Ecclesial Opposition to Large-Scale Mining on Samar: Neoliberalism Meets the Church of the Poor in a Wounded Land
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Neoliberal Mining in the Philippines
2.1. Neoliberalism
2.2. Neoliberalism and Mining
2.3. Neoliberal Mining in the Philippines
3. The Church of the Poor
3.1. Historical Background
When the Roman Catholic Church opened the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, she was obliged to recognize and confront the rapid changes and the situation of humankind in the world. The church declared her gravest error to be the dichotomization between faith and practice; between professional and social activity, on the one hand, and the religious life on the other.
3.2. From Vatican II to PCP II: The Church of the Poor in the Philippines
Essentially the vision of the church in the Philippines in PCP II is to become a Church of the Poor- a church whose members are ‘in solidarity with the poor,’ and who ‘collaborate with the poor themselves and with others to uplift the poor from their poverty.’
3.3. Ecclesial Opposition to Mining in the Philippines
One social issue on which the Catholic Church has not remained silent in the face of what she perceives as injustices committed against the poor is that of mining. On this particular issue, the Philippine bishops have given credible witness to PCP II’s vision of a Church of the Poor. They have spoken out strongly against large-scale mining in a series of pastoral statements, marshaled the organizational resources and networks of the Church behind their advocacy, and shown remarkable solidarity with their poor and marginalized constituents.
To live, poor people eat and sell the fish they catch or the crops they grow-and typically those who manage to subsist in this way do so with very little margin. Natural resource degradation often becomes an immediate and life-and livelihood-threatening crisis- a question of survival.
Environmental Effect | What This Entails |
---|---|
Hazardous Chemicals | Cyanide is frequently used as a processing agent in gold and silver mining and mercury is frequently produced as a by-product during mining. Spills of these chemicals can constitute a substantial threat to human health. |
Water Contamination | Acid mine drainage can occur if the ore body contains iron and sulfur and if these minerals are exposed to water and oxygen. Acid mine drainage poses a serious threat to all aquatic biota and can lead to the mobilization of heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury, cadmium, and lead. |
Air Pollution | Fugitive dust emissions from mining activities may cause serious respiratory problems in humans and lead to the asphyxia of plants and trees. |
Deforestation | The removal of trees in open pit mining reduces habitat for endemic species and leads to more rapid runoff and flooding during the rainy season. |
Water Siltation | Increased erosion leads to siltation of water systems and the degradation of fish habitat. |
Water Depletion | Mining’s heavy use of water, in mineral processing and in pit dewatering, leads to a diminution of groundwater resources. |
4. Samar: the Wounded Land
4.1. The Physical Geography of Samar
4.2. The Human Geography of Samar
Samar is without a doubt the poorest place we have seen in the Philippines. The people are deprived of the most elementary government services. The island has only a coastal road. The many barrios in the interior are not considered important enough for roads to be built. The traffic is carried out on the many waterways, which cut up the island, with small unmotorized prows, or on foot. The rivers are crossed by means of a simple bamboo bridge, with an improvised raft of banana stems or by wading through the stream. In the rainy season, many villages are cut off for months from the outside world.[60], p. 92
4.3. Samar: An Insurgency Hotbed
4.4. Human Rights Abuses in the Wounded Land
5. Ecclesial Opposition to Mining on Samar
5.1. Mining and Mineral Resources of Samar
5.2. Mining’s Impacts upon the Poor
Date | Ecclesial Action Against Mining |
---|---|
16 July 2003 | In response to information it had received regarding heavy siltation in the seas near Homonhon and Manicani islands the Diocese of Borongan asked the Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) to conduct an investigation into the impact of mining operations on those islands [78]. |
8 August 2003 | A protest caravan, organized by all three dioceses, started from Catarman, Borongan, and Basey and ended in Catbalogan to protest the 5 December 2002 granting of Mineral Production Sharing Agreements for bauxite mining in the interior of Samar [78]. |
27 September 2003 | The Diocese of Calbayog, lauded Western Samar for passing a 50 year moratorium on large-scale mining. The Dioceses of Borongan and Catarman both urged their respective provinces to follow suit [78]. |
