The Girl Who Wasn't There
by Hyunseok Elliott Lee
For the past year, Ecosave members have been working on producing promotional material to shed light on the injustices and issues in countries around the world. Recently, we turned our focus towards conducting research in the Philippines, our main country of expertise.
Ecosave had done research since last year on cases of human rights violations that were exacerbated by lack of birth certification, alongside OpenHands, influenced by the idea to produce a documentary to shed light on said issues. Researched traced us to a case of a young child called Rosario Baluyot; Baluyot was 12 years old when she was trafficked to and raped by a man in Olongapo. She was in severely injured and unwell conditions when she was rescued, but eventually succumbed to her wounds and trauma throughout the years. What got her into such a situation in the first place, as well as what stopped her from receiving adequate treatment, was her lack of birth certification.
Her abuser, allegedly a military worker in the US Naval Base in Subic Bay, was never brought to proper justice for his crimes, a result that also was attributed to the lack of birth certification (as she was never recognized as a citizen, the worker was never officially responsible for the crimes that he committed against her).
"The Girl Who Wasn't There" is a documentary that explores the unseen societal injustices that threaten the lives of the less unfortunate worldwide, told through the tragic story of a young girl who went by the name of Rosario Baluyot. Rosario was a victim of a case of terrible sexual abuse, yet her lack of a birth certificate allowed her abuser to go free without punishment. Reflecting on how society failed a young girl and her future, "The Girl Who Wasn't There" aims to see how we can make a world that keeps the hopes and dreams of the youth afloat.
Watch the documentary below:







