Established as a government housing project by the National Housing Authority (NHA) in the 1970s, Maharlika village has become a favoured destination in the capital for Muslims fleeing the conflict.
"My family came to Manila to escape war in Maguindanao [province]. Here in Maharlika Village, we are among fellow Muslims," Al-hesam Ebrahim, 19, told IRIN.
Ebrahim's parents fled Mindanao years ago. A student of architectural engineering and technology at the Technology University of the Philippines, Ebrahim says, "Years from now, I want to be famous for building houses, bridges and buildings."
But Ebrahim also dreams of returning to Mindanao where many of his relatives remain, their lives marked by constant displacement and uncertainty.
"I want to help build roads and schools there [in Mindanao]. My life is so different - and so much better - compared to my cousins' lives there who are the same age.
"I have cousins who are 17 years old, but only in grade 6. They had to stop studying because their schools were used as evacuation centres. Others have families already, which I think curtails their chances of improvement. My father, for example, was able to leave Maguindanao to come to Manila, but his sisters could not because they already had children to look after."
Photo: Jason Gutierrez/IRIN |
A Muslim mother and her child await for aid at an evacuation camp in the town of Talayan, Mindanao |
Mineral-rich Mindanao has been plagued by armed conflict for almost four decades. The fight for self-determination led by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) broke out in renewed hostilities in August 2008 when a memorandum that would have given the MILF control over land claimed to be its ancestral domain was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
Nearly 400 people were killed and 700,000 people displaced.
More than 17 months on, the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) says an estimated 126,225 people, mostly in the municipalities of Datu Piang, Mamasapano, and Datu Saudi remain internally displaced.
"Many areas have been declared safe to return by the military, but many IDPs chose to remain in the evacuation centres or with friends and relatives out of fear," Datukan Mokamad, Welfare Assistant, DSWD Maguindanao.
The government has extended more than US$10 million in humanitarian assistance to Maguindanao.
From IDP to social worker
Growing up in the Liguasan wetland in Maguindanao, Aleem Siddiqu Guiapal started dodging bullets and mortar shells at the age of three.
"I was an IDP. My family lost a lot of their land and my mother lost her brother, who was a rebel," Guiapal told IRIN.
Photo: David Swanson/IRIN |
An increasing number of IDPs in Mindanao want the government to do more |
Now 32, he has decided to use his education to give back to his homeland. As project director of the Young Moro Professional Network (YMPN) - a group comprising some 200 Muslim scholars, students and professionals who use their skills to alleviate the plight of marginalized Muslim communities, Guiapal now calls himself a social worker.
Recently, the YMPN was able to raise $4,000 for a feeding and rehabilitation programme for the displaced in Maguindanao.
"We inspire other Muslim youth to be successful in their field and contribute to making a better Mindanao," says Guiapal. "We also act as a channel of information for employment and scholarships because of our network in Asia and the US. We help open doors."
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions