
ROSCON FOUNDATION's beneficiaries:
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Our Lady of Salvation Parish, Upi, South Maguindanao
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Tutorial Center of the Philippines
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Philippine National Red Cross
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Reliquary of the True Cross
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Compostela Camp, Cebu
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Haduan Negrito Village, Pampanga, Philippines
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Paidyanan Aeta Livelihood Center, Capas, Tarlac
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LTCKK (Non-Profit Organization), Tarlac
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Tarlac State University
The Philippines in earlier times
The First Inhabitants 40.000 years ago
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It is thought that the earliest inhabitants of the Philippines lived some 40,000 years ago. On Palawan, the long and small island in the western Visayas, human bones were found dating to about 22,000 years ago. Stone tools from ancient times were found too on Palawan. The age of the tools is estimated to be about 30,000 years old. A analyses showed that the tools have similar features as tools which were found on Kalimantan (Indonesia).
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Since 1999, Roscon Foundation has concentrated their public charity work at Tarlac City. The Scholarship Program is supervised by Kristine David, Director. The latest adoption of the AETA Community to assist the S.SP.S. Nuns in their effort to develop these tribal communities will earmark the achievement of a major goal set in 2012 by the Board of Directors of Texas. Applications can be done online with Kristine David, Director of the Scholarship Program at Tarlac City, at tinedavid30@yahoo.com or submitted to the address at:

The original people of the Philippines were ancestors of the people known today as Negritos or Aeta. They are very small people with a dark skin and curly brown hair.

The Aeta came 13,000 - 10,000 years ago from the Asian continent. In earlier times they lived widespread throughout the Philippines. Today they are living in the remote highland areas of Luzon, Palawan, Panay, Negros and Mindanao. About 2300 years ago Malayan people arrived from the mainland in the Philippines and brought a more advanced culture; dairy, iron melting and production of iron tools, pottery techniques and the system of sawah's (rice fields).
In the 10th century Muslim traders come from Kalimantan (Indonesia) to the Philippines. A few centuries later, the Islam spread out in the southern part of the Philippines. Until now, the Islam is strong rooted on Mindanao and the other (smaller) islands of the southern part of the Philippines.
The arrival of the first Spaniards

In 1521 the Spanish period started with the arrival of a small fleet in the coastal waters of Mactan island, just east of Cebu island. It was Fernan de Magellanes (a.k.a. Ferdinand Magellan), a Portuguese in service of the Spanish King. He claimed the country for the Spanish King.
Lapu Lapu, The National Hero
There was great resistance of the local people. In the battle that took place that day, the locals with their leader Lapu Lapu succeeded in forcing the Spaniards to retreat to their ships, after their leader, Magellan, was killed by the spears of the Lapu Lapu warriors. Lapu Lapu became the first Filipino hero.

Roscon Foundation, Inc. has also adopted the AETA Communities in Capas and San Rafael, Tarlac as its principal beneficiaries for their community development projects. 2012 will see the Capas site to have their school library and the San Rafael site to have two (02) scholars to complete their teachers' exam and master's degree. The goal of the Foundation to have 10 scholars for 2012 has been achieved.

AETA PEOPLES
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

A trio of Aetas performing on stage- SM City Clark

Old Picture of AETAS
The Aeta (pronounced as “eye-ta,”), Agta or Ayta are an indigenous people who live in scattered, isolated mountainous parts of Luzon, Philippines. They are considered to be Negritos, who are dark to very dark brown-skinned and tend to have features such as a small stature, small frame, curly to kinky afro-like textured hair with a higher frequency of naturally lighter hair color (blondism) relative to the general population, small nose, and dark brown eyes. They are thought to be among the earliest inhabitants of the Philippines, preceding the Austronesian migrations. The Aeta were included in the group of people termed "Negrito" during Spanish colonial rule as Negritos. Various Aeta groups in northern Luzon are known as "Pugut" or "Pugot," a name designated by their Ilocano-speaking neighbors, and which is the colloquial term for those with darker complexions. In Ilocano, the word also means "goblin" or "forest spirit."
The Foundation has also opened its scholarship program to the children of the indigenous AETA tribes in Capas, Tarlac who could not afford to go to school. This leads some of the youth to step into unprepared marriages to simply settle down despite their intellectual capabilities.​