|

Which
of us is Filipino?

LAST week a giant billboard ad appeared at the corner of
Capitol and Ocean, a few blocks from my home in San Francisco,
featuring the photo of two attractive young women with the
words in bold letters above them asking, "Which one of
us is Filipina?"
One of the women was dark-skinned and could easily be an
African-American while the other of fairer complexion might
be a Latina. The answer printed just below the photo is "We
both are."
In very small print, that you can only read if you're really
close, are the words: "First Exposures: Youth Opportunity
through Photography." The sponsors of this intriguing
ad are listed below in even smaller letters as the Nelson
Fund of the Community Foundation of Silicon Valley and the
Potrero Nuevo Fund of the Tides Foundation.
What was the point of the ad? Was it to sell the notion that
Filipino women come in all complexions?
Regardless of the point of the ad, I was pleased that someone
took the time and invested the money to post its point in
a billboard. Because there are so few images of Filipinos
in the mainstream consciousness, we have to be grateful for
even small gestures. Thank you whoever you are for giving
recognition to Filipino women in particular and Filipinos
in general.
The billboard ad reminded me of what Dr. Dan Kelly, the president
of the San Francisco School Board, once observed that Filipinos
are the world's role model for racial harmony. The full spectrum
of races can be found in Filipinos, he said, and yet he saw
that we exhibited no racist attitudes toward Filipinos of
lighter or darker complexions.
Dr. Kelly expressed this observation at a meeting of the
local school board in connection with a resolution he had
sponsored recognizing the achievements of Filipinos.
We take his observation so much for granted because we are
so used to this notion and it is "no big deal" to
us. Just review the panoply of candidates Filipinos have elected
as president from Spanish mestizos Manuel L. Quezon Jr. and
Manuel Roxas to darker-hued "Balak beauty" Carlos
P. Garcia and Ramon Magsaysay to Chinese mestizos Sergio Osmena
Sr. and Corazon Cojuangco Aquino. In the Philippine Senate,
one can find a Richard Gordon and an Alfredo Lim. A former
mayor of Manila, Ramon Bagatsing, has family roots in India.
Filipino officials come in all sizes as well from six footers
in former senators Robert Jaworski and Freddie Webb to the
4'10" "champion of the little people" Sen.
Juan Flavier.
Neither the color of the skin nor the ethnic heritage of
the candidate has mattered at all in Philippine politics.
Filipino voters do not vote for or against a candidate based
on how he or she looks but on what he or she thinks, generally
speaking. The fact that Filipinos don't really care if the
candidate is a "he" or a "she" is remarkable
in itself as two of the last four presidents of the Philippines
have been women.
No, we don't knock each other down for how different we look
as Filipinos, we just knock each other down for being Filipinos.
We find so much to fault in ourselves that we don't take the
time to look at the good in us. It has to take someone from
the outside to point out something that we should take pride
in. We are the model for the world in how different races
can co-exist without racial discrimination and animosity.
That is truly something we should be thankful for this Christmas.
In a photo of us that would look like a gathering of the
United Nations, a question could be posed above the photo
-- "Which of us is Filipino?" The answer below the
photo would be "We all are."
As we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ this Christmas,
let us not forget the hundreds of thousands of Filipinos who
have lost their homes and their livelihoods to the devastations
of typhoons Yoyong and Winnie. Please continue to donate cash,
canned goods or clothing to them through your local organizations
or consulates through the Philippine Embassy in Washington,
D.C.
Let us also take time this Christmas to mourn the death of
Fernando Poe Jr. (FPJ). After he died of a brain hemorrhage
this past week, a reporter who visited his home was shown
the garage where FPJ was collecting canned goods to donate
to the typhoon victims. The reporter was informed that the
goods would not be stamped with anything that would show that
it came from FPJ as it was to be donated anonymously. This
one selfless act of FPJ has completely changed my perception
of him. He was truly a good man and I join the Filipino nation
in mourning his passing.
I will be attending the Third Global Filipino Networking
Convention next month on Jan. 20-22, 2005 at the Waterfront
Hotel in Cebu City (check out www.thirdglobalcebu.com for
more information). If you plan to be in the Philippines for
the Sinulog festival on Jan. 16, please extend your stay and
join Filipinos from all over the world who are coming to Cebu
to network with each other about how we can help the Philippines
and each other. The theme of this year's conference is "Pinoy
Power Worldwide."
I am grateful that I will be able to return to the Philippines
this January. As readers may recall, I filed a civil suit
against Sen. Panfilo "Ping" Lacson in the Alameda
County Superior Court and obtained a default judgment against
him in the amount of $3 million in January of 2003.
In the course of collecting on this judgment, I obtained
documents that showed that Senator Lacson had amassed more
than $1 million in cash and real property assets in the US
which he did not disclose in his statement of assets and liabilities.
Senator Lacson's lawyers have since appealed the judgment
and the case is now in the hands of the California Court of
Appeals.
If Lacson had been elected president this past May, I would
not be able to safely return to the Philippines. And Lacson
could easily be the president of the Philippines today if
he had not misunderstood the prediction of a fortune teller.
Senator Lacson was absolutely convinced that he would be
the next president of the Philippines because, he told confidants,
a widely-respected fortune teller in Shanghai had assured
him that he would be.
Just three weeks before the May 12 elections, opposition
presidential candidate FPJ offered to meet with Lacson to
discuss the merger of their candidacies, which was allowed
under the peculiarities of Philippine election law. FPJ offered
Lacson the vice presidency as his candidate, Sen. Loren Legarda,
was reportedly willing to step down for Lacson for the sake
of unity and run for re-election to the Senate where she would
be a virtual shoo-in.
But Lacson rejected FPJ's offer and instead offered FPJ his
vice presidential slot, which was vacant. It would be Lacson-FPJ,
he insisted, not FPJ-Lacson as he was more qualified than
FPJ to be president, he claimed. The Iglesia ni Kristo and
the El Shaddai movement were poised to endorse an FPJ-Lacson
merger and observers agree that the tandem would surely have
won the elections, hands down. At the very least, Lacson's
three million votes would have ensured FPJ's win and Lacson's
as well.
If FPJ and Lacson had won, and FPJ had suffered his brain
hemorrhage while serving as president, Lacson would now be
the president of the Philippines. And the very least of the
country's worries would be that I would not be able to attend
the Cebu convention.
Lacson's Chinese fortune teller would have been right on
the money but Lacson misunderstood him and thought that he
would be president via a direct electoral route. I have a
spare shoe Lacson can use to kick himself in the butt for
rejecting FPJ's offer. Thank you Lord.
Merry Christmas and a Happy and Safe and Secure New Year
to all.
|