Hacienda Luisita
Luisita workers reap gains from "bungkalan"
by Abner Bolos
Posted: 06 October 2005 | © Gitnang
Luson News Service
IN FOCUS

Part of the struggle. "Bungkalan"
is a solid argument for the complete revocation of the
stock distribution option in Hacienda Luisita.
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HACIENDA LUISITA, Tarlac -- Aside from decision
of the Department of Agrarian Reform [DAR] to revoke the stock
distribution option, farm workers in Hacienda Luisita have
one other thing to be happy about: they are slowly reaping
the benefits of cultivating idle land in the plantation.
Virgilio Pascua, 45, a farm worker and union
member, started clearing a small plot near his home in Barangay
Mapalacsiao when the rainy season started last May. He owns
P15,000 worth of stock shares in Hacienda Luisita Inc., but
there is no way for him to convert his shares to cash and
his family had suffered much because of the prolonged labor
dispute.
Two weeks ago, he harvested some 25 cavans of
rice worth more than P12,000 from a 1/2 hectare plot he was
able to make productive. A low yield by current farm standards,
but for a worker who has been out of work since the strike
began 11 months ago, the harvest is a welcome respite.
Pascua has also been earning some P500 a week
since July from his harvest of eggplants, string beans and
ampalaya [bitter gourd] and other vegetables, aside from the
rice harvest. He is among scores of striking workers who dared
till a part of the 6,000-hectare sugar plantation owned by
the family of former president Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino.
"Working the land is much better than being
paid very low wages. Even before the strike, we were getting
only P9.50 every week. I hope we can till the land permanently,"
Pascua said in an interview.
Pascua's union, the 5,000-strong United Luisita
Workers' Union [ULWU], the plantation workers; union, along
with the Central Azucarera De Tarlac Labor Union [CATLU],
700-strong sugar mill workers' union, struck in November 6
last year in protest over the termination of 326 ULWU officers
and members and to push their demands for higher wager and
benefits.
IN FOCUS

Enjoying the sight. Hacienda
Luisita strikers growing palay and vegetables in an
area where only sugarcane was allowed to grow before.
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"Bungkalan"
Last June, the unions declared that they will
encourage and undertake systematic cultivation of portions
of idle land in the plantation to produce food crops and stave-off
hunger during the rainy season.
The move called "bungkalan," a Filipino word
meaning cultivation, became widely accepted and there is now
a proliferation of small rice and vegetable plots in the 10
barangays comprising the hacienda. So far, more than 200 hectares
have been made productive by both the plantation and sugar
mill workers.
In Barangay Asturias, 21 farmers cultivated
an average of 1/4 to 1/2 hectare each, the typical size of
individual farms in the hacienda. The harvests have enabled
the workers to buy food and simple household needs. For some,
tilling the land even helped in sending their children to
school.
A portion of the harvests is sent to the picket
line to augment the food supply and as a contribution to their
struggle. After all, those engaged in cultivation regularly
visit and help man the picket, according to Pascua.
The workers feel some kind of liberation in
clearing the land, planting the crops they want and enjoying
the harvests. In the past, sugar cane is the sole crop planted
in the hacienda and the people are not allowed to cultivate
even the unused portions of the land.
"We used to wait for meager wages, but now we
can enjoy the full fruit of our labor. We feel freer now and
confident that we really can make our lives better," said
Maximo Sebastian, 56, an ULWU member who along with is brother
tilled a one-hectare plot in Barangay Asturias.
The unions however, are careful to note that
they are not yet claiming actual ownership of the land.
"Our effort to make the land productive is an
off-shoot of the strike. We are not saying that we are taking
possession or claiming ownership of the land. We just cannot
allow our members and their families to go hungry while the
land lies idle," ULWU president Rene Galang said.
IN FOCUS

Food for the strike. Idle
land near the strike line is being tilled to grow vegetables
for the strike. |
Part of the struggle
"Bungkalan is also part of our struggle.
We want to prove, even in a temporary way, that for the workers
to use the land for their own benefit is better than stock
certificates or wages from the Cojuangco family," Galang explained.
Union leaders say there are two forms of "bungkalan"
practiced in the hacienda: individual cultivation and "collective
farming." While both are encouraged, the unions hope collective
farming will be the more common practice.
Galang said collective farming will produce
better results in terms of higher crop yield and strengthening
the sense of organization and collective spirit of our members.
Lito Bais, 41, leader of a group of 76 workers
in a collective farm in Barangay Asturias said they are aware
that tilling the land will show the Cojuangco family that
the workers are serious in their struggle for land and may
compel the clan to negotiate with them to resolve the strike.
He said their experience with collective and
individual cultivation has left them many lessons. It took
only two days for about 40 people to clear and prepare a 1/2
hectare piece of land for planting. In comparison, those who
cleared and planted individually took as long as one month
to clear a plot of the same size, according to Bais.
There is also a middle ground between individual
and collective farming: these are two or three families who
jointly till and manage adjacent plots. Farm chores such as
weeding, applying fertilizers or pesticides or simply warding
off animals and insects are scheduled among family members.
This way, not all are tied-up in the farm and can attend to
other matters.
Most of those who joined the "bungkalan" used
only their bare hands and the crudest of farm implements--hoes,
shovels, pick axes, rakes and the like, since no mechanized
equipment are available.
The workers complain in jest about their lack
of skills and the shortage of farm tools. "Napudpod na ang
aming mga gamit bago kami nakapag-ani. Sa una, halos kinakamay
namin ang lupa dahil marami ang hindi pa marunong maghanda
ng lupa para sa gulay at palay, [Our tools were already worn-out
before we were able to harvest. At first some of us even used
our bare hands because we did not know yet how to prepare
the land for rice and vegetable crops]," one worker said.
For SDO revocation
The workers say their experience with "bungkalan"
is one solid argument for the complete revocation of the stock
distribution option in the Hacienda.
"The difficulties we faced because of the strike
and the way we were able to survive because we cultivated
even a small portion of the hacienda land is one more solid
proof that the SDO must be completely revoked and that land
distribution be implemented," Galang explained.
"Our experience with individual and collective
farming are also strong arguments that farm workers have a
better chance of improving their lives than through the stock
shares that were forced on us," Galang said.
Hacienda management have argued that parcelling-out
the land to thousands of farm workers will lose the viability
of the plantation.
For the long term, and should land distribution
take place in the hacienda, collective farming through cooperatives
is seen as a more feasible type of land use in the post-SDO
hacienda, according to union leaders.
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