Danawanon in Focus: Raul Gonzales

Wed, April 11, 2012  2:39 pm

Yes, Virginia, There are Danawanons Living Near the North Pole

Monching, Raul and Vida Gonzales

There are at least, two Danawanons that I know living and working near the top of the world.  One is a woman from Barangay Langlang, Rose Barriga-Jonsson. She lives and works in Iceland.  There could be more – maybe in Northern Alaska too or Norway.  Danawanons are just everywhere in the world.

The other sub-arctic resident is Raul Gonzales who  I recently met during the Holy Week – in Yellowknife, Northwest Territory, Canada.  (From Wikipedia: Yellowknife (2011 population: 19,234[1]) is the capital and largest city of the Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada. It is located on the northern shore of Great Slave Lake, approximately 400 km (250 mi) south of the Arctic Circle, on the west side of Yellowknife Bay near the outlet of the Yellowknife River)

Raul is the son of the late Noy Ramon and Nang Lalay Gonzales of Poblacion.  Their house is located at the Corner of Bonifacio and F. Ralota Streets, just across the Danao Central School and a block away from the church.

My cousin and friend Fr. Henry Bascones, currenlty a parish priest in High Level, Alberta told me about Raul, being there up far north in Yellowknife about 9 hrs. drive from his parish.

Then during the Holy Week I had an opportunity to travel far north of Canada and having a good feel of a very cold winter on springtime in Yellowknife.  So on Tuesday after Easter,  I bundled up, at least 4 layers – wore a winter hat – double  socks and a pair of winter boots for me to comfortably walk in the snow and meet Raul at his house, just two blocks from where I was staying.

For local residents, like Raul, a temperature of  -10°C is nice – they can be wearing lighter than their usual heavy winter get up that  protect them from the usual winter chill at -30°C up to -50°C, which I still have to experience. (That must be at least 3 times more freezing than the freezer at Magnolia).

Raul related that he came to Canada in 2001 as an immigrant because his first wife insisted she could not raise their daughter by herself. He was an accountant at the William Lines when he left Philippines and came to Hay River, Northwest Territory, Canada and worked in a grocery store.

In less than two years at Hay River, Raul and his wife were separated, filed for a divorce while he retained full custody of their only child. Then he moved farther north to Yellowknife.  The small city capital of the Northwest Territory has recently been experiencing a booming economy after the discovery of diamond in the early 1990s and the entry of the world’s  top players in the diamond mining industry.

Yellowknife is popularly known as America’s Diamond capital and considered the world’s third largest diamond producer.

Raul then applied to work in one of the 3 mining companies operating about 300 miles  north of Yellowknife and got his starting job as a company kitchen helper. But he did kitchen work for only a very short time, because he kept on applying whatever positions that open up until he passed a tough screening for  a much better paying job as a tool keeper and warehouseman at the Diavik Diamond Mine.

(From Wikipedia: The Diavik Diamond Mine is in the North Slave Region of the Northwest Territories, Canada, about 300 kilometres (190 mi) north of Yellowknife. It employs around 700, grossing C$100 million in sales, and producing 8 million carats (1,600 kg (3,500 lb)) of diamonds annually. It is connected by an ice road and Diavik Airport with a 5,235 ft (1,596 m) gravel runway regularly accommodating Boeing 737 jet aircraft.)

As a full time employee, Raul as well as most of the employees only work two weeks and get a 2-week vacation.  Every two weeks Raul takes the company airplane to the work site and is flown back to Yellowknife for the 2-week break.  Employees are provided a comfortable living accommodation and free meals at the worksite’s dining hall.  According to Raul aside from a handsome pay, employees are also given the opportunity to buy at 25% discount a maximum of 3 carats diamond every year.

Few years after his divorce, Raul remarried to a lovely nurse, Vida Atadillo, from San Fernando, La Union. She works at a hospital in Yellowknife. The couple came to visit Danao a year ago when  Raul’s father, passed away.  Raul’s daughter will be graduating from Edmonton University this June with a Bachelor’s degree in Social Work. (Monching – Apr 2012)

 

Comments

Got something to say?

You must be logged in to post a comment.