A War’s Toxic Legacy
/Agent Orange. An innocuous enough term for those who were not yet around during the Vietnam War or who are not aware of its folly. But for those who were there, like historian/writer and Vietnam War veteran Alex Fabros, hearing the term triggers a historical trauma, a deep-seated PTSD, an inescapable decades-long physical deterioration, hand-me-down genetic defects to offspring, a bureaucratic nightmare and a generational guilt that permeate the psyches of VW veterans. In other words, Agent Orange, the chemical weapon that the US unleashed in then-South Vietnam from 1962-1971 was, by any definition, a colossal bomb that may be as physically and psychologically destructive as the nuclear bombs dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in WWII.
"How Vietnam War Vets Wrestled with the Shadows of the Toxic Orange Mist" by Alex Fabros, our lead story this week, was not easy to write. Though he wrote the first version a few years ago, Alex had to set it aside several times. The memories and the pain that he endures to this day are just too much. We went back and forth with it for months as he rewrote, re-edited, tweaked. This while he was in and out of the hospital as he continues to bravely battle ailments related to, yes, Agent Orange.
As you read his story -- and we hope you will take it to heart --please take a moment to reflect on the immeasurable costs of war, not just to actual combatants and their families, but to nations and the future of mankind.
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Our other stories this week:
"New Residency Fellowship for Fil-Am Writers Launched" by Elaine Elinson introduces the Helen Toribio Kapwa Fellowship for Filipino and FilAm writers and activists at the Mesa Refuge, a writing residency north of San Francisco. The fellowship, named after a FilAm author/activist who passed away a few years ago, now has its first three recipients.
"Trump Immigration Clampdown Facing Backlash" is PF editor Rene Ciria Cruz's column, Edgewise in Rappler, where he dissects the pernicious implementation and effects of Trump's ill-conceived immigration actions that have led to the rapid fall of his poll numbers.
"Soccer, Lola, and the Persistence of Memory" by Anthony Maddela talks about FilAm soccer player Reina Bonta's short documentary, "Maybe It's Just the Rain," which is essentially a love letter to her Filipina lola Cynthia Bonta whose consequential life is definitely film material.
Our Video of the Week: Retired Stockton teacher continues to inspire her Filipino community
In The Know
Filipino workers removed from cruise ship in U.S. during raid
https://asamnews.com/2025/07/20/carnival-cruise-border-patrol-norfolk-immigration-arrests-deportations/
Filipino Americans brace for impact of Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’
https://usa.inquirer.net/175379/filipino-americans-brace-for-impact-of-trumps-big-beautiful-bill
Filipino sailor recounts Houthi attack: ‘I thought I was going to die’
https://globalnation.inquirer.net/285174/filipino-sailor-recounts-houthi-attack-i-thought-i-was-going-to-die?
Selling babies online? CHR alarmed as poverty drives families to trade children
https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2025/07/15/2458182/selling-babies-online-chr-alarmed-poverty-drives-families-trade-children?
Israel-based Filipina caregiver dies a month after Iran missile attack
https://www.rappler.com/philippines/overseas-filipinos/caregiver-dies-iran-missile-attack-israel-july-2025
This Hidden Library in Makati Lets You Stay and Read Books for Free
https://www.spot.ph/things-to-do/the-latest-things-to-do/this-hidden-library-in-makati-lets-you-stay-and-read-books-for-free-a5229-20250709-dyn?
Original Lyrics to “Lupang Hinirang”
https://www.facebook.com/reel/1070695107898887