Dr. Bjorn S. Santos welcomed as 7th De La Salle Araneta University President

The university welcomed Dr. Bjorn S. Santos as its seventh De La Salle Araneta University President last October 4. Dr. Santos concurrently serves as the university’s Vice Chancellor for Academics and Research (VCAR), and Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine and Agricultural Sciences, among others. 

Dr. Bjorn finished his bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Engineering from the University of the Philippines – Los Baños (UPLB) in Laguna. He went on to take both his master’s and doctorate degrees in Biological and Agricultural Engineering at the Texas A&M University – College Station in Texas, USA, with a specialization in power and machinery, and renewable energy.

Dr. Santos started his career in the academe as a full-time instructor at De La Salle University – Canlubang in Laguna, where he handled courses in Trigonometry, Engineering Graphics, Strength of Materials, Materials of Engineering, and Introduction to Environmental Engineering. From 2008 - 2013, he was a graduate research/teaching assistant at the Texas A&M University – College Station’s Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering. In 2014, he also had a brief teaching stint at the Department of Biology in De La Salle University before he went to the university to assume the VCAR post.

With his educational background and extensive experience as an administrator, Dr. Santos was elected by the Board of Trustees as University President after a candidate search which started as early as December 2015.

Dr. Santos is a member of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, and one of the founding officers of the UPLB Alumni Association Texas Chapter. He successfully passed the 2004 Professional Agricultural Engineering Licensure Examination, placing second.

DLSP Statement on the Supreme Court Decision on the Marcos' Burial

Never Forget!

 

There can be no moving on without an accounting of the past, no forgiveness without remorse and apology. There can be no justice without accountability. There can be no justice with impunity.

We are thus deeply despondent over the Supreme Court’s (SC) failure to stand on what is just by affirming Ferdinand Marcos’ planned burial at the Libingan ng mga Bayani (LNMB). The Court, on the petition against the President's order for the burial of Marcos' remains in the LNMB, has sadly chosen to err on the side of technicality rather than that of history.

Marcos is not a hero. He was an oppressive ruler and a dictator. The empowering experience and triumph of all freedom-loving Filipinos over authoritarianism through People Power 1 in February 1986 is a clear rejection of the Marcos regime.  He remains answerable for many counts of atrocities and human rights violations as well as ill-gotten wealth. 

The SC decision, an ominous development, reflects the weakness of our democracy to exact accountability from leaders who abused and are abusing their power. Unfortunately, after EDSA People Power 1, the task of deepening and consolidating our democracy by strengthening our institutions, including the courts, has not been assiduously pursued. The same weakness has now been taken advantage of by the Marcos family.

This challenges our schools all the more, to help clarify for and with younger generations and those who engage us, the lessons borne out of a scrupulous study of history, citizenship, accountability, and good governance. 

We therefore call on all our Lasallian teachers and partners to strengthen all their educational and community engagement efforts and programs towards a deepening of our people's appreciation for democracy and human rights.  Let us join with like-minded groups to create more robust advocacy on these issues.

Let us oppose every effort to distort our nation’s story.  We shall endeavor to re-tell our story so that we remain true to the values we have fought for and for which many have given up their lives.  The oppressiveness of Marcos’ Martial Law must not be forgotten.  

 

NEVER AGAIN!

 

 

Br. Jose Mari L. Jimenez FSC

President, De La Salle Philippines (DLSP)

10 November 2016

Pastoral Letter from the President of De La Salle Philippines

ENGAGING CIVIL AUTHORITIES IN BUILDING AN INCLUSIVE & LIFE-GIVING SOCIETY: A CALL FOR LASALLIANS TO MAKE A STAND AGAINST THE CULTURE OF DEATH

 

Dear Lasallians,

As a Catholic and a Filipino, I am deeply disturbed by the spate of killings that have attended this administration's pronouncements regarding its anti-crime and illegal-drugs campaign. Media reports indicate that from 10 May to 15 July 2016, cases of drug and crime-related killings have risen to 408* casualties and continue to rise. While these figures are alarming in themselves, what troubles me even more as an educator is the absence of a significant public outcry against the blatant contempt for the human life and the rule of law that these extra-judicial killings represent.

