Immigrants ask Obama to stop deportation and legalize good aliens

By Marivir Montebon

NEW YORK – Immigrant organizations in Washington, DC, Virginia, Maryland, New York, New Jersey, and Massachusetts asked President Obama over the weekend to use his executive powers to halt deportations and put all desirable immigrants in the path of US residency and citizenship.

A petition resolution signed by about 100 immigrant leaders holding the first International Migrants Rights Summit led by the Migrant Heritage Commission (MHC) said that the president has the legal authority to use his executive powers while Congress still has to thoroughly discuss and pass the immigration law.

“We are alarmed by the intensifying cases of deportations and removals of students, children, mothers, and fathers who do not have criminal convictions.  They must be stopped by the president until Congress passes the Comprehensive Immigration Law,” MHC co-executive director Arnedo Valera, an immigration lawyer, said.

For many immigrant groups, there are no signs that Congress will at all pass an immigration law.

The US is the world’s largest home to immigrants, accounting for 30% of the entire immigrant population worldwide. The top 12 emigrant countries in 2006 are Mexico, China, Philippines, India, Cuba, Colombia, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Vietnam, Jamaica, South Korea, and Guatemala.

During the immigrants’ summit, two guest speakers gave testimonies of their harrowing experiences on human trafficking from their home country to the US that moved many in the audience to tears.

“I almost lost my sanity and about to breakdown when I realized that I was being laid off as a special education teacher one month after I began my work. I made a huge loan for my employment fee, mortgaged our house and lot, only to find out that I came to the US to be jobless. I miss my family so much and I can’t afford not to earn, because I have four children who are now in college, and my mother is sick so I have to spend for her medication,” Rosa Cruz (real name withheld), broke down in tears as she told the audience her story.
James Quezon (real name withheld) meanwhile recounted how his employer trapped him into believing that he will be employed in Florida as a waiter but was instead brought to a far-flung plantation of pine trees and was made to plant grafted trees at $25 a day.
Both speakers expressed their humiliation for having gone through their experiences, but had to strengthen themselves in order to fight for their rights and safety.

After the testimonials, speakers from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Foundation for the Support of the United Nations (FSUN), and the World Council of Peoples for the United Nations provided context and analysis into the whole gamut of immigration issues in the US and globally.

In the petition resolution, immigrants quoted a study made by senior economist James Smith in Santa Monica, California saying that immigration, including illegal immigration as positive for the economy. The study noted that immigrants contribute to as much as $10 Billion to the US economy annually. The same study contended that the presence of immigrants made a net economic gain overall due to an increase in pay for higher skilled workers, lower prices for goods and services produced by immigrant labor, and more efficiency and lower wages for some owners of capital.  It also said that immigrant labor has not deprived American locals of their jobs, because the jobs immigrants get into are not those which the locals have traditionally engaged in.

The Cato Institute was also quoted in the petition resolution, which noted that low-skilled illegal resident workers in the US would result in a net increase in the US GDP of $180 billion over 10 years.

The Kauffman Foundation also said that entrepreneurial activity is nearly 40% higher among immigrants than for natives, hence making the economy more dynamic.

At the end of the conference, the delegates approved the petition resolution and sent it to Congress and Pres. Obama for action.  Thus begins a series of organized representations for policy advocacy for these immigrant groups.

The MHC held the immigrants summit as a highlight to its 6th Annual People’s Ball at the Marriott Wardman Hotel in Washington, DC on June 25, 2011.  With the theme, “Celebrating a great leap forward for immigrant rights,” the gathering spells out to be a political voice and cultural unity for immigrants.

Congresswoman Jackie Speier (D, California, 12th Dist.) spoke before the immigrants in an inspirational message during the gala. Speier has sponsored a bill called “Filipino Veterans Fairness Act” of 2011 to give full recognition and equity for Filipino World War II veterans, their widows and children.  She commended the veterans as the role model for all immigrants because they shared their talents and sacrificed their lives for the US.

