We Are Acting Against Hate

Hate crimes in California in 2022 was at an all-time high, with a jump of 20% from 2021. [https://oag.ca.gov/system/files/attachments/press-docs/Hate%20Crime%20In%20CA%202022f.pdf]

While overall, anti-Asian hate crimes/incidents have gone down in number following the easing of the pandemic and its accompanying anti-Asian rhetoric, it is still alarming that there were almost 10,000 reported cases between 2020 and 2021 alone. [https://archive.vn/qO57S] These stats illustrate that Asians are easily vulnerable to attacks; a single spark of hate can still ignite a prairie fire. 

It's not a time then for complacency. Or to even entertain (the premature and mistaken) relief that the tensions are over. As the recent beating of 75-year old Filipino American Amadeo Quintara in his own garage in Las Vegas by a white man shows, [see Corin Lujan's "Against Hate and Loathing in Las Vegas], hate is a living, breathing organism that will always be a threat, no matter how much we wish it away.

With this issue, Positively Filipino begins a partnership with the State of California and its agencies, the California State Library, the Department of Social Services and the Commission on Asian and Pacific Islander American Affairs as part of the Stop the Hate campaign. Through a state grant, PF will take an active role in providing historical and current information about anti-Asian hate crimes, assist in the documentation of incidents, and disseminate strategies on prevention and de-escalation. Our Act Against Hate section in the magazine and social media will be a valuable community resource for everyone who supports the struggle against hate, racism, discrimination and violence against Asians. 

Have you or someone you know experienced an instance when you felt targeted and afraid? Tell us about it at actagainsthate@positivelyfilipino.com. When did it happen? How did it happen? What did you do about it? It may not be something monumental -- murmured curses about your ethnicity, a deliberate bumping that threw you off-balance, being refused service, being sneered at during your daily walk -- all these little slights that we often just ignore, add up.  And to keep silent gives the perpetrators the green-light to proclaim their bigotry.  

So let us, as a community, raise our voices against hate in whatever form. Together we can stop, prevent, document, and de-escalate ethnic tensions while making sure that we ourselves are free of anger and prejudice.

This week, we also begin a series on Bridge Generation personalities, as profiled by historian/chronicler Peter Jamero in his monthly blog called Peter's Pinoy Patter. First up, Don Velez, 85, whose woodworking products are available on Etsy. 


Stories This Week

Against Hate And Loathing In Las Vegas by Corin Ramos Lujan

The 'Woodjammer' by Peter Jamero

Badoc Island: Ilocos Norte’s Little Secret by Ian Layugan

Nina Daza Puyat’s Culinary Mission by Claire Mercado-Obias

[Recipe of the Week] The Happy Home Cook: Lumpiang Shanghai With Sweet And Sour Sauce byNina Daza Puyat

[Video of the Week] Bataan Death March Anniversary

Read Agains

A Reunion Of Strangers by Oscar Peñaranda

Remembering Leonard Ralph Casper by Cecilia Manguerra-Brainard


In The Know

An unlikely provocateur, Miss Texas, takes on the state’s GOP leaders
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/06/30/averie-bishop-miss-america-texas-platform-diversity/?utm_campaign=wp_main&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwAR2oJmngWsEVcX13CEL_VjQ7gk7q87csivTctzJxd3NaoPapkqXwZXhqM58

Why Baclaran Church was named ‘important cultural property’ in the Philippines
https://www.rappler.com/nation/history-why-baclaran-church-named-important-cultural-property-philippines/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Social&fbclid=IwAR0dIjbKzCZPZFA7UmajG7m-1Zx0vBkaCqyjRwMsmToBRxH0qCA_UZGINCk

'I Am Fury': Filipino Photographer Captures Stunning Shot of Mayon Volcano Spilling Lava
https://www.esquiremag.ph/politics/news/filipino-photographer-edwin-martinez-mayon-volcano-lava-a00203-20230703?ref=article_featured

Why are Fireflies Vanishing in the Philippines? 
https://www.esquiremag.ph/long-reads/features/why-are-fireflies-vanishing-in-the-philippines-a00293-20200923?utm_source=Facebook-Esquire&utm_medium=Ownshare&utm_campaign=20230627-fbnp-long-reads-why-are-fireflies-vanishing-in-the-philippines-a00293-20200923-fbold&fbclid=IwAR1MwFXukfJ4rHXxqrNsFg9AckfTSXrgI6TWp1lPDU-9U1pGZbqmUFcSWns

'Paraluman' in Huling El Bimbo video met a sad end; actress who played her has a happier story
https://news.abs-cbn.com/ancx/culture/music/07/02/23/whatever-happened-to-the-girl-in-huling-el-bimbo-video?fbclid=IwAR2qLIuock7BFGaNVcqTf3wdHkoCEjgJrvAQeP95aNLVnsx6SrYQdweoyso

Kai Sotto all set for NBA Summer League as Magic roster, schedule revealed
https://www.rappler.com/sports/nba/kai-sotto-all-set-summer-league-orlando-magic-roster-schedule-2023/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR101n1pPbNsmqPrJ-lH_0H3hQQw2q56vC0ZLlLgWEGdL_sYasxQDT5Yt4c


Sisterhoods

For the Cold War generation, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are unfamiliar names. These countries fell within the expansive cloak of the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics), thus their separate identities weren't spoken about much. Now with the USSR gone, tourists are flocking to what constitutes Eastern Europe -- the exotic former Soviet states that hold astonishing sights and treasures of their own. One of these visitors was France-based Filipino artist Ofelia Gelvezon-Tequi, who recently took a journey with her sorority sisters and their families to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia and, with her artist's eye, describes the fascinating things to see in "Vilnius Mon Amour." If you're a devotee of the Divine Mercy, Lithuania should be on your bucket list.

Journalist/community activist and domestic abuse fighter Cherie Querol Moreno adds her voice to the rapidly expanding #MeToo and #TimesUp movements in "Sisterhood Shatters Silence on Sexual Harassment," as she talks to some Filipina women and California State Rep. Rob Bonta, who are in the forefront of the community's participation in changing the culture of harassment.

PF Correspondent Rey E. de la Cruz shares his encounters with kababayans across the pond in Pinoyspotting: England.

And from the Philippines, PF Correspondent Rene M. Astudillo documents "The Curious Case of the Disappearing Faces in Philippine Peso Bills," which has many Filipinos tsk-tsking about the supposed "computer glitch."

From Rene Astudillo's food blog (mybaykitchen.wordpress.com), we also picked up our Happy Home Cook recipe for this week, Adobo Pineapple Fried Rice, using rice left over from when you cooked too much.

Another collection of In The Know links to stories you may have not caught from other publications:

Trump Immigration Plans Hit Hawaii's Filipino Families Hard
http://usa.inquirer.net/9417/trump-immigration-plans-hit-hawaiis-filipino-families-hard

Recovering from Historical Amnesia
https://www.teachforamerica.org/one-day-magazine/recovering-historical-amnesia

The Filipino Guide to Staying Sane
https://www.ncronline.org/ news/opinion/young-voices/ filipino-guide-staying-sane

The Ominous Rumblings of Mount Mayon
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/01/the-ominous-rumblings-of-mount-mayon/551513/

For our Video of the week, the UP Office for Initiatives in Culture and the Arts presented a documentary of National Artist for Sculpture Napoleon V. Abueva. The video was written and directed by Katrina Ventura.

Gemma Nemenzo

Editor, Positively Filipino