When she was in her second year at Palawan State University, Rhealyn Paliza faced a problem, a growing one. “I got pregnant and I was about to give up my education. Dr. Susan Evangelista, one of my teachers during that time, convinced me to change my mind.” Paliza recounts. “She told me that getting pregnant shouldn’t be a hindrance to getting an education. I needed to give my child a good future.” While she faced a lot of challenges, she eventually earned her degree and became a teacher, all the while rearing her now seven-year old boy.

A year after that first talk, Evangelista approached Paliza once more, this time to convince her to help set up an organization that sought to help women in similar situations. “Susan was so alarmed by the number of students that approached her to say that they had to give up school because they were pregnant,” Paliza says. That organization eventually became Roots of Health (ROH) and Paliza became its assistant director.

“There was just a complete lack of knowledge of how pregnancies happen. And these were smart kids, but they just didn’t know how it happened. Their hopes and dreams got derailed,” says Amina Evangelista Swanepoel, Evangelista’s daughter who moved from New York to Palawan to work with ROH, and now serves as its executive director. (Evangelista sits as deputy director and Swanepoel’s husband Marcus is its media and program director.) Today, the organization works with four communities in Puerto Princesa as well as schools within the area.

ROH’s approach is holistic, and has three priorities: education, healthy pregnancies and nutritional support. Its goal is to produce communities that are well informed and aware of all the options that are available to them. Some of its programs includes maternal reproductive health sessions, teen health sessions, community health advocate training, support programs for underweight children, and even one that includes creating your own vertical garden to help sustain a family.

Raising funds has been a challenge Swanepoel admits, given that its cause is somewhat politicized. “A lot of donors do not want to become involved in an issue that might land them in the spotlight,” she says. Still, she says that it feels amazing to know that the organization is making a difference in the lives of the people in Puerto Princesa. “Knowing that women are able to choose the spacing and number of their children and that our pregnant clients will deliver their babies safely in the presence of our nurses and midwife, and that we are helping teens stay in school and avoid unplanned teen pregnancies and provide a lot of fulfillment,” she says.