As a tradition on this gala, the biggest gathering, by far, of immigrants in the US, the MHC awarded 22 immigrants and four organizations who have shown exemplary leadership, service, and expertise in their communities or profession.

“Our Outstanding Migrant Awards represents the quality and continuing upgrading of men and women who have come to this fabled dream land,” said Jesse Gatchalian, MHC co-executive director.

Bishop Eliezer Pascua of the United Church of Christ led this year’s awardees as human rights advocate who, together with a delegation from the Ecumenical Voice for Peace and Human Rights in the Philippines testified before the US Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee about the human rights abuses and extra judicial killings perpetuated by Philippine police and military.

Gymnast Maria Victoria Alicia Recinto, who will represent the Philippines to the Asian Games in November 2011, was likewise awarded, along with Dr. Reynaldo Lee-Llacer, a surgeon and community leader, who was responsible for institutionalizing foreign medical doctors the right to vote in their respective medical societies; and war veteran Felino Punsalan, who until now has relentlessly demanded full benefits of Phil-American veterans of World War II.
“This is a very historic and significant event which MHC has boldly embarked on. It is a response to the growing but neglected issue on immigration. We immigrants have continuously lobbied for reforms that are meant to create a win-win situation for the US government and the immigrants as a whole,” says Grace Valera Jaramillo, MHC co-executive director.
The Filipiniana and Barong Tagalog inspired gala was well attended by about 1200 guests. Aside from the awarding ceremony, the Ball was highlighted by the lighting of glow sticks and offering of country flags of Latin American, African, Asian, and European ethnics in a solemn ceremony as a symbol of unity and cooperation among all immigrants in the US. ( Marivir Montebon is Managing Editor of Migrant Heritage Chronicle)

###


LOS ANGELES CITY COUNCIL HONORS THE PHILIPPINES


Los Angeles, 10 June 2010 – A Resolution proclaiming the month of June as Philippine Independence Month was presented by the Los Angeles City Council to the Filipino-American Community in Los Angeles.

Photo shows Consul General Mary Jo Bernardo Aragon (3rd from right) receiving the Resolution from Los Angeles City Council represented by Councilmembers TomLaBonge (1st from left), Jose Huizar (3rd from left) and Richard Alarcon (4th fro left).

Also in photo are Los Angeles Filipino Association of City Employees (LAFACE) president, Ms. Cora Aragon Soriano (2nd from left); Walnut Mayor Antonio Cartagena (2nd from right); Cerritos Councilmember Mark Pulido (1st from right); and, members of the Filipino-American community.

 

 

 


CONSULAR OUTREACH IN LAS VEGAS ON JULY

 

 

 

 

 

Los Angeles, California – A team from the Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles will conduct a Consular Outreach Program in Las Vegas, Nevada on 2 – 4 July 2011:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Location :

3871 S. Valley View Blvd., Suite #3,Las Vegas, NV 89103 (Near Gold Coast Casino)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Service Hours :

9:00 am – 12:00 nn; 12:30 pm – 5:00 pm (2-3 July)

 

 

 

 

9:00 am – 12:00 nn; 12:30 pm – 4:00 pm (4 July)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Applicants with confirmed schedule for the postponed 28-30 May 2011 consular outreach program are requested to reconfirm their schedule with the Consulate. Visit www.philippineconsulatela.org to view the Appointment Scheduling Procedure and the previous appointment schedule.

 

 

The following consular services will be rendered:

·         Electronic Passport (ePassport) – to accept 360 applications only

Note: In view of the technical problem being encountered by the DFA, waiting period for the issuance of the new passport will take around 12 weeks or more (in some cases).

·         Extension of Validity of Passport

·         Retention and re-acquisition of Philippine citizenship pursuant to Republic Act 9225 or Dual Citizenship Law.

·         Report of Marriage & Birth

STRICTLY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY AND WITH COMPLETED DOCUMENTS ONLY.  NO WALK-IN APPLICANTS WILL BE ENTERTAINED.  Visitwww.philippineconsulatela.org for applicable scheduling steps.

