A Lively Day With Our Nobel Laureate

It has been a disturbing, infuriating, ire-inducing nail-biter of a past few weeks in our homeland. (It's hardly any better in the US.)

Investigations, accusations, scandals and lies are assaulting the sanity of those who have been assiduously monitoring the situation. As young Filipinos make their voices heard through social media, rallies and even during sports events, we wonder where all these will lead to. Will there be more revelations of scandalous corruption? Will there be prison sentences, as majority of Filipinos are clamoring for? An EDSA 4 people's uprising? A regime change?

Confronted with such existential question marks, it was quite a welcome break to listen to Fil-Am superstars Maria Ressa, veteran journalist and Nobel Laureate, in conversation with community icon/Pulitzer Prize winner Jose Antonio Vargas at the University of San Francisco. Not that Ressa's presentation was less disturbing (there's nothing comforting about AI and social media scrambling our brains with disinformation). But the difference was that the level of rhetoric was elevating, the discussion truly informative. PF contributing writer Lorna Lardizabal Dietz provides a summary.

Also in this issue, Manila-based contributor Manuel "EG" Hizon profiles Fr. Flaviano Villanueva, one of this year's Ramon Magsaysay Award recipients. Fr. Flavie, as he is fondly called, went through hell-on-earth as a drug addict before he found his vocation as a Catholic priest. He has since devoted his time and passion to helping the downtrodden, particularly fighting for justice for victims of the Duterte regime's extra-judicial killings. During his acceptance speech at the award ceremony, Fr. Flavie dramatically brought out a list of the victims -- a lengthy document that spilled out beyond the lectern into the stage, illustrating that there were tens of thousands that perished.

It's always good to be reminded that there are Filipinos who inspire with their intellect and their commitment to the common good. 




War, Family, Faith, and Pageantry

We have quite a varied lineup this week:

In time for Veteran's Day in the US yesterday, a feature on the children's book, The Horse Soldier: A Wartime Secret by Sandie Oreta Gillis. It is the story of Lt. Edwin Price Ramsey, who led the last horse-mounted cavalry charge in U.S. military history during World War II. It is also the story of the author's grandparents who risked sheltering Ramsey in their house in Pangasinan. An inspirational story of courage during war but told for children. Leodivico Padua Masuli writes about the making of the book.

An American actor and scriptwriter married a Fil-Am movie producer and made a movie called "One Big Happy Family." Lisa Jenner, whose husband is Dean Devlin, found rich material in Filipino family dynamics that, along with co-star Dante Basco, made this 2025 comedy movie a joy to watch. PF's Los Angeles correspondent Anthony Maddela gives us a glimpse.

From North Texas, Jocelyn Alvarez Allgood introduces Yvonne Yngson Gochangco, the reigning Ginang Filipinas America, whose academic and career credentials -- a master's degree in public health, a certified nurse anesthetist -- surpass her 2025 beauty title.

A sobering testimony: when software engineer Michelle Moreno-Apolo was diagnosed with breast cancer, she dug deep into her Catholic faith, instilled in her by her mother, to navigate the harrowing journey of treatments. She shares with us her story of faith.

*****

Last Saturday, November 8, the Maria Elena Yuchengco Philippine Studies Program of the University of San Francisco commemorated its 25th anniversary with one of the most anticipated and well attended events in the city: a conversation with Maria Ressa, veteran journalist and the Philippines' second Nobel Prize winner. Moderating the discussion was another Fil-Am celebrity -- Pulitzer-prize winner Jose Antonio Vargas. Read all about the event here. 

Jose Antonio Vargas leads the Q&A with Maria Ressa

Congratulations to PF regular contributor of Fil-Am history stories Alex Fabros, Jr. for winning 2nd place in the International Affairs category at the 2025 American Community Media Awards (there was a first place tie between Kalynh Ngo of Viet Bao and Shahbod Noori of Tehran Magazine). Here’s the winning story: How Vietnam War Vets Wrestled with the Shadows of the Toxic Orange Mist

Alex Fabros, Jr. with wife Lorraine Wong at the American Community Media Awards last November 7, 2025 in Oakland, CA.

[Partner] FilVetRep Day

[Read It Again]

The General At Ease by Gemma Nemenzo
The Boogie Woogie Boys by Alex S. Fabros, Jr.

[Video of the Week]

'Lies Spread Faster Than Facts'—Maria Ressa at the UN 


In The Know

Sometimes heroes are in a small boat with a salbabida

https://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/sometimes-heroes-are-in-a-small-boat-with-a-salbabida

Kaya Founders Secures $25 Million in Final Close to Back PH Startups

https://www.esquiremag.ph/money/industry/kaya-founders-bags-25-m-in-final-close-of-fund-

Still recovering from #FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth, but we wanted to share this news story covering the unveiling of Dr. Dawn Bohulano’s Portrait at Delta College

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=3158291527686077&extid=MSG-UNK-UNK-UNK-IOS_GK0T-GK1C&ref=sharing&mibextid=wwXIfr


A September to Remember

We end this September of remembering by noting that attempts by certain quarters to revise or even suppress history has triggered instead an outburst of recollections.  

Every action after all has an equal and opposite reaction, a Newtonian lesson that is lost on despots and their underlings all over the world.

Thus this month saw the emergence of an impressive collection of books, movies, stage plays, articles in print and online, art, songs, concerts and webinars to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the declaration of martial law in the Philippines. 

This is the time to learn and to teach. It is also a good time to document the never-ending array of stories from everyone who lived through that period and to reflect on who we are as a nation and people.

One recently completed documentary film with the intriguing title "11,103", reviewed here by veteran journalist Benjamin Pimentel, did just that.

A fraternity brother of both Ferdinand Marcos (the original) and Ninoy Aquino remembers a slain brother, Melito Glor, who chose to fight for "the other side."

Though September is about to end and we switch our focus to memories of other times (in October, it will be FilAm History Month), we will continue to be watchful and welcoming of stories that tell the history of our homeland.

Popular inquirer.net columnist Randy David puts the recent US visit of current President Bongbong Marcos in historical context, the better for us to understand the nuances of foreign relations. 

PF contributing writer Rafaelito Sy profiles former broadcast journalist, now a novelist Marga Ortigas whose debut novel, The House on Calle Sombra, draws from her coverage of Philippine and international realities.

And our lineup of FilAm community stars and stars-to-be continue with part 38, compiled by our publisher Mona Lisa Yuchengco.