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AETA
WOMAN II
(Philippines)
Oil on Canvas
- 40" x 32"
| Imagine yourself living in a busy
community with people all around, work to be done, and a flurry
of activity. Suddenly, the majority of the population disappears
and you find yourself in a starkly different environment. This
is basically what happened to the Aeta people when, within a few
months, a bustling $3 billion naval base at Subic Bay, Philippines,
turned into a ghost town. The Aetas are a native people who live
in an 18,000 hectare forest reserve adjacent to the base. In the
presence of the military, they worked as guides and staff and
provided jungle survival training. Following the military evacuation,
the Aeta people of Pamulaklakin quickly found themselves without
employment and income. I was guided to their village by a man
from JEST (Jungle Environmental Survival Training ), a group which
had trained the U.S. military in jungle survival. I met this woman
while walking up a long trail through the jungle to her village.
Her face was almost sculptural. |
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