 

 

No later than 24 June 2011, send an advance copy of the completed application forms and supporting documents (as stated in the Appointment Scheduling Procedures) to the Consulate by fax (213) 639-0990 or by email atconsular.outreach.lv@gmail.com.

 

 

 

FeesFees must be paid in person at the scheduled appointment.  The Consulate will only accept payments in cash, postal money order or cashier’s check. Personal checks will not be accepted.

Payments should be paid directly to the collecting officer/cashier of the Consulate during the outreach program and inside the venue only.  Please be informed that the Consulate has not authorized other people or entities to collect fees for all consular services rendered.

 

 

 

 

ePassport : $60 processing fee + $6 for passports to be returned to the applicant by mail  

 

Passport Extension $20 processing fee  

 

Dual Citizenship : $50 processing fee  

 

Civil Registry : $25 processing fee + $6 for documents to be returned to the applicant by mail  

 

 

 

Contact InformationFor information on consular matters, interested parties may contact Vice Consul Mary Joy Ramirez at Tel: (213) 637-3011 or Ms. Mila Verzosa at Tel: (213) 637-3023 or Mr. Vitto Palado at Tel: (213) 587-0758 or Email:consular.outreach.lv@gmail.com.

The Fear of Death

by Marlene Balotro

McAllen, Texas ( 20 May 2011) – There I was looking at the reflection in the mirror. I see not myself but a young lady whose life has been told might be cut short due to cancer.

Have I lived enough?”

That was the question I asked myself after being confronted with the fact that I might die soon due to cancer. For some, the fear of death is an overwhelming emotion that cripples the mind and the soul. The fear of the unknown coupled with various stories we have heard from people who came “back from the dead,” or from various depictions of death presented by the society engulf one’s inner emotional and physical strength. It overshadows one’s being that most succumb to recoil.

But not me. It was not the fear of death, nor the fear of the unknown, but the extent and depth of the life I have lived that I question. Mine is a life yet lived. And here I am being told that it might be taken away. Yet, I resort not to defeat, but to conquer. I shall overcome. For in doing so, I will live the life I wish to live.

Being faced with the reality that life indeed is short and borrowed has opened my eyes to its frailty. It has opened my consciousness to fears and doubts just months before were so foreign to me.

Yet I take them with open arms not to wallow in them, but to celebrate what remains of its existence; not to mourn its reality, but to build character from it. I believe that looking death in the eye would not only make me a stronger being but a better comforter, better listener, and a good companion. With this under my belt, I can offer a more personal approach to listening and caring to those who fear death or who are facing death.

My life would be a living testimony that there is nothing to fear, but fear itself. My life shall demonstrate that one should not stop living just because the body has imposed limitations. Instead, one should rise above the challenges and show death or diseases that even in the midst of overwhelming uncertainty; one can live… and can live happily. For the only thing that can limit a person is himself.


DUAL CITIZENSHIP PROCESSING BY APPOINTMENT

DUAL CITIZENSHIP PROCESSING BY APPOINTMENT

Formal Oath-taking Ceremony at Kalayaan Hall every Wednesday

NEW YORK – The Philippine Consulate General will now begin accepting by mail, pre-processing and applications for Dual Citizenship under RA 9225.  The first scheduled formal Oath-taking will be on 4 May 2011 at historic Kalayaan Hall of the Philippine Center, following a brief seminar at the Kalayaan Hall Annex at 10:00 AM the same morning.

The Consulate General strongly encourages applicants to submit their documents for pre-processing and elect for the formal Oath-taking, to give proper honor to this important occasion, and also to afford the following advantages:

·         Reduced waiting time at the Consulate General;

·         Early advice on any additional documents that may  be required;

·         Consultation and advice on RA 9225, and to determine if indeed Dual Citizenship is the correct process to undergo, or if applicants may be better-served by other procedures.