This disregard for the inalienable value of human life and the public silence that gives tacit support for such disregard does not bode well for the vision of a just and humane society enshrined in our Constitution. What these extrajudicial killings demonstrate is how desperate many people have become in the face of the issues of drugs and criminality.  The approval of so-called solutions that deny the sanctity of human life and respect for each person's right to due process amounts to a crisis of faith in the possibility of governing our nation by reason and the rule of law. These lethal acts and the attitudes that ground them undermine the fundamental respect for human dignity and the obligations of human solidarity which are the foundation of social life. We need to remind everyone that if we want a just and peaceful society, our means must partake of our ends.  You cannot build a culture that respects life while relying principally on the instruments of death.

It is appropriate to recall here the much publicized pronouncement of Pope Francis on 21 February 2016 when he called for the abolition of the death penalty. “The commandment ‘You shall not kill’ has absolute value and applies to both the innocent and the guilty.... It must not be forgotten that the inviolable and God-given right to life also belongs to the criminal." Behind these prophetic words is the vision of a God who refuses to give up on anyone, a God whose mercy embraces all without distinction. As Christians and Catholics, we give witness to the truth about God when we defend the right to life as unconditional. We give witness to the mercy we have received in Christ when we seek to rehabilitate rather than execute wrongdoers.

Furthermore, it is a mistake to believe that we can create a peaceful society by denying those suspected of wrongdoing their fundamental rights to life and to due legal process. The doctrine of the common good rejects any notion that the good of the majority may be attained by violating the fundamental rights of any member of society. It is a mistake to think the respect for the dignity of each individual and the pursuit of the common good are in competition or opposed to one another; indeed protecting and promoting the rights and welfare of each individual is constitutive of the common good. What is needed to create a better society is that all cooperate in insuring the promotion of each one's dignity, rights and responsibilities without exception (Solicitude Rei Socialis 1980).

Thus, while we resonate with our government's desire to address in a resolute way the problems of crime, drug-addiction and corruption, we need to insure that this is done within the framework of the law and the principles of human dignity and the common good enshrined in both our Constitution and in Catholic Social Teaching. To this end, our schools should critically engage civil authorities to insure that effective solutions to these social ills be pursued in the just and right way.

I urge our Lasallian educational communities - Brothers, faculty, students, personnel parents and alumni - to take up this urgent task. We need to engage civil authorities, not as adversaries, but as partners in building communities that reflect the values of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality and peace enshrined in our Constitution. In our various educational spaces, let us teach young people to reflect critically and equip them with the values and skills they need to help create a society that upholds human dignity, solidarity and the common good. Let us embed these three principles in our own school cultures, in our curricula, indeed in the understanding of the professions we educate our students towards. Furthermore, let us use the resources and influence of our schools to help create more life-giving conditions for those disadvantaged communities within our reach where often, the young and the poor become vulnerable to the machinations of corrupt and criminal elements.

Let us not allow violence to rule us but in every circumstance be vigilant and zealous in upholding the dignity and rights of all as befits responsible citizens and followers of Christ. 

Fraternally,

Br. Jose Mari Jimenez FSC
President, De La Salle Philippines
Auxiliary Visitor, De La Salle Brothers – Philippines

21 July 2016

*Based on ABS-CBN count on drug related killings

LA SALLE BOTANICAL GARDENS PROJECT

De La Salle Philippines, through the Lasallian Institute for the Environment (LIFE) proposes to build the La Salle Botanical Gardens.

Global climate change, floods, landslides, loss of forest cover, coral reef destruction, biodiversity imbalances—all these problems can be traced to the lack of fundamental awareness and appreciation of how our environment works and sustains life. In line with its vision of being good stewards of God’s creation, the aspiration to build the Botanical Gardens is La Salle’s response to the pressing environmental and ecological challenges confronting the nation today.

The goal of this project is to provide a platform for understanding the problems and identifying potential solutions for the environment through education, scientific research, plant conservation and public participation.

