Gina Quotes
Gina Quotes
Gina Quotes
“Because we’re so colonizedand we think we’re small but if you feel smallyou will think small you
will dream smallyou will do smallwe are not small we should feel we could fly.
“If all of us make an effort, if all of us make a commitment to love God, love our neighbor, take care
of the environment, Our country doesn’t have to be a poor country,”
“God exists. He does, he does, whether you believe it or not. He does exist,’’
“And if you can go into the quiet of your heart, you will feel that love is with you every single micro-
second of the day, like every single micro-second of your existence. That love is there for you and it
is here for you unconditionally. And may it continue to hold us, and may it continue to nurture us
and propel us into creating a piece of heaven in this country.”
"What I do is I follow my heart and right now, my heart wants to do this,"
“I was constantly looking for money to survive and take care of the children I was responsible for,”
“In areas where I’ve cleaned up the creeks and made the place more beautiful, 97 percent of the
people have more peace of mind, 97 percent of people are happier,”
. “When you’re stressed, you go to a place which is beautiful and healing and peaceful.”
"A good way to have new beginnings is to move from one phase to the next in grace. Bring closure.
Smooth out the rough edges. It feels so much better,"
“Any kind of mining operation in a watershed, that’s like saying that the gold and the nickel are more
important than the water that our people drink,”
“I’m going to do the right thing and let the dice fall where it may. And I am going to hope that maybe
these politicians, even if they’re funded by mining money, must have love for God and country in
their hearts,”
“I got really popular [when I was] rejected from DENR, so I’m riding on a crest and I’m
maneuvering all the support into building green models on the ground,”
“One of the biggest mistakes of humanity is to foolishly think we are these physical bodies and life
ends when this physical body deteriorates,” she added. “The truth is that we are spirit. Living now
gives us the opportunity to 'hone' our spirit so that it is more aligned with higher forces of truth and
light.”
“She talks of how she felt when she left her body. Heaven is so nice. She didn’t want to come back.
So, there is life after ‘death,’ Lopez said. “But while we are in this body, let’s be healthy, and
contribute in whatever way we can to a world that runs on love. I have no doubt that that’s the way to
go."
In 1990, the Lopez family welcomed their daughter back in time for a
Christmas reunion. “I had a really hard time adjusting,” she recalled of her
first few years back in the Philippines. Lopez went from sleeping on the
ground and walking barefoot in India to having to deal with all the societal
pressures that come with being a Lopez. “There you were, so busy because you
to do everything yourself and then you come home and everything’s done for
you. And you’re a Lopez. There, you didn’t have to worry about clothes—I had
only two sets and a pair of tsinelas and some and all of a sudden I had to dress
up. I had no idea what to wear. I was totally out of it.”
PHOTO BY AT MACULANGAN.
But soon enough, she found her footing and began to make waves through the
ABS-CBN Foundation, of which she was appointed general manager. Her
years as a missionary were put to good use and through the corporation’s
philanthropic arm, she worked to serve the needy, distributing relief goods to
disaster victims and establishing scholarships. Her good deeds reached
authorities such as the United Nations. In 1997, her initiative, the 24-hour
hotline Bantay Bata 163, was named the United Nations Grand Awardee for
Excellence. She was also the driving force behind educational
programs Sine’skwela, MathTinij, Epol/Apple, Pahina, and Hirayamanawari. For
producing Sine’skwela, she became the first Southeast Asian to earn the
UNESCO Kalinga Award.
“The greatest thing is the possibility of making a difference,” she said.
A natural giver, Lopez had also extended her working hands to help the
environment, another passion that would be greatly associated with her until
the time of her passing. In 1998, she founded Bantay Kalikasan, most
popularly known for rehabilitating the 2,700-hectare La Mesa Watershed.
This would later lead to the establishment of La Mesa Eco Park and the
initiatives Bantay-Usok and Bantay-Baterya.
PHOTO BY LILEN UY.
After La Mesa, her brother, Gabby Lopez suggested she use her talents to clean
up Pasig River. A week later, she received a call from former first lady Amelita
Ramos, requesting her to take over since she was beginning to wind down. It
was all or nothing for this eco-warrior. Lopez agreed to take on the Herculean
task only if then-DENR secretary Lito Atienza would hand over the
responsibilities for Pasig, Laguna Lake, and Manila Bay as well. Her demands
were met.
“I became increasingly aware that it was more than just cleaning the water of a
river,” she said back in 2010, “It was connected to our history, to our identity.
Cleaning the river is really more about reconnecting to the essence of what we
are. We are essentially a river people, taga-ilog, and for a river people to live in
filth goes against our very soul.”
PHOTO BY LILEN UY.
After much success, she was appointed by former President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo to head the Pasig River Rehabilitation Commission (PRRC). Despite
her accomplishments in this endeavor, she remained humble and credited
those who worked with her. “All I do is connect the dots and touch the part in
them that can be touched, and then we work together without any agenda.
Everyone has some equity to put on the table,” she believed.
"I would say the number one commandment is to take everything positively, because
the moment you become cynical you stop growing, and the best human life is the one
that’s interactive with the divine."
Lopez was also a recognized force in the anti-mining movement and her work
to save Palawan from the large-scale mining had caught the attention of many,
including current President Rodrigo Duterte. The President invited Lopez to
be the secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources,
and she accepted. As environment secretary, she continued her crusade
against mining, lobbied for the indigenous people, and established a DENR
hotline that created a way for the public to address their issues to the
government office. She served as secretary for all of nine months, after failing
to get a majority vote from the Commission on Appointments.
PHOTO BY AT MACULANGAN.
But even before she took on the role of Secretary, Lopez perceived her
responsibilities through a lens of virtue. “It’s having the clarity of vision to
know what’s best for you. It puts a primer on integrity, on being aligned with
what is true, which is very important to me. There is a higher truth and it’s not
intellectual and energetic, and we have to align our energy with that. You have
to be always committed to the truth, especially when you get to a position of
power. I have found that as long as I’m aligned, as long as I’m doing things
which are true, even if I make mistakes, miracles happen every day. I would
say the number one commandment is to take everything positively, because
the moment you become cynical you stop growing, and the best human life is
the one that’s interactive with the divine.”
PHOTO BY LILEN UY.
“Making a difference gets me on a high,” she told Tirol. “At this point in my
life I am doing something that is needed. My life is filled with blessings, and
even the difficulties, the challenges, are opportunities to grow. I look at myself
five years ago and I know I’ve really shifted. I’m more gutsy but I also feel
more. I can feel people, I can feel their pains, and I can feel their energy, the
web of life.”
In her own words, she expressed the happiness she had encountered in her
years. “Life is beautiful,” she said.
The ABS-CBN Foundation announced today that a memorial service will be held for
her at La Mesa Eco Park from August 22 to 23.