Those scheduled for formal Oath-taking (by class) will be invited to attend for the Seminar and formal Oath-taking ceremony.  If you wish to take part in this, be advised of the following:

  1. Applicants submit the Dual Citizenship Appointment Request along with the duly-accomplished petition, photos, and all other documentary requirements.  A checklist is provided on the Appointment Request Form, available on our website (see the Dual citizenship tab on our website,www.pcgny.net for downloadable forms and the list of documentary requirements);
  2. Applicants will receive acknowledgement from the Consulate on the receipt of the application for appointment by email / phone, depending on the mode selected by the applicant;
  3. Oath-taking is scheduled regularly every Wednesday morning (except on official holidays).  To request a specific date, the Consulate must receive the documents on the Monday before the scheduled Oath-taking (at the latest).  Applications received from Tuesday through Friday will be scheduled for Oath-taking on Wednesday of the following week.

Walk-in Applicants will still be processed – one Seminar and Oath-taking session a day beginning 2 May 2011

Starting on Monday, 2 May 2011, those who cannot make themselves available for the formal Oath-Taking ceremony may still be processed as “walk-in” applicants, provided that he/she is able to submit complete documentation (including photocopies as required) by the daily cut-off time of 2:00 PM.  Only one (1) session per day will be held for walk-in applicants. The regular seminar and oath-taking for approved applicants will be at 3:30 PM.

Walk-in applicants may also elect to join the formal Oath-taking ceremony.  They may submit their documents in person for pre-processing, and be included for the final processing and Oath-taking the following Wednesday.

In view of the number of applicants during the summer months, applicants are advised to avail of the pre-processing option.  Please visit our website www.pcgny.net and click on the Dual Citizenship tab for more information.


REGISTRATION NOTICE

REGISTRATION NOTICE TO ALL FILIPINO CITIZENS FOR THE               MAY 13, 2013 ELECTIONS

The Philippine Consulate General New York wishes to inform the public that the Commission on Elections (Committee on Overseas Absentee Voting) has announced its Notice of Registration and Elections to All Filipino Citizens.

Under Republic Act No. 9189, otherwise known as “The OverseasAbsentee Voting Act of 2003”, all citizens of the Philippines abroad, not otherwise disqualified by law, at least eighteen (18) years of age on the day of the election, and who are registered overseas absentee voters with approved application to vote in absentia, may vote for Senators and Party-List Representatives.

For this purpose, all qualified Filipinos citizens not registered as voters under Republic Act No. 8189, otherwise known as “The Voters Registration Act of 1996”, (the system of continuing registration) shall file an application for registration while those who are already registered under the said Act shall file an application for certification.

For purposes of the May 13, 2013 elections, the filing of applications for registration/certification and transfer of registration records shall be filed at the Philippine Consulate General New  York or other designated registration areas from October 31, 2011 to October 31, 2012.

The 30-day voting period will commence on April 13, 2013 until 3:00o’clock in the afternoon (Philippine time) of May 13, 2013 at anyPhilippine embassies or consulates. (The time for voting to be announced later).

For details, please contact Consul Zaldy B. Patron or Ms. Maria Theresa T. Almirante at telephone number 212-764-1330 Ext. 601/602 or refer to the following websites:

                                             Philippine Consulate General New York

556 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10036

www.pcgny.net

DFA-Overseas Absentee Voting Secretariat (Manila)

COMELEC-COAV (Manila)

www.dfa.gov.ph

www.comelec.gov.ph

Hotlines: +6328330914, +6328328363

Hotlines: +6325222251,

+6325212952, +6325239924


Stolen expensive big bikes from Texas traced to CDO syndicate

by Froilan Gallardo

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY, PHILIPPINES (MindaNews/4 May) – A  published picture of a beautiful handcrafted motorcycle in the Internet led Houston, Texas law enforcement officers to a crime syndicate based  here that steals motorcycles and cars in the United States and selling them here in thePhilippines.

