Founding Director, Chief Vision Facilitator of GINHAWA, Inc.
Ms. Leah Tolentino “breathes” GINHAWA every day as she learns and teachers the essence of well-being that embraces the personal, societal and ecological.
Leah is a teacher’s teacher on spirituality and transformation, an artist-healer who uses the psycho-soma-spirit approach, a well-being consultant, guide-mentor for those seeking a conscious path in the work of healing and renewal.
Ms. Leah’s journey from chronic ailment and auto-immune disorder to long-term healing enabled her to discover inherent well-being capacities. After bouncing back to health, she committed to a path of facilitating healing to a wide variety of client groups, including those who were in dire need of healing, like abused children, women in crisis, and people living with HIV+/AIDS.
These experiences honed her competencies and compassion as she embarked on studies and immersive lessons in the fields of spirituality, holistic health, creative expressions, body-mind-spirit studies, social sciences, arts, and integral inner work.
Leah has a master’s degree in Creation Spirituality from Naropa University, based in Colorado, USA, and has completed the course work in the doctoral program of Applied Cosmic Anthropology at the Asian Social Institute (ASI).
Leah completed a graduate certificate program at the Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley, USA, and has finished a Specialty Certificate in Sacred Dance (Healing, Renewal, Transformation) at the Center for Arts. Religion and Education, an affiliate center of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, USA. She has studies in Pastoral Psychology (CEFAM-Ateneo) Oriental Healing Arts and Indigenous Sacred ways with wisdom keepers from various Philippines cultural communities.
As the principal program developer of GINHAWA, she has conceptualized and implemented well-being retreats, creative culture-affirming classes, transformative sessions for the Filipinos both locally and overseas, for over two decades. And brought GINHAWA programs to Filipinos, where and when it mattered most: like de-stressing sessions for frontliners during the pandemic, post-trauma, and healing sessions for those severely affected by super typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan, international name), a month after it struck the hardest in Eastern Visayas.
As a well-being consultant and resource person to various organizations, Leah has developed and conducted programs for government and corporate executives, NGOs, humanitarian organizations, universities and educational institutions, religious and faith-based organizations.
Currently a faculty in the post-graduate program of the Asian Social Institute, part-time faculty of the Institute of Formation for Religious Studies, resource-person/faculty at the Institute of Formation, Fondacio-Asia. She was featured in the book “101 Outstanding Filipino Achievers”, published in 2009.
Johnnel helps bring about balance in the world in his different roles as a healer, a Traditional Medicine student, a GINHAWA, Inc. Board Officer, and a corporate leader for a tech firm. He leads in financial planning, institutional balance, and strategy for GINHAWA.
Johnnel holds a double degree in Business Administration and Accounting from the University of the Philippines, Diliman where he graduated with honors. He has over 10 years of experience in management consulting, big data, analytics, as well as strategy and operations - having served several US-based clients, which are part of Fortune 500.
He is a firm believer that 'The Filipino is World-class' so in his work he devotes a lot of his time to grooming and mentoring young talents from Manila, coaching them and leading them to drive successful business outcomes.
Outside of his regular day job, Johnnel is very much a student of life. He was first introduced to meditation at the age of eight through Hinga-Langin (breath-centered prayer). From childhood through adulthood, he was privileged to receive onsite lessons from a host of healer-mentor-teachers on varied fields, like intergenerational healing, psyche-soul link, financial literacy. The contrast he witnessed in human dynamics opened his eyes to the need and importance of balance and compassion. Johnnel participated in several GINHAWA retreats, workshops, mentoring from the GINHAWA founder, Ms, Leah Tolentino for his spiritual anchoring and grounding. Today, Johnnel is a certified Guided Meditation Teacher, and generously shares meditation space in various settings.
Coming from a lineage of traditional/natural healers, Johnnel started to embrace his path of healing through the practice of Reiki. Today he is a Reiki Third Degree Practitioner and a TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) student at Ateneo de Manila.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean commodo ligula eget dolor. Aenean massa. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.
Hazel H. Navarro-Tan is a clinical psychologist and a Board Member of GINHAWA since 2000.
Hazel’s deep empathy and inner strength have truly served GINHAWA’S advocacies in the transformation and rehabilitation of those needing healing, especially children and women in crisis.
Early on in her career, Hazel championed the protection and promotion of the well-being of women. She was a bearer of hope for commercial sex workers in Negros Occidental in the Philippines as a volunteer for the prevention and reduction of HIV-AIDS transmission.
She helped co-develop a GINHAWA program for women in crisis and survivors of abuse at the Euphrasian Community of the Religious of the Good Shepherd in Quezon City. She carried on with her psychological services even after the program lapsed. Hazel, would also continue this advocacy in the Bukid Kabataan, a center run by the Good Shepherd sisters, that houses hundreds of young survivors, braving the long travel to Cavite. For a good number of years, she chose to serve in a professional capacity for the GABAY BATA Project of the Zonta Club of Muntinlupa and Environs, Third World Movement Against the Exploitation of Women (TW-MAE-W.)
Undaunted by the stigma of associating with those who are HIV/AIDS positive, she was also involved in the then outreach of GINHAWA for those living with HIV+/AIDS. Her master thesis in clinical psychology was a study on improving the life orientation of those living with HIV/AIDS, with an experiential component co-implemented with GINHAWA associates.
Hazel also ventured into education, training, and transformation serving academic institutions as College Instructor/Professor and Guidance Counselor, private organizations as Human Resource Management and Training consultancies for both government and private institutions, government work as Program Officer at the Philippine Sports Commission, and non-government organizations with stints at Transparency international, Philippines, TW-MAE-W.
She was the Pioneering Organizer and part of the Technical Working Group of Sanlakbay, a Community Rehabilitation Program for Drug Surrenderers under the Restorative Justice Ministry of the Archdiocese of Manila, Philippines. Hazel is also a Volunteer Psychologist at the Pontifical University of Santo Tomas Psychotrauma Clinic.
Lilac is a founding member of GINHAWA. She is an academic, sustainable living advocate, and social development practitioner.
Lilac is a staunch advocate-teacher specifically in the areas of holistic living, social inclusion, gender equality, work-life balance, diversity, multiculturalism, through her occupational commitments, community involvements, relationships, and lifestyle of choice.
Ginhawa’s Pagbubuo (becoming whole) process was instrumental for Lilac to name and discover her life’s purpose. From thereon, Lilac has consciously chosen to live out her fundamental life calling. She affirms that this has unlocked boundless opportunities for her to grow, serve and be happy.
Lilac served through various professional capacities in several Philippine organizations before she ventured into postgraduate studies in Australia. Gifted with intellectual vigor, focused on her life path, Lilac finished her Ph.D. at The University of Melbourne where she explored the changing identities of skilled Filipina migrants in Melbourne.
Thinking globally and acting locally, Lilac dedicated years of service in community and international development work. Currently, she is Senior Manager of the Communities for Children Hume Program in Uniting Vic Tas, based in Victoria Australia. There she assumes key leadership role in projects that ensure that children and their families experiencing complex life circumstances can reach their full potential.
As an academic, Lilac is a member of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Social and Global Studies Centre, had teaching stints at the University of Victoria, The University of Melbourne and RMIT University. She has published academic papers and commissioned researches.
Today in GINHAWA, Lilac sustains the vision through her wisdom from lived experience, indigenous knowledge, social sciences, and spiritual truths. A torch bearer, Lilac emulates liwanag (light) as she witnesses others in their search for meaning and becoming a conduit of change.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean commodo ligula eget dolor. Aenean massa. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.