School


This was no ordinary camp. It was a crucible—blending science, service, and a sense of stewardship to mold the next generation of Filipino climate leaders.



Camiguin: Nature’s Classroom, Crisis’ Frontline

Camiguin, long celebrated for its biodiversity and microclimates, provided the perfect canvas for this scientific and emotional awakening.


From sunrise reef explorations to afternoon lectures on weather systems, students walked in the footsteps of scientists from the University of the Philippines – Marine Science Institute (UP MSI) and DOST-PAGASA. They learned how thermohaline currents dictate climate shifts and how mangrove forests act as nature’s defense line.


Inside DOST-PAGASA’s Synoptic Weather Station, the youth watched barometers tick and anemometers spin—suddenly realizing that these cold instruments spell out warm warnings that save lives.


Meteorology sessions exposed them to forecasting, hydrometeorological hazards, and the vital work of disaster prevention. In oceanography modules, they unraveled how the oceans breathe life into the planet—and how that breath is now gasping.


“Before this camp, climate change was just a topic in class. Now, it’s a face. It’s the face of a farmer who lost his crops to floods. The face of a child who can’t go to school when storms hit.”

— Student participant from Davao del Sur


Learning Empathy, Practicing Leadership

But knowledge alone is never enough. In a moving turn, the campers were also immersed in the stories of those living at the frontline.


Under the guidance of DOST-SEI Director Dr. Jayeel S. Cornelio, a noted sociologist turned policymaker, the students learned to listen—not just with their ears but with their hearts. They were trained in community-based research and how to conduct Focus Group Discussions (FGDs).


With notebooks in hand and sincerity in their voices, they engaged with the people of Sagay, a coastal town braving the consequences of climate change daily. They heard fishermen speak of dwindling catch. Farmers shared stories of failing crops. Barangay leaders narrated how rising tides now rewrite evacuation maps.


And then, something shifted.


Students stopped asking, "What can we learn?" and began asking, "What can we do?"


Action Plans: Seeds of Change

Fueled by real stories and raw truths, the youth designed their own climate action plans—not hypothetical school projects, but passionate blueprints for change.


One group envisioned eco-friendly fashion shows to make climate conversations cool and creative.


Another proposed waste segregation and recycling initiatives that begin in schools and ripple into barangays.


A team designed a community-wide plastic barter program, turning trash into teaching tools.


“This camp didn’t just teach science. It awakened responsibility.”

— Teacher delegate from Bukidnon


The Camp Ends. The Mission Begins.

As the final boat pulled away from Camiguin’s coast, there were no tearful goodbyes—only determined promises.


These students are no longer just learners. They are now leaders. Witnesses turned warriors. Equipped with knowledge, inspired by compassion, and bonded by a shared dream—a future where the Philippines not only survives climate change but leads the fight against it.


Thanks to the efforts of DOST-SEI, UP MSI, and DOST-PAGASA, and the vision behind CSYC, a new generation of heroes is rising—not in capes or uniforms, but in rubber boots, lab coats, and grassroots action.


And the story of Filipino resilience gains new protagonists—braver, bolder, and burning with the will to change the world.


For more stories of climate action and Filipino youth leadership, follow Wazzup Pilipinas and stay inspired by the change that begins with us.

“Multa at Kulong”: Lacson Revives Parents Welfare Act to Punish Neglectful Children


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In a society where family is revered as the cornerstone of moral obligation and respect for elders is woven into the cultural fabric, the latest move by Senator Panfilo "Ping" Lacson is both bold and stirring. Dubbed the Parents Welfare Act of 2025, the proposed bill resurrects a long-standing but often overlooked moral imperative — to care for one's aging parents. But this time, it's not just a moral obligation — it could soon be a legal duty, complete with hefty fines and prison time for those who deliberately neglect it.





A Law Born from Conscience and Crisis

The Parents Welfare Act of 2025 seeks to mandate support for elderly parents, especially those who are weak, sickly, or no longer able to work and sustain themselves. At its core, the bill emphasizes the idea that abandonment is not only a moral failure but now a punishable crime — if a capable child willfully refuses to help their aging parents, they may soon find themselves facing penalties ranging from substantial monetary fines to actual jail time.


“The intent is not to punish, but to remind,” Senator Lacson explains. “This bill is about restoring accountability and compassion — values that are quietly eroding in our fast-paced and often self-centered modern society.”


Who Will Be Held Accountable?

Importantly, the bill distinguishes between willful neglect and inability to provide support. Lacson is careful to clarify that children living in poverty or earning just enough to survive will not be penalized. The law is directed at those who possess the financial means but still choose to turn their backs on their parents.


This vital exemption aims to shield already struggling families from additional legal burden, focusing instead on those who can but won’t — a necessary nuance in a country where millions live below the poverty line, yet are known for their deep familial ties.


Public Reaction: Applause and Alarm

Unsurprisingly, the revival of the Parents Welfare Act has stirred a storm of public debate.


Supporters hail it as a long-overdue legal reinforcement of Filipino values. “It’s time children are reminded that caring for their parents is not optional,” said a netizen whose bedridden mother was left under her sole care by siblings. “You don’t stop being a child just because you grew up.”


On the other hand, critics caution that legislating familial love could set a dangerous precedent. “What’s next? Jail time for not visiting your parents on Christmas?” questioned one social commentator. Others fear that the law may be weaponized in toxic or estranged family dynamics, where the lines between neglect and self-protection are blurred.


Still, many believe the bill is a wake-up call for a generation accused of prioritizing convenience and career over caretaking. In an era where retirement homes are slowly becoming normalized in the Philippines, the bill challenges us to revisit the age-old question: Do we still take care of our elders — or have we passed that task to others?


The Emotional Weight of Law

What makes this bill uniquely compelling is that it goes beyond economics and legal responsibility — it strikes at the heart of emotional accountability. In Filipino culture, where utang na loob (debt of gratitude) and pagmamahal sa magulang (love for parents) are core values, this law could either be seen as a necessary enforcement or a painful symbol that these values now require legal backing.


But perhaps, in a rapidly changing world, legislation is one way to remind us of what should never be forgotten — that our parents, in their frailty, deserve more than indifference. They deserve dignity, and if not out of love, then at the very least, out of the law.


The Next Step

The Parents Welfare Act of 2025 is expected to undergo intense scrutiny in the Senate, with amendments likely to clarify grey areas and protect both the vulnerable and the accused.


Senator Lacson remains firm. “This isn’t about policing love. It’s about protecting the dignity of those who once sacrificed everything for us. We owe them that much.”


Whether applauded or attacked, one thing is certain — this bill is forcing the nation to look inward and ask the difficult question:


Are we truly taking care of those who once took care of us?


For more stories on law, society, and social responsibility, stay with us at WazzupPilipinas.com — where issues meet insight.

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