Local police, agents from the National Bureau of Investigation and the Federal Bureau of Investigation raided two warehouses in Barangay Kauswagan here and in Talakag town in Bukidnon province Tuesday afternoon.

Agents seized a total of 21 motorcycles and four cars, including the handcrafted Martin Brothers motorcycle said to cost about P4 million, from the two warehouses.

The main suspect, identified as Lynard Allan Sariling Bigcase, a naturalized American, was not in the two warehouses and has remained at large.

NBI Regional Director Jose Justo Yap said the Martin Brothers motorcycle was published at the suspect’s website, www.albigsmotorcycle.com, and was seen by its owner, Skiff Wood, a movie writer.
Surprised because the motorcycle was stolen in Houston, Yap said the owner notified the police to track it in southern Philippines.

The website features different kinds of big motorcycles and fancy cars that include a 2008 Triumph Rocket Star III that sells for P750,000 and a 2006 GT Mustang convertible that sells for P1.5 million.

FBI agents and a private detective hired by the owner arrived in Cagayan de Oro early this week and coordinated with the police here.

Yap said Judge Jose Yamut, of the Regional Trial Court Branch 11, issued a warrant to search the two warehouses for unlicensed firearms.

He said an unlicensed shotgun was found in one of the two warehouses but did not say why the motorcycles were impounded at the headquarters of the Misamis Oriental PNP office in Villanueva town.

Seized in a warehouse in Talakag town were four dirt bikes, a big bike, three ATV motorcycles and three vehicles, including a Chevy Tahoe.

In a rented house in Sitio Pasil in Barangay Kauswagan, agents seized 13 big motorcycles and a Toyota SUV. (Froilan Gallardo / MindaNews)


OF SPRINGTIME REUNIONS

By Marivir R. Montebon

Close friends and I have blocked the third weekend of May since a year ago to be able to make it to the 2011 Graduation Rites of the US Military Academy in West Point, New York.

The reason is obviously personal. The youngest son of ex-college sweethearts, now gorgeous couple of almost 30 years (I have lost count), Oscar Ibrahim and Zurita Hernando, was to be the first Moro Filipino-American to graduate from the USMA.

Father Oscar, or Bong to us and the entire clan, beams with pride as he talks about his West pointer son, Uzcar Hussein Ibrahim, while mom Zurita just a matter-of-factly tells us about Uzi’s major hurdles in school and in brief assignments outside its portals.

And so after four rigid, character-testing years of training, Uzi finally graduates. The date? May 21, 2011, earmarked to be the day when the world ends. To my mind, who cares if the world ends on this day? I am with my daughter and friends. We were of course so much more excited to meet up in West Point and laughed off the silly doomsday prophecy.

Prior to this much anticipated reunion of friends from Chicago, Missouri, Hawaii, and the Caribbean, there was to be another reunion that I unexpectedly became a part of. Life indeed is full of surprises and ironies and drama, I had to fly to the Philippines early May to fulfill the wish of my grandmother, to bring back her remains to her hometown. Genara Rubi, passed away at the age 92 on April 26, 2011, a week after I visited her in the hospital in Stockton.

It was to be my first homecoming, a rather sentimental one, for almost four years of being away. I flew in to California to attend my grandmother’s Church service before embarking on the long flight to Cebu and then finally to her hometown in Larena, Siquijor.

The journey was emotional and exhausting, that in all the four flights I made (from New York to Charlotte, then San Francisco, Hong Kong, and finally Cebu), I immediately fell asleep as the planes taxied before taking off. My seatmate, also a Cebuana who had to go home to pay the final respects for her mother, was amazed at how I slept like a baby in that long, cramped, cold flight.

It was great to see my father again, and to finally interact with my nephew CJ who was three months old when I left and to enjoy the antics of Jazzy, his one-year-old baby sister, who I found is like me, so camera-ready, flashing a smile each time we pose for pictures.

