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View Full Version : Manila trash becomes hot London fashion item


tcha
12/02/09, 05:58 PM
By Jason Gutierrez
Agence France-Presse
First Posted 10:47:00 12/01/2009


MANILA, Philippines – At a warehouse near Manila's infamous Smokey Mountain dump, slum-dwellers working for a British-led charity are turning rubbish into fashion items that are proving a hit in top-end London shops.
Under a dim fluorescent lamp, amid the constant humming of sewing machines, about 20 women cut pieces of cloth and other materials found amid the garbage to make teddy bears.
Others are busy putting finishing touches to handbags and purses made from discarded toothpaste tubes, while glossy magazines are turned into colorful bracelets.
"This bag costs about 100 pounds sterling ($165) or more in London," said Jane Walker, a former publishing executive from Southampton who gave up her lavish lifestyle in 1996 to set up the Philippine Christian Foundation in Manila after seeing the plight of the poor here.
Walker said about 200 bags were currently being shipped to boutiques in London, and the foundation was unable to meet demand.
"I had to turn down three shops in London ordering our products because we keep running out."
Walker said a deal to supply a major luxury chain was also in the works, while negotiations were underway with an American firm to produce shoes and slippers using discarded car tires.
Known in the local press as Manila's "angel of the dumps" for her work among the scavengers of Smokey Mountain, the 45-year-old single mother's tireless efforts have helped entire families rise above crushing poverty.
Last year, she was made a Member of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II in honor of her work.
Relying mainly on corporate donations, the non-profit foundation provides livelihood projects, health services and free education to children of families living on the dumpsite.
Covering a sprawling area in Tondo district near Manila Bay and just a few kilometers (miles) from the presidential palace, Smokey Mountain has come to symbolize pervasive poverty in this Southeast Asian nation of 92 million people.
An entire colony of squatter families lives off the dump, which got its name from methane gas-induced black smoke billowing from the mound.
While parts of the site have been leveled to make official settlements over the past decade, a large portion remains a permanent open dump for tons of daily refuse from Manila's 12 million inhabitants.
Before Walker set up her foundation, swarms of children and entire families would descend on the trash, scavenging for items to sell at junkshops.
The thousands of people living on Smokey Mountain had no other way out, and the few pesos earned from a day's grueling work was spent on food.
Many still do scavenge.
But through Walker's efforts, a school was built, an abandoned warehouse was transformed into a livelihood centre where hot meals were offered and the children were given a semblance of a normal life.
Then, when the global financial crisis hit last year and many donors cut back on corporate social responsibility work, Walker was forced to find creative ways to raise new funding.
She came up with the idea of turning trash into fashion accessories and began getting members of the community, mainly mothers, to start sewing together ring tabs from aluminum cans into tiny purses.
She then expanded the project to include laptop and shoulder bags for women.
Other products soon followed -- necklaces and bracelets from colorful magazines, and stuffed toys from readily available material from the dump.
"The magazines are cut into triangular shapes and glued and rolled, keeping the brightly colored part as the last part to roll so the beads are more interesting," Walker said.
"The beads are then dipped in clear varnish and later assembled into jewelry."
The products were first sold to friends, but then found their way into a specialty store carrying eco-friendly fashion in Manila's upmarket Makati financial district. Soon, there were orders from shops in London.
"The mothers come up with their own designs, they are all very creative," she said.
At any given time, about 40 families are directly employed by the foundation, with each earning at least P3,000 ($65) a month -- far more than they could earn from picking trash alone.
"This has helped me a lot because I can work and watch my grandchildren go to school," said Martha Dominguez, 60, as she delicately put together a stuffed toy.
"We lived surrounded by trash all our lives, not knowing that we could have made it into money."
Walker said the project gave the people involved more than just income.
"There is a big social angle to the project. Many mothers consider mastering the techniques in making bags their biggest achievement in life," she said.
Proceeds from the sales are not enough to sustain the foundation's entire operations but they have helped fill a void left by the donor slump.
"We will never be 100 percent financially sustainable, but if we can aim to be at least 50 percent self-sufficient, then we can expand the work we are doing," Walker said, adding the long-term goal was for the organization to have its own boutique in Manila.
Meanwhile, Walker and her staff are busy trying to expand the fashion line.
"We are always taking in stuff from the dumps. Right now, I'm trying to figure out how to use old piano keyboards as a design on a hand bag," she said, briefly pausing before her eyes lit up.
"Ahh, I need to drill holes into them first."


