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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

ONDOY RESCUE OPERATIONS PART 2- UNSUNG HERO VERSUS MOVIE ACTOR HERO KUNO

Dear insansapinas,


There are unsung heroes in every calamity. They're heroes because they unselfishly help others at the risk of losing their lives. One of them is an eighteen year old from a squatter's area.

There are heroes kuno who do it for publicity notwithstanding if their stories are ones that insult the intelligence of the public.

Maniniwala ka bang speed boat ang ginamit sa pagrescue ng isang kapartner na artista sa isang village na kahit ang mga Navy,Coast Guard at iba pang mga rescue operatives ay kailangang maghintay para bumaba ng kaunti ang tubig para makita nila ang mga naglipanang mga nakaungos sa tubig baha upang makaraan ang kanilang rubber boat.
Speed boat. Ano yan pelikula kung saan ang mabilis na takbo ng bangkang ito ay maaring puwede lang sa malawak na dagat na walang mga nakaharang. Parang James Bond. Haah.

Ito ang kuwentong paniniwalaan ko pa.



He died rescuing neighbors

by Jason Gutierrez

MUELMAR Magallanes braved rampaging floods to save more than 30 people, but ended up sacrificing his life in a last trip to rescue a baby girl who was being swept away on a Styrofoam box.

Family members and people who Magallanes saved hailed the 18-year-old construction worker on Monday a hero, as his body lay in a coffin at a makeshift evacuation center near their destroyed Manila riverside village.

“I am going to be forever grateful to Muelmar. He gave his life for my baby. I will never forget his sacrifice,” said Menchie Peñalosa, the mother of the six-month-old girl whom he carried to safety before being swept away himself.

Magallanes was at home on Saturday with his family when tropical storm Ondoy—international name Ketsan-—unleashed the heaviest rain in more than 40 years on the Philippine capital and surrounding areas.

At first the family, long used to heavy rain, paid little attention to the storm.

But Magallanes and his father quickly decided to evacuate the family once they realized the river 800 meters away had burst its banks.

With the help of an older brother, Magallanes tied a string around his waist and attached it one-by-one to his three younger siblings, whom he took to higher ground. Then he came back for his parents.

But Magallanes, a strong swimmer, decided to go back for neighbors trapped on rooftops.

He ended up making many trips, and eventually saved more than 30 people from drowning, witnesses and survivors said.

Tired and shivering, Magallanes was back on higher ground with his family when he heard Peñalosa screaming as she and her baby were being swept away on the polystyrene box they were using in an attempt to cross the swift currents.

He dived back in after the mother and daughter, who were already a few meters away and bobbing precariously among the debris floating on the brown water.

“I didn’t know that the current was so strong. In an instant, I was under water. We were going to die,” said Peñalosa, her eyes welling with tears and voice choking with emotion.

Then this man came from nowhere and grabbed us. He took us to where the other neighbors were, and then he was gone,” she said.

Peñalosa and other witnesses said an exhausted Magallanes was simply washed away amid the torrent of water.

Neighbors found his body on Sunday, along with 28 others who perished amid Manila’s epic flooding.

The official death toll stands at 86 but that excludes those recovered in Magallanes’ village, called Bagong Silangan.

Standing next to his coffin, Magallanes’ parents paid tribute to their son.

“He always had a good heart,” said his father, Samuel.

“We had already been saved, but he decided to go back one last time for the girl.”

His mother, Maria Luz, wept as she described her son as incredibly brave.

“He saved so many people, but ended up not being able to save himself.” AFP

Pinaysaamerika

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