Student Christian Movement of the Philippines

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Student Christian Movement of the Philippines
SpokespersonKej Andres
Colours     
Mother partyKabataan
International affiliationWSCF
ILPS
National affiliationBayan
Makabayan
NewspaperBreakthrough

The Student Christian Movement of the Philippines (SCMP) is a youth

Kabataan Partylist.[4]

Orientation

SCMP is a national-democratic ecumenical mass organization of Christian students in the Philippines. As Christians, they believe that faith alone cannot solve structural problems in the Philippines, and poverty and injustice must also be solved through action, programs, and a national-democratic alternative. Economically, the group believes in establishing genuine agrarian reform, then national industrialization, in order to free the Philippines from poverty. It also build links with other Filipinos of other sectors and faiths, as well as through international solidarity.[5]

The group also support the causes towards human rights and LGBT liberation.[6]

SCMP have been also part of

COP 27. The group called for change in the “consumerist, profit-driven, wasteful, and warmongering system" that is the root of climate disasters. "While companies continue to rake profits and imperialist militaries continue to wage senseless wars, the subsequent effect of climate change and environmental plunder has been catastrophic especially for vulnerable communities," the group added.[7]

History

Origins

Part of the worldwide youth ecumenical movement which had its roots with the first SCM founded in Great Britain in 1899, the Student Christian Movement of the Philippines was founded on December 27, 1960, through a National Assembly of 57 delegates representing 52 units from around the country.[2]

Marcos dictatorship

A copy of Breakthrough, SCMP official publication, and a booklet from 1983.

The group participated in the

student movement in the Philippines during the 1960s and 1970s. During this time, it was one of the groups that the Kabataang Makabayan sought help for the latter's expansion.[8] It was during 1971 in which the organization released a statement integrating liberation theology with local Maoism, to pursue the struggle against US imperialism and local feudalism and capitalism. It was influential among radical Christians, together with Luis Jalandoni and Ed de la Torre.[9]

Prominent SCMP leaders during this time include Carlos Tayag from UP Diliman, who organized the Christians for National Liberation (CNL) and Kalipunan ng Kristiyanong Kabataan sa Pilipinas (KKKP), but became a desaparecido on August 17, 1976, suspected to be abducted by military agents.[10] Jessica Sales from UP Los Baños was one of the founders of the UPLB university chapter and she also became a desaparecido on July 31, 1977. Neri Colmenares from Negros and also an officer of the Student Catholic Action of the Philippines (SCAP) became a political prisoner during the dictatorship era.

SCMP organizing was affected by the declaration of

UP Los Baños. It expanded its work outside Metro Manila and strengthened its work on international solidarity and basic masses integration.[5]

SCMP became one of the Christian organizations that took participation at the First EDSA People Power.[6]

Post-EDSA

The group persevered in organizing and strengthening links among other sectors when the

Mendiola Massacre happened under then-president Corazon Aquino.[5]

SCMP was also part of the Second People Power Uprising.[11] During the early administration of President

College Editors' Guild of the Philippines, the National Union of Students of the Philippines, and the Student Christian Movement of the Philippines met in the office of Anakbayan in Padre Noval, Sampaloc, Manila, to discuss plans to advance the interests of the Filipino youth. Talks were made due to the disillusionment brought by the new administration. Eventually, these talks culminated in the formation of Anak ng Bayan Youth Party on June 19, 2001, coinciding with the birthday of José Rizal.[4]

Since 2000, Student Christian Movement of the Philippines has remained active in the student movement in the University of the Philippines,[8] as well as in other schools and provinces in the Philippines.

During

Pope Francis's visit to the Philippines in 2015, the group held a youth camp and other activities to celebrate the arrival of the Pontiff.[12] Additionally, SCMP urged Pope Francis to make 'surprise visits' to urban poor communities in Metro Manila and in the "tent city" of typhoon Yolanda survivors in order to be more familiar with the concrete conditions of the marginalized in the country.[13] The group, meanwhile, denounced the handling of Benigno Aquino III of the disaster, saying that he was like Pontius Pilate, in his 'washing of hands' on the deaths due to the typhoon.[14]

In 2016, SCMP and WSCF released a statement condemning the killings of Lumads in Mindanao, holding accountable the government under Benigno Aquino III. Various groups asserted that the role of the church as sanctuaries of the oppressed must be respected.[15]

Duterte administration