Running for just causes

Filipino priest Robert Reyes dons his running shoes to fight injustices, corruption, environmental degradation and a host of other causes, writes Kate McGeown for BBC News.
Philippines
September 21, 2011
Catholic Church News Image of Running for just causes
Screenshot from the BBC News report

The Philippines has got more than its fair share of problems – poverty, corruption, environmental degradation, political tensions – and one man has taken it upon himself to cast light on all of them. (Kate McGeown, BBC News)

Father Robert Reyes is a Catholic priest, but he is better known for putting on his running shoes and jogging around the country promoting different causes.

“People don’t know my name anymore,” Father Reyes says, smiling. “They see me and say: ‘That’s the running priest’.”

It all began in 1995, when he decided to do something special to mark the centennial of the Philippine revolution against Spain.

“I wanted to do something unique that will effectively communicate the message and tell everyone about the need for an ongoing revolution.

“This funny suggestion just came to my head,” he says. “Why don’t I run across the country?”

So that is exactly what Father Reyes did. Three years later, on the exact day of the Philippines’ liberation from Spanish rule, he achieved his goal.

He did not stay still for long, though. “I said ‘This is end of my running days.’ But in a few days I was running again, because people were asking me to run with them and for them, for their causes.”

Sixteen years and several thousand miles later, despite being jailed several times for his activities and even losing his parish, he is still going strong.

On a typical sunny Manila morning, Father Reyes has come to visit Manila’s Department of Justice before he starts his latest run.

Standing in the corridor in his jogging clothes, he is easy to spot among the smartly dressed ministers and their assistants.

They all seem to know him well. “I’m now treated as a friend of the Department of Justice. I come here very often,” he says.

Despite the thorough security check which other visitors have to go through at the gate, he is allowed straight inside, carrying a large stick – which was given to him by one of the many people he has helped, a woman whose son has disappeared.

This time, he is here to hand in a petition highlighting alleged political corruption.

A senator has recently resigned amid evidence that he was only elected because the vote was rigged.

The senator denies any wrongdoing but the priest wants him to become a whistleblower for what went on during the previous government’s administration.

Father Reyes hands in a typed letter, then – on a spare table in the corridor – takes out some felt-tip pens and a large piece of coloured paper and constructs a banner with the message: ‘Thank you Senator Migz Zubiri for resigning, but it is not enough. Tell all!’

With that he leaves the office, holds his banner aloft to address the waiting media and sets off down the road, waving at passing motorists, who honk their horns in recognition.

“When it was 2006, time for our reshuffling, my bishop said he didn’t like what I was doing.

“He asked if I wanted a parish, and I said yes of course. Then he told me: ‘I will only give you an assignment if you keep quiet, stop running’. But there are things I just can’t keep quiet about.”

So Father Reyes did not get a parish, which meant he also lost his income.

He now relies on donations – and he says that God somehow always makes sure he gets enough to survive and keep running.

FULL STORY

Philippine ‘running priest’ takes on corruption (BBC)

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