In the quiet fields of Sta. Cruz, Rosario, Agusan del Sur, the footsteps of Mrs. Merly Canonigo trace a journey of struggle, sacrifice, and steadfast resolve. At 59, she stands as a widow, a mother, and a leader—and above all, a living proof that when a woman rises, an entire community rises with her.
Merly began her journey in 1998 as a humble worker of the Rosario Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Multipurpose Cooperative (RARBEMCO). Through years marked by uncertainty, crises, and meager harvests, she endured with quiet strength.
In 2002, the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) awarded the farmers their long-tended lands under the Certificate of Land Ownership Award (CLOA). This became a turning point—not only for Merly but for generations of farmers who had long waited for justice to take root.
Empowered by DAR’s continued support to agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs), Merly’s leadership flourished. In 2011, she rose to become RARBEMCO’s manager, despite doubts that she could lead in a field often dominated by challenges and setbacks. Many thought the responsibility would overwhelm her—but she proved them wrong.
Through debts, delays, and droughts, she stood her ground. “There were times I thought of giving up, but my determination was stronger than my exhaustion,” she recalls.
With perseverance and DAR’s guidance in enterprise development, RARBEMCO’s fortunes turned around. By 2024, its revenues reached P3.4 million, marking a full recovery from the pandemic’s economic impact.
Yet for Merly, her greatest achievement is not measured in profit—but in the renewed confidence of farmers who now dream bigger, of women who see themselves as leaders, and of families whose futures are more secure.
Today, she lives a life once beyond her reach—owning a modest home, managing a small store and piggery, extending livelihood loans, and serving her barangay as a respected community leader for more than two decades.
Behind that strength, however, were sleepless nights, financial worries, and the heavy responsibility of raising a daughter alone. “Running a cooperative isn’t easy,” Merly says, “but when we work together, nothing is impossible.”
Merly Canonigo’s story is a testament to the transformative power of perseverance and partnership. With DAR’s unwavering support, she turned hardship into opportunity and helped her cooperative—and her community—thrive.
Her journey reminds us that true progress begins when determination meets empowerment. Shaped by the very fields she toiled, Merly Canonigo stands tall—a symbol of courage, perseverance, and hope. From a humble farmworker to a respected cooperative leader, her story reflects how DAR’s support can turn hardship into harvest and dreams into reality.