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Ask
Josephine Gonzalez how many children a family should have
and the stick-figured 31-year-old mother answers without
hesitation. “I only wanted three,” she says, trying to
soothe the naked baby boy who tugs at her ragged dress.
But
Gonzalez is, in fact, a mother of six. Her sister Angie
Maquiran, two years older, has seven children. Together
with the fathers, the pair are raising their families in a
public park across the street from one of Manila’s oldest
Roman Catholic churches, sleeping on the ground, their
possessions stuffed into a small cart that marks where
home is.
Maquiran
says the priests at the church tell her, “Children are
riches, and the more you have, the more blessed you are.”
But health officials and some politicians here say that
the
Philippines
has too many poor mouths to feed, an overpopulation
problem that condemns millions of children to poverty.

JOSEPHINE GONZALEZ and her
partner, Edwin Lihay-lihay, are raising their six children
in a public park in Manila. Gonzalez said women are given
no information on artificial birth control.
--LOS ANGELES TIMES
PHOTO BY BRUCE WALLACE
Population
size is an issue of perennial debate in this predominantly
Catholic country, which has seen its population jump to
92.5 million from 60 million in 1990. But the situation
has become more acute amid this year’s global food crisis.
With the price of rice soaring, the poorest Filipinos are
faced with spending more of their minuscule incomes on
food or going hungry.
Critics
lay some of the blame on the family-planning policies of
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who has sided with the
Church in its campaign against any form of artificial
birth control.
“Those of
us who study population have seen this food crisis coming
for 30 years,” says Dr. Alberto Romualdez, head of the
graduate school of health at the University of the City of
Manila
and a health secretary under former President Joseph
Estrada. “Already these people couldn’t buy enough rice.
Now we are having more babies born to those who can least
afford it, and unfortunately one of the main reasons is
the Catholic Church.”
The Church
rejects that its anti-contraception activism is
responsible for the high birthrate, citing the 2007
census, which showed the rate of annual population growth
dropping to 2.04 percent last year from 2.36 percent in
2000.
“We
accept that the growing population is a problem, but the
facts are that when a country is poor, you will have more
children,” says Msgr. Pedro Quitorio, spokesman of the
Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines.
“We had
almost the same number of people this time last year and
there was no rice crisis then,” Quitorio says. “Give
people a job and the population will drop.”
The Church
successfully has fought to end campaigns by nongovernment
organizations to distribute free contraceptives and advice
about artificial methods of birth control. Although
wealthier Filipinos can obtain contraceptives through
private clinics, the main program for free contraceptives
run by the US Agency for International Development is
being phased out by year’s end on government orders,
raising fear that the birthrate will jump when stocks run
out.
So far,
Arroyo has shown no inclination to change her government’s
policy of urging natural family planning. And Church
leaders claim that attitudes toward sex, not a lack of
condoms, are the reason for the higher birthrate among the
poor.
“It is
stretching the imagination to say our teachings have that
much effect on people,” Quitorio says. “The people have
their own religion. Even if you dropped a batch of condoms
in the barrios it wouldn’t make a difference, because sex
is recreation for the poor.
“They have
no TV, no movies, they don’t read,” he says. “They have
guitars and they drink. And when they drink, condoms have
no place.”
On the
streets, the father of Gonzalez’s six children laughs and
agrees with the priest. The only time men here use a
condom, Edwin Lihay-lihay says, is when they are having
sex with a prostitute and fear they’ll contract AIDS.
Others say
that the debate over which came first, the poverty or the
overpopulation, is a distraction from the public health
issue.
“Look, I’m
not so sure we have too many people,” says Sen. Chiz
Escudero, a popular young politician often cited as a
possible 2010 presidential candidate. “Other countries
have controlled their population growth and ended up with
a problem of aging populations. Good for them. They’re
rich and they can hire Filipino nurses to look after them.
“But we
need to frame this debate as one of access to
information,” he says. “Governments have a duty to inform
their people about health issues and choices.
What if a
Muslim woman here wants to learn how to protect herself
from getting pregnant? The Catholic Church can’t tell the
government it is not allowed to give her health
information.”
On
Manila’s streets, the sisters agree that people are
confused about the facts on artificial birth control.
“We get no
information,” Gonzalez says. “I heard the IUD can rust
inside you and make you sick.”
“Some
women say the IUD is the reason they got fat,” her sister
adds. But Maquiran says she no longer needs any
information about birth control. Her seventh baby was her
last, she says.
And she
has a method for not getting pregnant again.
“Now I
just don’t have sex,” she says. |