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Inspiring Filipino PWD Stories

This document highlights three inspiring Filipinos with disabilities: Ronnel del Rio is a blind broadcast journalist who has pushed for accessible services and advocated for persons with disabilities in the Philippines. Ana Kristina Arce is deaf and has earned multiple degrees, including a master's from Gallaudet University, and hopes to help other deaf Filipinos through education and advocacy. Gilda Quintua-Nakahara, who is also deaf, runs a successful travel agency catering to deaf travelers and has helped establish a deaf organization in her province.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
629 views8 pages

Inspiring Filipino PWD Stories

This document highlights three inspiring Filipinos with disabilities: Ronnel del Rio is a blind broadcast journalist who has pushed for accessible services and advocated for persons with disabilities in the Philippines. Ana Kristina Arce is deaf and has earned multiple degrees, including a master's from Gallaudet University, and hopes to help other deaf Filipinos through education and advocacy. Gilda Quintua-Nakahara, who is also deaf, runs a successful travel agency catering to deaf travelers and has helped establish a deaf organization in her province.

Uploaded by

Junar Amaro
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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3 Inspiring People with Disability (PWD) in the

Philippines
By Dindin Reyes @dindinreyes On October 12, 2015

PWD stands for person with disability and how apt that the word person comes
before disability. Just because these people have to live with physically and mentally
challenging conditions doesnt mean that their world ends there. Like each and every
one of us, our actions are our fate.
In honor of the strength of our PWD brothers and sisters who have maximized their
potential, Kalibrr has put together a list of inspiring Filipino PWDs who are making their
own small changes in the country.

Ronnel del Rio

(Source: VERA Files)


Ronnel del Rio is a broadcast journalist. He is also blind.
A radio journalist for almost a decade now, Ronnel first became known in 1996 because
of his radio program, Good Morning Southern Luzon. A voice of reason and
awareness, he discussed national issues as well as issues that the community of PWDs
in the Philippines faced. Striving to be a voice for the unheard PWDs in the Philippines,
Ronnel pushed for accessible services not only in his area but in the rest of the country.
His resume is equally impressive. Ronnel is the president of the Philippine Chamber of
Massage Industry for Visually Impaired, is part of the Philippine Coalition on the United

Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, a board member of the
Philippine Mental Health Association, president of the Federation of Disabled Persons in
Lipa, and is the chief executive officer of Punlaka a PWD advocacy group based in
Region IV.
A man with much vision for everyone, not just his fellow PWDs, he also works as a
Housing and Homesite Regulatory Affairs Officer for the government of Batangas.
There, he pushed for the Viable Socialized Resettlement Program wherein idle land is
taken under consideration to become housing projects for the underprivileged in
Batangas.
Del Rio is also the first blind person to earn a Masters degree in the Philippines, having
studied Management Technology in De La Salle University in 2003.
RELATED: RIGHTS EVERY WORKING PWD SHOULD KNOW ABOUT

Ana Kristina Arce

(Source: Deaf E-News)


Search for Ana Kristina Arce on YouTube and youll find video upon video of
commencement speeches. Without a sound, she is able to communicate passion and
hope in her speeches.
Deaf since she was born, Anas hearing disability didnt stop her from unstoppable
yearning to learn. She was awarded class valedictorian at the Philippine School for the
Deaf and her success in the academe went on from there.

In 2009, she graduated magna cum laude from the De La Salle College of Saint
Benilde (CSB) with a degree in Applied Deaf studies. Her focus was on the multimedia
arts and she went on to become a graphic artist at her alma mater, CSB.
Blazing the trail, she continued on to study abroad to pursue a Masters Degree. She
earned her MA in Deaf Studies from the Gallaudet University, Washington D.C., one of
the worlds most prominent universities in the field of deaf studies. She is the first
Filipino to be sent to Gallaudet University with a World Deaf Leadership Scholarship.
Why all the studying? Ana says she wants to give back. On the New Internationalist
Blog she said:
I hope to not only help them (the deaf) go through college, but also make them good
researchers, and active advocates in their respective communities. In my advocacy, Im
looking at opportunities to bring the needs of the Deaf into the consciousness of society,
especially the hearing people. I aim to help integrate the Deaf and the hearing together
in unity, bridge the communication gap, increase awareness of the Deaf culture, and
raise the respect for the natural sign language of the Filipino Deaf the Filipino Sign
Language.
Hear her words in the video below:

Gilda Quintua-Nakahara

(Source: Trip & Travel Blog Facebook Page)


To run her business and talk to people, Gilda uses her hands either through pen and
paper or Filipino Sign Language. The definition of a successful Deaf Entrepreneur, she
runs a travel and tour business called Nakahara Lodging and Travel Agency. Catering to
those like her, its primarily a travel service for deaf people around the world, though
they also provide services for hearing people.
Drawing inspiration from foreign deaf friends, she and her fellow deaf Pinoys met in
tourist spots, and she decided to set up her own business starting in 2004. A travel
agency like any other, shes known for her reliable arrangements and service which she
describes has age-old Filipino hospitality.
Pushing through discrimination and barriers, she managed to learn the ins and outs of
booking flights, accommodations, and tour management.
In 2007, she was recognized at the Go Negosyo Caravan for People with Disabilities in
De Salle College of St. Benilde. But, as she said in her interview with Manila Bulletin,
representing the fellow deaf is its own reward.
As a deaf person in this kind of business, I am proud to say that I have crossed the
border of so-called limited access. I honestly worked hard to achieve my goals. I wanted
to show the world that we are not cut off from mainstream society and we are capable of
regularly doing and keeping our jobs like the rest of hearing and speaking people.
Aside from all of this, Gilda has helped establish a deaf organization in her province of
Eastern Samar.
Its not huge acts that make someone inspirational. Its the daily effort to better yourself
in whatever situation you find yourself in. These three Filipinos are an inspiration not
just to PWDs, but to the rest of us as well.

Do you know of any other inspirational PWDs? Share their


story with us via the comments below!

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