Quezon City Urges Schools To Adopt Sustainable Practices Amid Climate Crisis

Inaasahan ng Quezon City ang mga paaralan na maging mga modelo ng sustainability sa gitna ng patuloy na pagbabago ng klima.

PCG Awards Purchase Deal For 40 Patrol Boats To French Firm

Ang Philippine Coast Guard ay nakakuha ng kontrata mula sa OCEA para sa 40 patrol boats. Isang positibong hakbang patungo sa mas ligtas na karagatan.

Sipalay Accommodations 90% Booked For Holy Week Break

Ipinakita ng Sipalay tourism office na halos puno na ang mga akomodasyon sa kanilang lungsod para sa Holy Week.

Negros Occidental Braces For Thousands At Holy Week Pilgrimage Sites

Bilang paghahanda sa Holy Week, ang mga pilgrimage sites sa Negros Occidental ay handang tumanggap ng maraming deboto at bisita.

Filipino Humanitarian Engineer Turns Traumatic Past Into A Resilient Future

SPOTTED: The resilient engineer opens his book of life and shares his inspiring story of how his early childhood earthquake experience made him work in rebuilding communities affected by disasters.
By The Luzon Daily

Filipino Humanitarian Engineer Turns Traumatic Past Into A Resilient Future

0
0

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Harold Aquino, a Filipino Humanitarian and Resilience Engineer, shared his strenuous and promising journey in giving another hope to tremendously affected people of certain calamities or disasters.

The resilient engineer opens his book of life to the Pinoy Scientists official website and tells his inspiring story of how he ended up working for communities and rebuilding their lives.

https://pinoyscientists.com/post/188342847475/meet-harold-aquino-humanitarian-and-resilience

Engineer Aquino was an Assistant Professor at the UP Diliman Institute of Civil Engineering and currently, he is a doctoral researcher at the Centre for Disaster Resilience, Recovery and Reconstruction (CDRRR) of the University of Auckland in New Zealand.

His work epitomizes venturing out to catastrophe-stricken regions, working with and for communities to assist them to recuperate and rebuild from the impacts of disasters, and co-creating knowledge and feasible solutions towards developing resilience.

He graduated from the University of the Philippines Diliman and continued his doctoral degree at the University of Auckland. Aside from reaching out to people, he is also fond of playing instruments and singing.

His interest in disaster research and serving the public developed from his traumatic experience back in 1990.

“I have my long-standing, deep hugot why I’m so into disaster research. I was standing on my mom’s office table on the 9th floor of SSS Main Office in Quezon City when there was this sudden strong shaking; my mom and I then hid under the table. That was my earliest childhood recollection and it was the 1990 Luzon earthquake that caused the collapse of the Hyatt Hotel. That’s what continues to drive me to strive towards disaster resilience.” he reiterated.

His story and life-changing experiences are indeed an eye-opener to many that science is also a venue to serve the people and change the world for the better.

Source: https://pinoyscientists.com/