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Thursday, March 19, 2026

The Evolution of Peace: Can Humanity Finally Break the Cycle of War?


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 




For millennia, the history of our species has been written in blood. War has remained a stubborn reality of international politics, with conflicts erupting despite the existence of international law. We have lived under a structural pattern where order is determined by the superiority of power. But as we mark the 10th Anniversary of the Declaration of Peace and Cessation of War (DPCW), a profound question stands before us: If conflict is inevitable, must war be the only way we resolve it?


A Vision Forged in the Fire of Combat

The DPCW was not born from abstract, ivory-tower ideals. Its roots are found in the harrowing firsthand experiences of HWPL Chairman Man-hee Lee, who served as a student soldier during the devastation of the Korean War.


Haunted by the sight of lost lives, Lee founded Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL) with a singular, burning conviction: the cycle of sending young people to the battlefield must end with this generation. This mission reached a turning point in September 2014 at the HWPL World Peace Summit in Seoul. There, nearly 2,000 participants from 152 countries reached a consensus that the world needed more than just a reaction to conflict; it needed a way to institutionalize peace.









The Blueprint: 10 Articles and 38 Clauses

To turn this vision into a legal reality, HWPL launched the International Law Peace Committee (ILPC) in 2015, a brain trust of global legal experts. Their work culminated on 14 March 2016 with the proclamation of the DPCW.


The DPCW does not seek to dismantle the existing legal order. Instead, it clarifies and strengthens it through:



Defining Standards: It sets clear rules on the use of force and procedures for peaceful resolution.



Total Inclusion: It incorporates the vital roles of religion and civil society into the framework of global security.



Structural Change: It moves humanity beyond an order that presupposes war as a valid tool for conflict resolution.


"The question raised by the DPCW is simple: even if conflicts exist, must they necessarily result in war?" 


A Global Groundswell

In the decade since its proclamation, the DPCW has moved from a bold proposal to a massive global movement. It is no longer just the talk of diplomats; it is the demand of the people.


Level of Support Impact and Reach

Regional Parliaments

Endorsements from the Pan-African Parliament (PAP), PARLACEN, and Parlatino.


Civil Society

Approximately 900,000 signatures collected across 178 countries.


Institutional Progress

Ten years of building the social and institutional foundations for a new international norm.


The Path Ahead: Legacy or Declaration?

Despite this momentum, the world remains a complex stage of power politics and entrenched interests. The transformation the DPCW envisions is still unfolding. We stand at a crossroads: will we continue a path where war is the ultimate arbiter, or will we choose to structure and institutionalize peace?


The past ten years have proven that a vision of a world without war is possible. The challenge for the next decade is to ensure these standards operate within the actual international order, leaving a legacy of safety for future generations.



The choice, ultimately, belongs to us.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

𝐊𝐖𝐅 𝐚𝐭 𝐓𝐒𝐔, 𝐥𝐮𝐦𝐚𝐠𝐝𝐚 𝐧𝐠 𝐌𝐎𝐔



Wazzup Pilipinas!? 






Pormal nang nilagdaan ng Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino (KWF) at Tarlac State University (TSU) ang Memorandum ng Unawaan (MOU) noong 4 Marso 2026, sa Bulwagang Romualdez ng KWF.

Layunin ng MOU na paigtingin ang kolaborasyon sa pagpapaunlad, pagpapalaganap, at preserbasyon ng wikang Filipino at iba pang mga wika ng bansa, partikular na sa loob ng akademikong komunidad.



Binuksan ang programa sa isang bating pagtanggap mula kay Fultaym Komisyoner Benjamin M. Mendillo, Jr., ang kinatawan sa Wikang Ilokano ng KWF.






Nagbigay ng mensahe si Tagapangulo Atty. Marites A. Barrios-Taran ng KWF ukol sa kritikal na kalagayan ng wikang Abëllën, na batay sa datos ng KWF sa Sigla ng Wika, ang Abëllën ay kasalukuyang nasa Grado 4 o "Di-ligtas" (Unsafe).



Ipinaliwanag ni Barrios-Taran na bagaman ginagamit pa ang wika ng ilang bata sa lahat ng domeyn, ang kabataan ay gumagamit na lamang nito sa mga limitadong pagkakataon. Sa ilalim ng Salik 3 (Proporsiyon ng mga Ispiker), ang wika ay nasa antas na "Tiyak na Nanganganib" (Definitively Endangered).



"Ang liit ng bilang ng mga ispiker kompara sa kabuoang populasyon ay isang malakas na hudyat na kailangan natin ng mabilis na aksiyon. Ang ating paglalagda sa MOU na ito ay hindi lamang pormalidad, ito ay isang pagsagip sa isang nanganganib na kultura," dagdag pa niya.

Ipinahayag naman ni Dr. Erwin P. Lacanlale ang kahandaan ng Tarlac State University na isulong ang mga probisyon ng MOU at isabuhay ang pagpapahalaga sa pambansang wika sa kanilang kampus.



Nagtapos ang programa sa pangwakas na mensahe ni Fultaym Komisyoner Carmelita C. Abdurahman, Kinatawan ng Wikang Samar-Leyte. Hinikayat niya ang parehong panig na huwag hayaang manatili lamang sa papel ang lagdaan, kundi magbunga ito ng mga kongkretong aksiyon at proyekto para sa kapakanan ng mga mag-aaral at ng sambayanang Pilipino.

Marcos admin brings YAKAP at Kalinga health caravan to schools nationwide


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MAKATI CITY, 18 March 2026 — Spearheaded by President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr., the Department of Education (DepEd) recently conducted the Yaman ng Kalusugan Program (YAKAP) at Kalinga Caravan at Marcelo B. Fernan-Polambato Elementary School in Bogo City to bring essential medical services directly to learners, teachers and the school community.

The initiative, a joint project of the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) and DepEd, aims to link schools with the local healthcare system for better accessibility to preventive care and diagnostic services. 





During the latest YAKAP at Kalinga mission, some 200 beneficiaries received free medical consultations and laboratory tests.

The President, together with First Lady Louise Araneta-Marcos and Education Secretary Sonny Angara, also witnessed the distribution of reading glasses and essential medicines.

Along with medical services, President Marcos also inspected the new disaster-resilient Learning Continuity Spaces (LCS) at Marcelo B. Fernan-Polambato Elementary School as part of the larger effort to ensure uninterrupted education following the 6.9-magnitude Cebu earthquake last September.

The program is set to expand its reach to Bataan, with a dedicated caravan scheduled to bring these vital health interventions to the students and faculty of Mariveles National High School-Cabcaben Annex Alasasin.

Secretary Angara said the YAKAP at Kalinga Caravan is a cornerstone of the agency’s reform agenda to prioritize learner wellness.

"This project reflects the marching orders of President Marcos to ensure that no Filipino learner is left behind, even in the face of the most challenging health and environmental calamities," Angara said.

The YAKAP at Kalinga Caravan for schools aims to make preventive care accessible within the campus to reduce out-of-pocket expenses for learners and teachers.

President Marcos and Secretary Angara have led several of these missions in several school locations across the country, recently in Minuyan Elementary School in San Jose del Monte, Bulacan and in San Francisco High School in Quezon City, to ensure primary healthcare reaches the most remote teaching communities.

DepEd remains committed to expanding these caravans nationwide to institutionalize comprehensive school-based health services.
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