Manila's Urban Poor Situation

In the Claws of a Century Wanting is set in the historical port district of Tondo, Manila—one of the most densely populated places in the Philippines and the world. With the Manila North Harbor, International Container Terminal, and the Divisoria Market at its heart, Tondo welcomes at its ports thousands upon thousands of peasants and workers migrating from the underdeveloped countryside, who look to find in the vicinity their first jobs in the capital city.

 

In the gaps and seams of the international port, generations of migrants make do with makeshift housing and precarious living conditions, for as long as they have accessible livelihood while hoping for better chances that often never come. Collectively, they belong to the larger urban poor sector of the Philippines—comprising upwards of forty percent of the country’s urban population—holding on to similar hopes and facing interconnected predicaments.

 

Like in some of the older urban poor communities in Metro Manila, waves of evictions and demolitions have marked the history of Tondo communities from as early as the post-war period. People’s settlements have perennially been pitted against urban development, city beautification, and in recent years, port expansion and the rehabilitation of the bay area and waterways. Consequently, mass resistance and labor movements have braved against the government and big business-driven policies that seem to see the poor as obstructions for development. But consistently unheard are what people have been demanding for decades—employment, better living and working conditions, adequate housing, and welfare.

Manila's Urban Poor Situation

In the Claws of a Century Wanting is set in the historical port district of Tondo, Manila—one of the most densely populated places in the Philippines and the world. With the Manila North Harbor, International Container Terminal, and the Divisoria Market at its heart, Tondo welcomes at its ports thousands upon thousands of peasants and workers migrating from the underdeveloped countryside, who look to find in the vicinity their first jobs in the capital city.

 

In the gaps and seams of the international port, generations of migrants make do with makeshift housing and precarious living conditions, for as long as they have accessible livelihood while hoping for better chances that often never come. Collectively, they belong to the larger urban poor sector of the Philippines—comprising upwards of forty percent of the country’s urban population—holding on to similar hopes and facing interconnected predicaments.

 

Like in some of the older urban poor communities in Metro Manila, waves of evictions and demolitions have marked the history of Tondo communities from as early as the post-war period. People’s settlements have perennially been pitted against urban development, city beautification, and in recent years, port expansion and the rehabilitation of the bay area and waterways. Consequently, mass resistance and labor movements have braved against the government and big business-driven policies that seem to see the poor as obstructions for development. But consistently unheard are what people have been demanding for decades—employment, better living and working conditions, adequate housing, and welfare.

In the 2010s, the government implemented some of the most determined efforts to clear vast areas of Tondo’s waterfront following the privatization and expansion of the port industry. The film witnessed old conditions unfolding under new contexts and within the backdrop of an increasingly liberal international trade. 

 

The port of Tondo became a vein in a new global economic flow, where rules are determined elsewhere under new orders of supremacy. With the same forces changing urban landscapes in the Philippines, systemic imbalances have been aggravated, where vulnerable people remain the most affected by distinct but related issues—urban development and land use, housing crisis, inadequate social services, widening inequality, displacement, and violations of human rights.

 

The same contexts that outline the complexity of poor communities in Tondo forebode what is to come. Yet, survival being their driving force, people who live under these oppressive conditions plod on, asserting their right to live both in organized resistance and their adaptive ways of living. The film is a window into these lives, and on how these communities navigate the systems that are seemingly built against their existence.

Be Informed

Learn more about the Philippine urban poor situation and the country’s worsening housing crisis:

“Slums and squatter communities, existing side by side with urban modernity, serve as a  constant reminder of the severe inequalities that characterize the urban system.”

Urban Poor Data and Analysis Vol. 1 No. 1 by the Urban Poor Resource Center

Urban Poor Data and Analysis Vol. 2 No. 1 by the Urban Poor Resource Center

 

Urban Poor Resource Center

 

IBON Foundation

 

Be Informed

UP CIDS Policy Brief 2019-1

Chester Antonino C. Arcilla

 

Social Transformations: Journal of the Global South

Chester Antonino C. Arcilla

Ethnographies of Development and Globalization in the Philippines:

Emergent Socialities and the Governing of Precarity

Chester Antonino C. Arcilla

 

IBON Foundation

 

Support the urban poor movement in the Philippines

Trailer

SYNOPSIS
Four families live in the seams of Manila's busiest international port. They are migrants from the Philippine countryside who have ended up among the bottom quarter of Manila's population. In the hours of their ordinary days, they hear and see, the wealth of different nations packed as cargo, passing them by, leaving and entering Manila's shores. Anne gives birth to her third child. Akira learns reading and writing while foraging for scrap metal and coal. Eddie entertains himself to sleep with a broken TV before another nightshift work as a stevedore in the port. Emelita prays over the funeral of her husband. Around them and their days, the port is slowly expanding. Anne’s midwife, Paning, brings the news. In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a filmic symphony depicting the increasing everyday violence in the aspiration for a city fit for globalization. It captures a global process from the perspective of everyday life. In the everyday of four small homes, the film traces imprints of the larger world.
About the Director
Jewel Maranan is a documentary filmmaker, producer and cinematographer whose creative documentaries explore how history inches through ordinary life. Her directing and producing works, crafted in this pursuit, have been screened and awarded in international film festivals and art events–Tondo, Beloved (Philippines, 2011), In the Claws of a Century Wanting (Philippines, 2017), The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil (Vietnam, Philippines, 2018), and The Silhouettes (Iran, Philippines, 2020). Aside from her filmmaking, she organized pioneering cinema initiatives in the Philippines such as the Daang Dokyu Film Festival, Nation in Visions Film Festival and the Alternative Cinema Initiatives Conference. She is the founder and manager of Cinema Is Incomplete, an alternative film center with projects in the Philippines and the Asian region, and is the co-founder of the newly established Filipino Documentary Society. Her films and initiatives have received support from Sundance, Visions sud est, Asian Network of Documentary, Ford Foundation, Doha Film Institute, Purin Foundation, Movies That Matter and IDFA Bertha Fund, among others. She graduated from the University of the Philippines Film Institute and DocNomads Joint European Masters in Lisbon, Budapest and Brussels. She is also an alumna of the Berlinale Talents DocStation and Doha Film Institute’s Qumra and teaches as a senior lecturer at the University of the Philippines Film Institute.
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SYNOPSIS
Four families live in the seams of Manila's busiest international port. They are migrants from the Philippine countryside who have ended up among the bottom quarter of Manila's population. In the hours of their ordinary days, they hear and see, the wealth of different nations packed as cargo, passing them by, leaving and entering Manila's shores. Anne gives birth to her third child. Akira learns reading and writing while foraging for scrap metal and coal. Eddie entertains himself to sleep with a broken TV before another nightshift work as a stevedore in the port. Emelita prays over the funeral of her husband. Around them and their days, the port is slowly expanding. Anne’s midwife, Paning, brings the news. In the Claws of a Century Wanting is a filmic symphony depicting the increasing everyday violence in the aspiration for a city fit for globalization. It captures a global process from the perspective of everyday life. In the everyday of four small homes, the film traces imprints of the larger world.
About the Director
Jewel Maranan is a documentary filmmaker, producer and cinematographer whose creative documentaries explore how history inches through ordinary life. Her directing and producing works, crafted in this pursuit, have been screened and awarded in international film festivals and art events–Tondo, Beloved (Philippines, 2011), In the Claws of a Century Wanting (Philippines, 2017), The Future Cries Beneath Our Soil (Vietnam, Philippines, 2018), and The Silhouettes (Iran, Philippines, 2020). Aside from her filmmaking, she organized pioneering cinema initiatives in the Philippines such as the Daang Dokyu Film Festival, Nation in Visions Film Festival and the Alternative Cinema Initiatives Conference. She is the founder and manager of Cinema Is Incomplete, an alternative film center with projects in the Philippines and the Asian region, and is the co-founder of the newly established Filipino Documentary Society. Her films and initiatives have received support from Sundance, Visions sud est, Asian Network of Documentary, Ford Foundation, Doha Film Institute, Purin Foundation, Movies That Matter and IDFA Bertha Fund, among others. She graduated from the University of the Philippines Film Institute and DocNomads Joint European Masters in Lisbon, Budapest and Brussels. She is also an alumna of the Berlinale Talents DocStation and Doha Film Institute’s Qumra and teaches as a senior lecturer at the University of the Philippines Film Institute.
Slide 2 Heading
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Previous
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