22 July 2004 | The Diocese of Borongan articulated its opposition to government efforts promoting mining and stating that it will not surrender its call for the preservation of the Samar Island Natural Park as well as an island wide ban on mining [78]. |
5 March 2006 | The Diocese of Borongan sent a letter to the DENR secretary asking for the cancellation of mining on Homonhon island. The letter stated that mining on Homonhon island has done harm to the environment and little to alleviate poverty [79]. |
10 March 2006 | Father Cesar Aculan, the Social Action Director of the Diocese of Calbayog, testified before a committee of the Philippine Senate and referred to the logging and mining industries as “twin industries of mass destruction” and called for a cleansing of the DENR of corrupt officials who act as fixers for those industries [80]. |
29 February 2008 | The three Samareño bishops, in conjunction with the bishops of Leyte, issued a pastoral letter warning that recent flooding in the Eastern Visayas is attributable to irresponsible mining. The bishops also stated that environmental abuse for money gives only minimal compensation and temporary employment to the poor [81]. |
22 October 2010 | The three Samarnon bishops, along with the other Eastern Visayan bishops, signed a pastoral letter warning that relying upon mining to act as a form of development will lead to a threatening of the ability of people to draw their life’s sustenance [82]. |
21 March 2011 | The Diocese of Borongan again called for an end to mining on Homonhon island [83]. |
2 February 2012 | The Diocese of Borongan appealed to President Benigno Aquino to impose a moratorium on mining in Eastern Samar to prevent further environmental degradation and to preserve farming and fishing [84]. |
19 March 2012 | All three Samareño dioceses, along with the other dioceses in the Eastern Visayas and a group of protestant churches, signed an ecumenical pledge to condemn and oppose large-scale mining [85]. |
15 May 2012 | All three Samarnon dioceses issued a joint pastoral letter expressing their outrage at the 1 May 2012 killing of Francisco Canayong, an anti-mining activist in Salcedo, Eastern Samar [86]. |
5.3. Mining and Samar’s Vulnerability to Natural Hazards
5.4. A Lack of Faith in Technology
5.5. The Threat Mining Poses to Samar’s Biodiversity
5.6. Mining and Militarization
The New People’s Army is under orders to dismantle large-scale mining projects and to attack and disarm the military, paramilitary, police and private security guarding these projects until they are forced to shut down.[97]
5.7. Mining and Human Rights Abuses
5.8. Mining is not Development
6. Discussion
6.1. The Effectiveness of Ecclesial Opposition
6.2. The Influence of the Church of the Poor
We are the heirs of earlier generations, and we reap benefits from the efforts of our contemporaries; we are under obligation to all men. Therefore we cannot disregard the welfare of those who will come after us to increase the human family. The reality of human solidarity brings us not only benefits but also obligations.[111], p. 5
Because the integrity of God’s creation is violated our people suffer the destruction brought about by droughts and floods. Those disasters cannot be traced merely to the uncontrollable powers of nature, but also to human greed for short term economic gain.
6.3. The Church of the Poor in Contradistinction to Neoliberalism
Clearly the neoliberals [were] not talking about workers in factories, nor women in families, nor peasants on plantations. They [meant], by the free individual, the entrepreneur, the capitalist, the boss. And they [meant], by freedom, the opportunity to make money.
6.4. The Church of the Poor as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse
7. Conclusions
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Holden, W.N. Ecclesial Opposition to Large-Scale Mining on Samar: Neoliberalism Meets the Church of the Poor in a Wounded Land. Religions 2012, 3, 833-861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3030833
Holden WN. Ecclesial Opposition to Large-Scale Mining on Samar: Neoliberalism Meets the Church of the Poor in a Wounded Land. Religions. 2012; 3(3):833-861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3030833
Chicago/Turabian StyleHolden, William Norman. 2012. "Ecclesial Opposition to Large-Scale Mining on Samar: Neoliberalism Meets the Church of the Poor in a Wounded Land" Religions 3, no. 3: 833-861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3030833
APA StyleHolden, W. N. (2012). Ecclesial Opposition to Large-Scale Mining on Samar: Neoliberalism Meets the Church of the Poor in a Wounded Land. Religions, 3(3), 833-861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3030833