Objectives:

The Botanical Gardens is being envisioned as the platform by which the research, education and awareness goals can be achieved. It is designed to provide the following:

• a laboratory for scientific research
• a garden for plant conservation
• a means of increasing public awareness, education and appreciation
• a venue for public recreation

It will be of world-class quality, among the top in the world. It is the goal of the project to be recognised and accredited by various international botanical and environmental associations.

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LjKihx_YyGA&w=854&h=480]

DE LA SALLE ARANETA UNIVERSITY'S NATIONAL ANTI-RABIES VACCINATION CAMPAIGN

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In support of the World Rabies Day, the university launched a National Anti-Rabies Vaccination campaign on September 27. The campaign, made possible in partnership with the DLSAU’s Veterinary Clinicians Society and in collaboration with ten confirmed DLS schools, was conducted in coordination with Bureau of Animal Industry – Animal Health and Welfare Division, and Provincial and City Veterinaries.

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Lasallian Mission Annual Project 2015 - Favorite Teacher

For this year's Lasallian Mission Annual Project we asked some of the Brothers to tell us about their favorite teacher.

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJgip-kSpCE&w=854&h=480]

To learn more about the Lasallian Mission Annual Projejct, you may contact us at +632 721 2000 loc 603, look for Marivic or Claudeth or email us at advancement@delasalle.ph

Letter from Br. Superior on the International Lasallian Days of Peace

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21 September 2015

 

Dear Young Lasallians

As the International Council of Young Lasallians launches its annual initiative on September 21st for its Days for Peace enjoining the worldwide Lasallian community to pray for peace in our world and peace in our hearts, peace continues to elude our fragile planet.

The war in Syria, terrorism, and the strife of civil conflicts in various countries around the world has created today’s migration crisis causing untold suffering to millions of our brothers and sisters.  These must be the focus of our prayer and the focus of our action this year.

A Gospel Adventure is the theme for our global Lasallian Family in 2015 – 2016.  The Gospel passage inspiring our theme is the parable of the Good Samaritan. A man going from Jerusalem to Jericho is attacked by robbers who strip him and beat him. A priest and a Levite pass by without helping him. But a Samaritan, a foreigner, stops and cares for him, taking him to an Inn where the Samaritan pays for his care.

The General Council and I invite all Lasallians to re-read this parable in the light of our personal and collective responsibility to respond to the poor in our midst and the migrants on our borders.  This is a journey that requires us to embrace their condition with mercy and compassion. This is a journey of understanding of what it means to be human amidst a world that is increasingly indifferent at best and hostile at worst to the poor, the widow, the orphan and the stranger in our midst.

Locally, Lasallians, including you young Lasallians, are responding with mercy and compassion.  I encourage you to become familiar with and support any initiatives in your District.  Create your own as well.  Above all, align yourself with groups advocating for peace and for support of migrants.  Challenge the political leaders of our nations to treat all people with dignity and build instruments of peace, not war.

As Pope Francis quotes in his encyclical Laudato Si, “Let our time be remembered for the awakening of a new reverence for life, the firm resolve to achieve sustainability, the quickening of the struggle for justice and peace, and the joyful celebration of life.”

Sincerely in Saint La Salle,

 

Brother Robert Schieler, FSC
Superior General

Shake Drill

In line with our Disaster Risk Reduction and Management and Emergency Preparedness initiatives under Facilities and Environmental Program Management (FEPM), we call on our Lasallian Family to continue to build a culture of safety, preparedness and resilience in our schools and communities. 

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De La Salle Philippines' passing rate in the Licensure Examination for Teachers (March 2015)

100% passing rate for first time takers in the Licensure Examination for Teachers last March 2015.

Elementary Level:
De La Salle John Bosco College
De La Salle University
University of Saint La Salle

Secondary Level:
De La Salle John Bosco College
De La Salle University
La Salle College Antipolo

Passing rate (all DLSP schools) for first time takers for both levels is 85% (204/241 takers)

 

Lupang Hinirang Featuring De La Salle Philippines

Benilde presents the DLSP National Anthem video featuring the 16 De La Salle schools in the country.