And so it happened, the thing which I dread doing in reality, collecting the remains of my grandmother from the airport and transporting it to the ferry boat to Siquijor. As a journalist, one of the things that I didn’t want to cover was anything about picking up the remains of the dead from war or any tragedy to be part of my story.

But life is ironic indeed. I was the one who had to personally do that for my grandmother. How my heart sank seeing the white box which contained her body being conveyed by the forklift at the airport and at the pier. We never choose how we die. In whatever manner, death humbles us.

Upon reaching the port of Larena at midnight, we were met by poignant faces of my folks. My aunt, who hasn’t seen my grandmother for nine years, was wailing upon the sight of the white casket. Everything that I had pictured in my mind to happen has unfolded.

And so the nine nights of wake has began in the old house where I spent wonderful childhood summers. Family and friends pour in the house anytime of the day to pay respects to my grandmother.

Lola was gone for a long time to live in the US since 1987.  Her journey was typical in the island where many locals have become petitioned sons and daughters of naturalized US citizens. Siquijor has a long-drawn history of Filipino diaspora since the time of early sacadas in Hawaii and California in the 1900s.

Grandma was a well-known dressmaker and like everyone else, was also a farmer and a fisher. Being the eldest grandchild, I had the best of everything from Lola Nara. She sewed dresses for me, every week, and took me to the beach and the farm as she gathered firewood or fruits or shellfish with my late grandfather.

The love and protection I had from my grandparents was completely assuring. That was the kind of love any child should have to be able to love back and be fundamentally happy and confident. I knew I was lucky. And I couldn’t be so grateful to my old folks.

I wrote this message of gratitude in my eulogy for her.

My short visit was marred by crazy reunions of cousins and friends, and the delightful savoring of foods that I miss. I couldn’t help but scream with gusto as I first tasted the sweet mangoes of Cebu! And the bibingka of Mandaue! And the puto and tsokolate! And the sticky humba! And the caramelized banana cue! The malunggay soup with fresh fish was a constant on our lunch table. Gosh, I truly missed home.

Before going back to the US, my cousins and I did a road tour around Siquijor, stopping at every church in the towns (there are only six) of Siquijor, San Juan, Lazi, Maria, Enrique Villanueva, and Larena. It was another journey of laughter and reminiscing good old days of climbing trees and eating pastries originating from my grandmother and perfected by our aunts.

The last two days in Cebu was a frenzied meeting with college buddies for dinner and karaoke, and some three hour snack with bosom friend Annette, a 20-minute swim at the Portofino Resort, a five hour chat with ever dearest Stella, and a lunch treat by an old family friend we fondly call Tita Lina.

How is that for a first homecoming?

My heart sank again when we said our goodbyes, especially to my cousins. But these days, it isn’t so bad anymore, because we can readily say, see you on Facebook!

The day after I got back in New York on May 18th was my reunion with college friends who were to attend the graduation of Westpointer Uzi. I was so busy, I don’t remember having been jetlagged.

The first to arrive New York were the Ezras from Chicago. I haven’t seen Kitty since 2003 when they visited Cebu together with husband Tom and daughter Isabelle. My daughter Nikki went ahead with them to West Point as I waited for the Missouri contingent, Debbie and daughter Kayra the following day.

With my party complete, we went to West Point through the first trip to Poughkeepsie at six in the morning. Debbie hurriedly but gracefully caught our train on her Jimmy Choos. We boarded two minutes before departure.

The graduation rites began on a fine sunny Saturday. The Michie Stadium was filled to the brim.  Admiral Michael G. Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, gave the graduation address to the 1000 new 2nd lieutenants of the US military.

Aside from Uzi, the Filipino graduates included Gian Mark Domingo Agni from Ewa Beach, Hawaii and Ronald Razon Medina Jr. from Piscataway, New Jersey.

These young gentlemen were later accorded a sumptuous lunch celebration at the residence of Gen. Bryan Goda, who along with his Filipino wife, Gloria, had been their gracious sponsor for the grueling four year course.

