Our Place in Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month

On this Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month, we Filipino Americans join our brothers, sisters, and forebears, who originally came from across, or within, the Pacific Ocean, in celebrating our presence in our adopted country and our uniqueness from one another. We also stand strongly against the voices of hate who would ignore our contributions and deny us the right to be here. 

This year’s heritage month has brought a sharper focus on AAPI achievements in mainstream news media, entertainment, literature, government, and in American society as a whole. Kamala Harris became the first Asian American to be elected vice president. There have been several Asian American appointments, including Filipino Americans, to high national, state, and local offices. These contributions stand in sharp contrast to the racist attacks, including physical violence, against Asian Americans since the pandemic began. By March this year there had been some 3,800 reported incidents of racism directed against Asian Americans. The bigotry has been so appalling that no decent person can remain unmoved. 

Asian Americans have not taken these unwarranted attacks lying down. Protests against bigotry and xenophobia are being held across the country. Prominent Asians are speaking out against anti-Asian hate. Webinars are buzzing with discussions on racism, on  our place in U.S. history, and with efforts to understand the roots systemic racial prejudice in the evolution of American democracy.

These bracing developments indicate that we Asians are asserting ourselves as fully contributing members of American society, no longer the silent, self-effacing, "model" minority that we have been perceived to be.

But where does the Filipino American fit in the emerging AAPI  narrative? Our doctors, nurses, and hospital workers keep America’s health care system running, and our professionals and clerical workers keep corporations humming. Where is the Filipino American in the "best of" lists that have included Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Indian names? 

We are steadily getting there, as our new generations come to their own; but we must still persist in our collective quest to make our voices heard. We need to build comparably strong political muscle that can help bolster that of other Asians. But we also need to rid our consciousness of vestigial colonial mentality, of our own animus against other people of color, of wanting only to fit in. Only then we can become a more visible strand in the fabric of the social construct called Asian America.  

Our Stories This Week

Getting Swabbed And Jabbed For Dear Life By Criselda Yabes

Fil-Ams Among The Remarkable And Famous, Part 19 By Mona Lisa Yuchengco

To Nina Aguas, Being Filipina Is An Advantage By Elizabeth Ann Quirino

[Cook Again] The Happy Home Cook: Vegetable Lumpiang Shanghai by Chef Richgail Enriquez

[Video of the Week] Living Lullabies

In The Know

Olivia Rodrigo: ‘I’m a teenage girl. I feel heartbreak and longing really intensely’
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/may/07/olivia-rodrigo-im-a-teenage-girl-i-feel-heartbreak-and-longing-really-intensely?utm_term=bf600b9ee81eddaf23cbbde9d71261b4&utm_campaign=GuardianTodayUS&utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&CMP=GTUS_email

The First Asian American Settlement Was Established by Filipino Fishermen
https://www.history.com/news/first-asian-american-settlement-filipino-st-malo?fbclid=IwAR24jUrte-1CbWS0PkwKt7t12BTnXeyp2PdaC8WOLGoVwihoT43_LQ5fzxY

This Close-Knit Island Near Seattle Has An Overlooked History Of Defying Hate
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/bainbridge-island-japanese-american-history_n_5cde4b02e4b00735a914047a 

Dave Bautista fires back at the forces of anti-Asian intolerance: 'There's more of us than there are of you'
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/dave-bautista-anti-asian-intolerance-hate-crimes-aapi-army-of-the-dead-170039003.html?soc_src=social-sh&soc_trk=ma

Reina Reyes looks like science
https://www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/reina-reyes-looks-like-science


"Feastivals" and Valentine Videos

A day after Valentine's Day, the social media universe of the Philippines – where some serious celebration of V-Day happens every year -- is still kilig over the three tear-inducing videos of Jollibee, titled Crush, Vow and Date. Watch them here and get your hankies ready.

Minola Oil (a Philippine product) underscores the progress of gay rights in the country with its V-Day commercial.

Another story of celebrations comes from Positively Filipino Correspondent Rene Astudillo, who has moved semi-permanently from the San Francisco Bay Area back to the homeland. “Feast-ivals of the North” introduces the food festivals of the Ilocos, a region famous for both healthy and strange dishes.

Another Positively Filipino Correspondent, Los-Angeles-based Anthony Maddela profiles Fil-Am Jeffrey Cirio, principal dancer of the American Ballet Theatre in New York. Jeffrey, raised in Philadephia by his Filipino father and American mother, will be dancing in Don Quixote in May 2017.

For your expanded reading fare, here are the In the Know links for this week:

From Oprah to MoMA Catalog: Filipino Designer's Clutch is a Hit: http://www.townandcountry.ph/out-about/arts-culture/filipino-designer-carissa-evangelista-s-clutch-makes-it-to-moma-s-international-catalog-a00180-a00185-20170208

The Second Youngest Billionaire in the World is a Filipino-American:
http://nextshark.com/bobby-murphy-snap-inc-filipino-american/

Toronto Ube Desserts
https://www.facebook.com/Insiderdessert/videos/1643592859269533/?autoplay_reason=user_settings&video_container_type=0&video_creator_product_type=2&app_id=2392950137&live_video_guests=0

Bongbong to DILG? Robredo allies, ex-Comelec exec weigh in:
http://news.abs-cbn.com/news/02/14/17/bongbong-to-dilg-robredo-allies-ex-comelec-exec-weigh-in

We go vegan again this week with Richgail Enriquez's recipe for vegetable lumpiang shanghai.

A post-Valentine Watch Again treat: “66 Years, 2 Months, 21 Days…. and Still Counting,” produced and directed by our publisher, Mona Lisa Yuchengco.

Gemma Nemenzo

Editor, Positively Filipino