This is De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde's gift to De La Salle Philippines in celebration of our 25th Jubilee.

Lupang Hinirang sung by Coro San Benildo.

Produced by the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde-Center for Institutional Communications (Benilde-CIC).

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IE6z7R--Ck0&w=854&h=480]

De La Salle Alma Mater Hymn

The De La Salle Alma Mater Hymn video highlights campus landmarks of all 16 DLSP schools in the country.

This is De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde's gift to De La Salle Philippines in celebration of our 25th Jubilee.

Alma Mater Hymn sung by DLSU Chorale.

Produced by the De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde-Center for Institutional Communications (Benilde-CIC)

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nPuDjWDc-8&w=854&h=480]

De La Salle Philippines Statement on the Mamasapano Incident

We invite all Lasallians to reflect on the encounter in Mamasapano, Maguindanao that resulted to the violent and senseless loss of human life. We share with you this statement of concern and commitment in the hope that it will deepen our conviction as educators to be in solidarity with our fellow Filipinos. May we make our own their anguish and their hopes for a lasting and sustainable peace.

THE CONTINUING PURSUIT OF PEACE IN MINDANAO:
IN SOLIDARITY WITH YOUNG PEOPLE RENDERED VULNERABLE BY SITUATIONS OF CONFLICT

     De La Salle Philippines (DLSP) grieves with the nation over the loss of lives in a bloody encounter last January 25, 2015 in Mamasapano, Mindanao.  We mourn with the families of all those who were killed -- the forty-four members of the Special Action Force (SAF) of the Philippine National Police (PNP), the eighteen combatants from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), and the four civilian casualties, among whom was an eight-year old child.  

     As Lasallians, we support the calls for an impartial investigation so that we may know the facts behind the Mamasapano incident and set aright our relationship with those wounded and aggrieved by selfishness, mistrust or fear.

    The Mamasapano incident aggravates a situation of fear and poverty.  Decades of armed-conflict have heavily affected the well-being of the people of Mindanao, with children being the most vulnerable to suffering.  Whenever there are military or police encounters with rebel groups, communities are forced to evacuate to ‘safer’ places.  Such displacement takes a heavy toll on our children and those who are physically weak.  

     After the clash at Mamasapano, some 6,620 people were displaced and classes in thirteen nearby public elementary schools were suspended (UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs). This adds to the thousands of people, who until now, have not been re-settled after the so-called Zamboanga siege in October 2013. An unseen collateral damage in all these is the healthy growth of our children and young who cannot develop fully in an environment of fear and instability.

     Educating children, particularly of the poor -- instilling appropriate values and equipping them with relevant tools and skills so that they can be responsive and responsible citizens -- is primary in our mission as a network of Lasallian schools. We thus pray for a more conducive environment where Mindanao’s children can attend school, learn, and play without tension or fear.

     Amidst fears that the Mamasapano incident could derail the peace process, the Lasallian community stands firm that the peace process should in fact continue.  We are in solidartiy with our countrymen who are committed to the vigorous pursuit of lasting peace in Southern Philippines.  Even as investigations on the Mamasapano clash proceed, we ask both government and the MILF leadership to continue with the peace process; and for Congress to pass the needed legislation to enable the diverse groups in Mindanao to be heard, have their rights to develop acknowledged within the framework of our Constitution and live in peace. 

     As Lasallians, we will continue with our vigil and prayers for the families of the casualties and all the people who were affected. We shall also educate ourselves further on the peace process and on the complexities of the proposed Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL).   

     Lastly, we ask our people to act with sobriety and discernment as we grieve the lives that were lost and as we hurdle the challenge of restoring to wholeness the lives of those who have been displaced.  In these times we believe that what is asked of us as citizens is to reflect on the needs of our nation and to give shape to our collective aspiration in the name of the young and vulnerable people who can only discover their better selves in an atmosphere of peace and mutual acceptance.

_______

February 10, 2015

Br. Jose Mari Jimenez FSC
President, De La Salle Philippines (DLSP)