By Jill Richardson
Shortly after the extent of the
damage of storm known as either Super Typhoon Haiyan or Yolanda became clear,
the United States got to work sending much needed aid to the Philippines. With winds up to 195 miles per hour, it left
more than 5,200 people dead and four million displaced.
The Philippines is a poor nation,
and it’s also the most exposed country to tropical storms
in the world. That’s hardly surprising, since it’s made up of over
7,000 islands.
On a good day, that makes it a nice
vacation spot. On a bad day, it’s a sitting duck for typhoons, tsunamis,
earthquakes, and anything else nature throws its way.
But Filipinos can’t forget about the
United States. Their nation was our colony. From the end of the
Spanish-American War at the turn of the 20th century until just after World War II,
the Philippines belonged to us. That’s why English is one of their official
languages. To this day, the U.S. remains very influential in the Philippines.
In 2011 I had an opportunity to go
the Philippines and jumped at the chance. I didn’t visit the part of the
country that Haiyan ravaged. I visited the other part of the country that iseven more vulnerable to typhoons. The
poverty was nothing short of shocking.
I met one family of ten — two
parents with no formal education, the dad with an amputated arm, and eight
children — living in a flimsy wooden home and attempting to survive by growing
corn and rice, supplemented by wages as day laborers when they could find work.
Life wasn’t easy for them in good weather, let alone in a typhoon.
But it’s not just the poverty that’s
so striking, it’s the inequality. There are rich people in the Philippines. At
the airport, I overheard the conversation of other American tourists comparing
how many servants were employed by the Filipino families they visited.
America didn’t necessarily cause the
inequality, but it certainly turned a blind eye to it. Or, worse, aided and
abetted those in power.
In 1981, when Ferdinand Marcos,
dictator of the Philippines, was “re-elected,” Vice President George H.W. Bush
congratulated him, saying, “We stand with you sir… We love your adherence to
democratic principles and to democratic processes.”
Today, corruption is just one
problem facing the county. The Philippines is ranked as thethird
most vulnerable nation to
the climate crisis in the world. Haiyan itself, like any individual extreme
weather event, might not be a result of global warming. But it could bea harbinger of what to expect as the planet heats up.
The storm was both a natural and a
man-made disaster. Nature created the super typhoon, but poverty and a lack of
preparedness in the Philippines made the loss of life and devastation worse.
When disaster strikes, it’s
wonderful that the U.S. is one of the first nations in line with life-saving
aid. But we must also consider our role before the storm comes.
When we cozy up to corrupt
governments, or back so-called free trade deals and economic policies that
enrich the powerful elite and further disenfranchise the poor, we help set up
disasters like the one that just happened. When we refuse to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions to stem climate change, we help set the stage for more violent storms in the future.
Let’s keep helping the Philippines
recover — and then let’s re-evaluate how our foreign policy and climate policy
will impact the next typhoon.
OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson
is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and
What We Can Do to Fix It. OtherWords.org