Rosemarie Arante lost everything when Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines in 2013. Since then (thanks to a little help from CARE!), she has rebuilt her life, earning enough money to send her children to school and is now hopeful for the future.




When Rosemarie Arante recalls surviving 2013’s Typhoon Haiyan—one of the most difficult experiences of her life—the emotions are still raw.
“I don’t want to see…to remember…” she trails off as tears well up in her eyes.
Typhoon Haiyan, known locally as Super Typhoon Yolanda, was a Category 5 storm that hit the Philippines in 2013. With winds at more than 150 mph, Haiyan is still considered one of the most powerful typhoons of all time.
The aftermath was devastating for the 14 million people who were impacted by the devastation. Over 6,000 people died and 4 million people were displaced from their homes. The livelihoods of nearly 6 million people were lost or disrupted.
More than 1 million houses were destroyed in the country, with some areas losing 90 per cent of their homes. When Haiyan hit her village of Barangay Pontoc in Lemery, Iloilo, Rosemarie, a 48-year-old farmer, was among those who lost everything.
“After [the typhoon] came, everything was destroyed. All the crops were gone, so the community had to start from the beginning.”
Determined to rebuild, Rosemarie participated in a CARE project called Asenso sa Good Agriculture Package (aGAP). The project helps farmers work more sustainably and increase their incomes by diversifying their crops and creating more opportunities to access markets. Rosemarie also worked with CARE providing financial management and business training to farmers severely affected by the typhoon.
It’s all a part of CARE Philippines’ work with communities to help rebuild their lives and livelihoods, in addition to the emergency relief efforts after Haiyan.
Rosemarie embraced CARE’s business and agricultural training. She was one of the first participants in the aGAP program and has been instrumental in its development. Now, she is a small business owner with a brick-and-mortar shop selling seeds, tools and other farming supplies. Rosemarie has both diversified and increased her income and has been able to send her three children to college.


Rosemarie works around the clock, waking up at 1 AM to transplant seedlings. By 9 AM, she makes her way to her community to help train other farmers on how they can improve their businesses.
“I help people in my community—especially the vegetable farmers, the vulnerable people—to plant vegetables for daily needs and to support their families,” she says.
Through growing vegetables, Rosemarie explains that farmers can earn money twice a week. Previously, farmers would grow produce such as corn, and would not earn money for months at a time. She says earning money more frequently is helping farmers better support their families and pay for their children’s educations.
Recalling the typhoon’s impact years later is still difficult for Rosemarie and many of her neighbours who continue to deal with the aftermath.
“It destroyed my community,” she says. “I lost everything in Yolanda and my heart was broken.”
But more than six years later, life has improved.
“My life is getting better…I have hope for the future. I am a farmer and I am proud!”