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By Lambert Sagalla
"Aditako bokodan di gawis" = Let us share our blessings


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The Origins of
 SMSS Foundation of Sagada Inc.,[Philippines]; and SMSS  Alumni and Friends Foundation, [U. S. A.]
By Lambert Sagalla

St. Mary’s School, Sagada [SMSS],  was established by Rev. Fr. John Staunton in 1904 in the mountains of the Philippine island of Luzon, among "naked, head-hunting, trial-marriage savages," as one missionary called the local Igorot tribes[1].

Fr. Staunton, then 34 years old and Rector of St. Peter’s Church in Springfield, Massachussets, was among a number of American missionaries who leapt at the opportunity to do missionary work in the Philippines following President William Mckinley’s declaration that it was the United States manifest destiny  to take possession of the Philippine Islands  to “educate the Filipinos, and uplift and Christianize them”[2].  President McKinley supposedly told a Methodist congregation that he came to this decision after seeking divine guidance[3].  

While not a few would point out that it was really  the lobbying of  President Mckinley’s friends in the Sugar industry that prompted the United States to take possession of the Philippine Islands, the missionary works of Fr. Staunton and other American Missionaries have had profound influence in the lives of Igorots in Northern Philippines. Igorots have historically been referred to as  non-Christian Tribes,  cultural minorities or mountain dwellers of the Cordillera mountain ranges of Northern Philippines.

SMSS became a watershed of learning for education-thirsty Igorots.  Through St. Mary’s School, quite a number of Igorots  were able to educate themselves and accelerate their assimilation with mainstream Philippine society. Many found  gainful employment in the Philippines as well as overseas particularly in the United States, Europe, Canada and Australia.

With the help of American missionaries/educators,  SMSS built a reputation of not only dispensing academic excellence but also discipline to its students. In fact not a few parents [including  parents with military backgrounds] sent their spoiled brats to SMSS for the primary purpose of reforming them.  SMSS students  came as far as Mindanao as well as from Manila and Baguio City.

It, therefore, came as a shock to most  SMSS graduates to learn that their beloved alma mater had been experiencing extreme financial difficulties and the possibility of closing the school was being floated around by the Episcopal Diocese of Northern Philippines [EDNP], the administrators of the school.

Since 1990 when the Philippine Episcopal Church [PEC] gained autonomy from its mother church – The Episcopal Church of the United States of America [ECUSA] – school subsidy from the later dried up. This, together with economic stagnation in hinterland communities of Northern Luzon, which often are the last priorities of Philippine economic development programs, were cited as the key factors for the financial difficulties of the school.

The majority of Igorots and related people are still mired in poverty and could not afford the tuition fees and cost of living required to enter the better-staffed and better-equipped schools in urban communities of the Philippines. Closing SMSS can only exacerbate the difficulties of acquiring quality education for many indigent but gifted Igorot students.

Cognizant of the foregoing and the importance of SMSS in improving the educational, spiritual, social, economic and/or political well-being of their less fortunate brothers and sisters in the hinterlands of the Cordilleras, concerned SMS alumni and friends led by Frank Longid, SMSS Alumni President for 10 consecutive years, launched several initiatives to support the continued operations of the school.

These initiatives were mainly in the form of fund campaign, book campaign, scholarship campaign, material & services support campaign and the like. These were mainly effected by word-of-mouth, net-working with alumni and friends, periodic alumni homecomings, and an SMSS alumni and friends website: www.smssfoundation.com 

Through these efforts, fund donations and pledges were generated; scholarships were sponsored; second-hand books, magazines, computers were received; and paintings and repairs needed to comply with basic facilities requirements  by the Philippine Department of Education were done.

While these efforts somehow helped to keep the school functioning, it became evident that these were not enough to sustain a faculty and administrative staff required for the school to continue dispensing the same quality education and discipline that justified  its existence for nigh100 years.  

To exacerbate the situation, the financial woes of the Episcopal Diocese of Northern Philippines [EDNP] continued to deteriorate. Subsequently, EDNP announced that it will no longer be able to sustain operations of SMSS beyond year 2005.

Concerned SMSS alumni and friends opposed any plan to close the school, with Frank Longid orchestrating the opposition. Frank Longid, who contributed so much of his personal fortune and time to SMSS, was able to convince the majority of alumni and friends as well as EDNP that a better option to closing the school was for the Diocese to turn over administration of the school to the Alumni Association. His plans for saving the school included incorporating SMSS as a foundation to encourage tax-deductible donations, grants and aids from individuals as well as corporate donors.

With EDNP's blessings, Frank Longid initiated: 1) the drafting of a memorandum of agreement effecting  transfer of school administration to the proposed foundation; and 2) preparation of the  foundation incorporation papers. Unfortunately, before the foundation was organized, Frank Longid died in June 2003.

The responsibility of organizing and registering the foundation and eventually heading it was graciously assumed by Engr. Rufino Bomasang who was prevailed upon by alumni and friends to take over the leadership of efforts to save SMSS from closing.

Subsequently, the school was incorporated as "SMS Foundation of Sagada, Inc." under the laws of the Republic of the Philippines on September 2003.

Following their Philippine counterparts, concerned U. S. based alumni and friends of St. Mary’s School, Sagada, gathered in July 5, 2003 at the Episcopal Church of  St. Lukes and All Saints in Union, New Jersey, to likewise consider their options at effectively helping their alma mater. The consensus arrived at was to incorporate  an SMSS Alumni and Friends Foundation  to serve as the springboard for generating contributions, donations, aids and grants from individual and corporate donors in countries outside the Philippines particularly the U. S. A..

Consequently, concerned SMSS alumni and Friends in the U. S.A.,  organized themselves as a public charity foundation and obtained  approval as  A Tax Exempt Organization under section 501 (c) of the U. S. Internal Revenue Code effective May 4, 2004.

As such, donations /contributions to SMSS Alumni and Friends Foundation are tax deductible under section 170 of the Code.  Likewise, bequests, devises, transfers or gifts made to SMSS Alumni and Friends Foundation are also entitled to tax deductions under section 2055, 2106 or 2522 of the Code.

It is the fervent hope of St. Mary's  Alumni and Friends that with the tax exempt status of their organization in the U. S. A., individuals as well as corporate donors will be encouraged to donate/contribute to the humanitarian effort of saving SMSS.

These U. S. based Alumni and Friends of St. Mary’s School [unlike President Mckinley] sincerely believe that it is their manifest destiny to support, in whatever way they can, their less fortunate brothers and sisters in the hinterlands of the Philippines Cordilleras.

Lambert Sagalla


[1] Steven Roberts,  “John Staunton and the Sagada Mission: An American Missionary in the Philippines Cordillera”, [http://64.17.141.29/by_steven_rogers.htm].
[2]ibid.
[3]iIbid.

 P. S.: Pictures provided by Edwin Abeya, Ernest Killip and Joe Toctocan - Thank you.


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