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This Museum Features Mementos of Typhoon Yolanda Survivors

Following a successful run in Tacloban City during the 10th-anniversary commemoration of Super Typhoon Yolanda (international name: Haiyan), the People’s Museum of Climate Justice opened its doors in Manila City as part of the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior shipโ€™s visit to the capital region.

The Peopleโ€™s Museum of Climate Justice pays homage to the stories of climate survivors through a poignant collection of objects of memory and art pieces that encapsulate their enduring memories of the climate crisis.

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Photo: Greenpeace Philippines

Organized by environmental non-profit organization Greenpeace Philippines, the exhibit is co-created and co-curated with climate-impacted communities from Tacloban, Bohol, Metro Manila, and other vulnerable regions in the Philippines. The exhibit features everyday tools, mementos, and significant items contributed by community members, each item a vessel of stories recounting their encounters with extreme weather events and the profound impact of climate change on their lives.

โ€œA museum is a bastion of memoryโ€”a collection of tangible and intangible artifacts that carry narratives and experiences of people, put forward to be immortalized,โ€ said Mark Simbajon, a Super Typhoon Yolanda survivor who contributed to the exhibit. โ€œFor us coming from communities at the receiving end of the impacts of the climate crisis, this is our physical concretisation of strengthโ€”strength that defines our truth, truth that refuses to be just sidelines of history.”

Raise for Habitatโ€™s John Emmanuel Tayo, a climate survivor from Catanduanes who experienced the wrath of Super Typhoon Rolly in 2020, is among the community members who contributed a memento to the exhibit. He shared, โ€œCatanduanes is far from economically advancing and achieving livelihood security as year after year, we are devastated by strong typhoons exacerbated by climate change. We are always prepared for typhoons, but if the scenario stays the same and super typhoons become the norm, we will not progress.โ€

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Photo: Greenpeace Philippines

Through its exhibit in Manila, the Peopleโ€™s Museum of Climate Justice aims to bring these abstract statistics into human focus. The museumโ€™s goal is to serve as a reminder of the environmental and social injustices that climate-vulnerable populations must navigate daily.

“The People’s Museum of Climate Justice is more than just an exhibit; it’s a platform that brings the realities of climate change experienced by the most marginalized communities around the country to the fore,โ€ said Greenpeace Philippines Campaigner Eunille Santos. โ€œEach object of memory on display is not just a remnant of climate disasters. Behind them are stories that show the strength of the Filipinos.โ€

Santos continued, โ€œPeople never forget, but people are also tired of always remembering. There needs to be something after remembering. This museum aims to show how remembering is not only recalling, it is doing something with that memory. In this case, it is collective climate action.โ€

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Photo: Greenpeace Philippines

Inspired by other collective memory initiatives such as the Museum of Memory Against Impunity in Nicaragua and the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Chile, the Peopleโ€™s Museum of Climate Justice will run from November 21 โ€“ 30, 2023, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM at the Remedios Jubilee Mission Center, Malate Catholic Church compound. Admission is free. Walk-ins are welcome but guests are encouraged to register online at act.gp/shiptour2023manila.

The Peopleโ€™s Museum of Climate Justice is part of Greenpeace Philippinesโ€™ 2023 Ship Tour. This yearโ€™s Ship Tour honors the courage and determination of Filipino communities that are standing up for justice in the face of devastating climate impacts. The Rainbow Warrior will carry their stories of hope beyond the Philippines to foster international solidarity for climate justice, demanding to make climate polluters pay.