showbizandstyle.inquirer.net/entertainment

jolidon me
12/19/09, 08:49 PM
It made me cry reading this article! She is very admirable.
This is the kind of news that I like to hear all the time
"Productive and Moving". Keep up the good work Ms. Walker.
Where in The Philippines can I buy her product?

tcha
12/21/09, 06:00 PM
It made me cry reading this article! She is very admirable.
This is the kind of news that I like to hear all the time
"Productive and Moving". Keep up the good work Ms. Walker.
Where in The Philippines can I buy her product?


^^^I don't have any idea, try this link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/philippines/2259207/Jane-Walker-a-Briton-who-brings-hope-to-children-of-the-tip.html

tcha
12/21/09, 06:04 PM
Jane Walker, a Briton who brings hope to children of the tip

Children who used to sift refuse on a huge Filipino rubbish dump are receiving an education, and even ballet classes, with the help of a British woman.






By Thomas Bell in Manila
Published: 9:16PM BST 06 Jul 2008



http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/00685/Manilla-rubbish-404_685338c.jpg British woman, Jane Walker, 44, who has set up a school for children who live on a rubbish dump in Manila Photo: THOMAS BELL

http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/00685/Manilla-rubbish-404_685340c.jpg Children scavenge the refuse to help eke out a living for their families Photo: THOMAS BELL

http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/00685/Manilla-rubbish-404_685341c.jpg The school was established in 2002 in a warehouse that was full of garbage. Now there are 400 pupils, dressed in blue uniforms Photo: THOMAS BELL

http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/00685/Manilla-rubbish-404_685342c.jpg There is a waiting list for the school and only the most needy are admitted Photo: THOMAS BELL


Jane Walker, 44, a single mother from Southampton who received an MBE in last month's Birthday Honours list, has established a school for children who live on the vast tip in the centre of Manila.
Her dream is to eradicate child labour at the site, where families struggle to survive by scavenging for anything that can be recycled from the foul swamp of stinking rubbish generated by a city of 15million people.
In narrow alleys on its margins, desperate families live in flimsy shacks. Some have lived this life for 40 years, the approximate life expectancy here. "We all take risks with our health," said Miss Walker. "Everyone gets sick."
The children, used to earning around 8p if they gather 1kg of used plastic bottles, are hard-working and disciplined. To enable families to leave their children in school, the charity feeds pupils and sends them home with canned food at the end of the week.
The Philippine Community Fund, which Miss Walker founded in 1996, also offers parents classes in skills such as hairdressing and repairing mobile phones.
It is a rough neighbourhood, but one where Miss Walker finds a strong values system. "The parents don't have many alternatives," she said. "They can get involved in the sex industry, they can beg on the streets, they can become criminals or they can get involved in waste picking. The honourable families get involved in waste picking."
Regular typhoons make ever more families destitute, driving them to live on the dump.
Miss Walker worked for a regional newspaper company in the Midlands when she went to the Philippines in 1996. "When I saw the kids it changed my life," she said. "It wasn't something that I could forget. I just felt I had a part to play."
The school was established in 2002 in a warehouse that was full of garbage. Now there are 400 pupils, dressed in blue uniforms. The teachers are specially trained and the standard Filipino curriculum specially adapted to the children's needs.
There is a waiting list for the school and only the most needy are admitted. They can learn ballet, taught by the country's most famous ballerina, and have lessons in football, guitar, swimming and singing.
Miss Walker has begun constructing a new school using shipping containers, which she hopes will accommodate all the children on the dump.









/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/philippines/2259207/Jane-Walker-a-Briton-who-brings-hope-to-children-of-the-tip.html

gAn
12/21/09, 11:56 PM
Thanks, tcha!

Jane Walker --- what an admirable woman!

:wave: :wave: :wave:

kenbyhomes
03/31/12, 02:13 AM
It is very true that Manila trash becomes a hot london Fashion item for UK. The Noble causes in a way of Charitable Incomes via Fashion Shows are very nice.