I remember seeing pictures and footage of Doña Aurora Aquino cradling her son Ninoys bloodied body in the morgue of Fort Bonifacio. She looked like she was chanting a song of grief.
I lost a baby girl 13 years ago when she was but 22 weeks in my womb. I held her only once, all too briefly, in my arms, before she flew to heaven, but I still think of her.
Mothers never really get over the grief of burying their children. But mothers who have lost children can be happy again. They can and do move on.
Like KC, Miko died during the Christmas season, and therefore Gina and Ali have had to face a period of sorrow during a season of gaiety. They are finding strength in each other (When Gina saw Ali at KCs wake last year, they clung to each other for almost 15 minutes) and in the other women in their foundation.
"We are recharged by each others company. We feed on the hope that the other gives," Ali adds. They take comfort in sharing their painful experiences the "drowning" sensations, the feelings of guilt, the temptation to give up on life.
But another grieving mother can become a life raft for another grieving mother. In Ina Foundation, they are all helping each other stay afloat.
It was not an ordinary gathering. In fact, it was the second meeting for the organizers of Ina Foundation, composed of mothers bound by love for their children who have already passed away.
Inspired by Manay Ginas own struggle for survival after losing her youngest daughter KC, the foundation was established to provide psychological support to bereaved mothers through programs and projects aimed at helping them to move on from a place of grief to a place of hope, and empowering them to reach out to others.
Ali Sotto also served as a catalyst in co-founding this advocacy. She herself lost her beloved son, Miko, in an accident. Together with the other grieving mothers, they are translating their experiences by bringing mothers who have undergone the pain of losing a child to create a humanitarian synergy and provide a venue towards the emotional healing of all mothers, who have been deeply wounded by the untimely demise of their children.
Ina Foundation is slowly working its way to being a source of strength and inspiration to uproot mothers from the grief and yield them to continue living their lives through the support of concerned members. They also discussed the possibility of creating a nationwide network of grief counselors, with the help of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD). Mrs. De Venecia noted this need and cited as example the grief counselors in modern countries like the US who provide free counseling to surviving victims of tragedies, such as the 9-11.
During the meeting, they also shared their life testimonies and narrated their challenges and struggles through the difficult period of mourning. Learning from their brave testimonials, they are now helping other mothers who are hopeful to rebuild their lives.
The foundations incorporators are lawyer Lorna Kapunan, Jean Goulbourn, Kathy Guballa, Dingdong Liwanag, Bibi Yu and Baby Tiaoqui, with chairman Gina de Venecia, vice chairman Ali Sotto and treasurer Le Lagdameo. Social Welfare and Development Assistant Secretary Alice Bala and Dr. Ma. Lourdes Carandang, former director of Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology of Ateneo de Manila University, serve as advisers.
(For inquiries about Ina Foundation, please call 813-6257.)