Springtime and Justice

Now that we're inching to spring, it's time to make travel plans. How about visiting Amsterdam, whose fascinating windows, artistic displays, cobbled streets, environmentally sound transport (bicycles) and intoxicating whiffs of legal substances guarantee a wondrous vacation for anyone. PF correspondent Criselda Yabes, now France-based, writes about this tourist friendly city that beckons and lures.

The fight against anti-Asian hate requires special efforts by various states to stem the insidious crime. In New York recently, as assault victim Vilma Kari, a Filipino American senior, was accorded justice with the sentencing of her attacker to 15 years in prison, NY Governor Kate Hochul pledged $30 million in support of the AAPI communities' (including the Fil-Am community) efforts to protect its constituents from hate crimes. The Filam.net founding editor Cristina DC Pastor reports.

It's never too early to teach children the principles of justice, and books such as Ang Hukuman ni Sinukuan are on hand to provide parents and educators the tools to explain the complicated concept via mundane and familiar stories. Contributing writer Ian Layugan elucidates.

We close Black History Month with two stories that solidify the solidarity between Fil-Ams and Blacks.

Justin Jones, an elected member of the Tennessee House of Representatives, made headlines in 2023 when he joined two other representatives in breaking decorum on the House floor in a gun control protest. Long before that incident, PF featured him as a community activist actively embracing his Filipino roots in https://www.positivelyfilipino.com/magazine/justin-jones-black-filipino-civil-rights-activist

A little-known but significant history: in 1925, the Pullman Company hired Filipinos as scabs when Black porters were trying to form a union. The train company didn't anticipate that the Filipinos would eventually join the Black porters in forming the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Read all about it in https://www.positivelyfilipino.com/magazine/how-black-and-filipino-unity-was-forged-in-the-pullman-workers-union 

[Video of The Week] EDSA On My Mind


Anti-Asian Hate Watch

California Assemblymember Carlos Villapudua Bill Would Establish Greater Penalties for Felony Hate Crimes
https://goldrushcam.com/sierrasuntimes/index.php/news/local-news/54302-california-assemblymember-carlos-villapudua-bill-would-establish-greater-penalties-for-felony-hate-crimes

Group launches new campaign to fight anti-Asian hate
https://www.aol.com/group-launches-campaign-fight-anti-204000574.html

Seattle police officer who struck Jaahnavi Kandula won’t face charges
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/law-justice/seattle-police-officer-who-struck-jaahnavi-kandula-wont-face-charges/?utm_source=marketingcloud&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BNA_022124201042+BREAKING+No+charges+for+officer+who+struck+Jaahnavi+Kandula_2_21_2024&utm_term=Registered%20User

Man Pleads Guilty To Hate Crimes For Attacking Asian Family, Blaming Them For COVID-19
https://www.aol.com/man-pleads-guilty-hate-crimes-224853882.html 

Asian hate: Attacker of elderly Filipina sentenced to 15 years
https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/558378/asian-hate-man-who-attacked-elderly-filipina-in-ny-sentenced-to-15-years

A New Chapter in Hell's Kitchen: The Resilience of Vilma Kari and the Fight Against Hate
https://bnnbreaking.com/breaking-news/crime/a-new-chapter-in-hells-kitchen-the-resilience-of-vilma-kari-and-the-fight-against-hate

More than half of Asian New Yorkers report feeling isolated or anxious, yet many don't seek mental health services: report
https://www.audacy.com/1010wins/news/local/more-than-half-of-asian-new-yorkers-report-feeling-isolated

Funding provided by the State of California.


Paging Book Lovers

An effective way of getting kids interested in reading is to offer them the yucky or the scary as subject matter. In his illustrated book Bunso Meets the Mumu, artist Rev Valdez uses the mumu, a Filipino sobriquet for “ghost,” as a come-on to make children realize it’s really nothing to be scared of. It’s also a way of introducing a broader audience to Filipino mythology and culture. Contributor Claire Mercado-Obias explores how Valdez does it (The Mumu Goes Mainstream). 

Speaking of books, Frankfurt, Germany hosts the world’s largest book fair. In 2025, the Philippine book industry will be the holding a P200 million-peso exhibition. Contributor Criselda Yabes hopes Filipino book lovers from all over the diaspora will come to show their support. Frankfurt, she writes, is also worthy of exploration (All Booked Up in Frankfurt).

In this issue, we also feature the third-place winning entry at the 2022 Doreen Gamboa Fernandez Food Writing Award. Alfonso Delgado of Victoria City, Negros Occidental writes about breadfruit, a “super fruit” that also rekindles his memory of his grandmother and her cooking (The Breadfruit, a Super Fruit and So Much More).

Meanwhile, New York writer-editor Cristina DC Pastor gives an update on Vilma Kari, a victim of a hate assault in Times Square. Vilma is recovering from serious physical injuries she received from the unprovoked anti-Asian hate attack. But her daughter says recuperation from emotional damage is more challenging (Hate Survivor Vilma Kari: Doing Well Physically, But Emotional Healing Takes Time).

Finally, contributor Corin Ramos tells us that a tireless community leader in Las Vegas, Rozita Lee shows no sign of slowing down (Meet Unstoppable Community Advocate Rozita Lee). Originally from Lahaina, Maui, the 89-year-old, has gone back several times to her fire-devastated hometown to help survivors recover and cope with the aftermath. Manang Rozita is among the treasures of our community.

Video of the Week: Sinulog Festival 2024


Anti-Asian Hate Watch

CA vs Hate highlights new tools amid still-growing reports of hate
https://asamnews.com/2024/01/18/ca-vs-hate-highlights-new-tools/

Hate Crime Map
https://www.hatecrimemap.com/

NYS Bar Association proposes expansion of hate crime statute amid rising incidents
https://brooklyneagle.com/articles/2024/01/22/nysba-proposes-statute-expansion-amid-rising-hate-crime/

A year later, the AAPI community is still crying for change after mass shootings in California
https://www.mlive.com/reckon/2024/01/a-year-later-the-aapi-community-is-still-crying-for-change-after-mass-shootings-in-california.html

IU shows solidarity with the Asian-American community through ‘Hope Not Hate’
https://www.idsnews.com/article/2024/01/bloomington-event-hope-not-hate-solidarity

Funding provided by the State of California.