After the commissioning ceremony, which was initiated by Gen. Goda, the graduates tried to hold back their tears as they delivered their thank you speeches, with voices almost broken as they express their gratitude to their parents and loved ones.

I feel pride and anxiety for our new soldiers as they face the new challenges of the treacherous battlefields of their new assignments.  Power is always nourished by the blood and selfless dedication of a nation’s people.

I particularly remember Uzi’s older sister, Aisha who beams with pride talking about her brother. “I will always feel scared for Uzi, as he has always been my baby brother,” she once confided.

My college buddies and I occupied the expansive porch overlooking the Hudson River. Lunch was a lovely time catching up on each other’s lives. How have we been since college days, since we were the young student leaders marching the streets denouncing Marcos and organizing the students?

A lot have happened and changed since we were in our feisty years.  Dr. Aming has married college friend Lina, founded a family of three children in the Caribbean, and pursued their careers as medical doctor and physical therapist.

As for Debbie, she has carved a career in Psychology and remarried, and reunited with her two daughters.

Kitty remains the bubbly, ever loyal wife to college sweetheart Loloy who is a respected physical therapist in Chicago. Their daughter Isabelle is a constant source of pride, being a young student leader and stage singer/actress in her high school.

Of course, we know the successful business of Bong and Zurita who have set up a huge physical therapy clinic in West Virginia, aside from raising three beautiful, equally successful children.

Are we a case of amnesia from the deep-seated truths of immense poverty and human rights excesses in our country?  No. Life has an uncanny way of teaching each of us the truth, of how to live to be happy but not blind and unmindful, to arm ourselves with honesty and dedication in our lines of calling, etcetera, etcetera…each one has a reflective line to tell.

Downstream, in the midst of our laughter while taking pictures and cheerful chat, the mighty Hudson continues to flow majestically, giving life to all of New York.

***********************************************************************************

(Marivir Montebon is the managing editor of the Migrant Heritage Chronicle, a Washington, DC-based community paper for immigrants)


APALP HONORS FIL-AM MONA F. PASQUIL

Photo c/o Mr. Benny Uy (www.bennyuyphotos.com)

Los Angeles, 25 April 2011 – The Asian Pacific American Leadership Project (APALP), a non-profit organization dedicated to fostering civic involvement and leadership development for Asian Pacific Americans, honored Mona F. Pasquil, Appointments Secretary, Office of California Governor Jerry Brown, during ceremonies held at The Westin Bonaventure Hotel and Suites at downtown Los Angeles on 21 April 2011.

Pasquil is a third generation Filipino-American. Her paternal grandfather was a Philippine Scout, and her maternal grandparents belonged to the first wave of farm workers that settled in California. She was born and raised in Walnut Grove, in the Sacramento River Delta.

Photo above, courtesy of Mr. Benny Uy, shows Consul General Mary Jo Bernardo Aragon (right) poses with Mona Pasquil (center) and Representative Judy Chu (left).


SARI SARI’NG REFLECTIONS

by David Nieto

THE PAPER CLIP

The next time you feel that your life does not really count – because you are just a single individual &you cannot do much to right the wrongs in life – remember that a paper clip, a tiny one-inch paper clip, saved a 500,000-pound experimental plane from crashing and breaking into pieces.

An experimental jet airplane known as the SB70A took off from its home base all right, but when the pilots were ready to bring the plane down, the landing gear would not cooperate. No amount of juggling would release the landing gear.

Joseph Cotton, the copilot on the plane, took a paper clip and short-circuited a relay panel, which forced the balky nose gear into landing position. Pilot Al White said, “I am convinced we would have broken the plane to pieces if we had tried to land without the nose gear locked into position.”

A paper clip saved an experimental jet plane! History tells us that on a number of occasions a very insignificant item or object becomes the means or inspiration of accomplishing great things.

A spider who strung a web across a garden path was the inspiration for the suspension bridge.

A kitchen teakettle, singing on the stove, gave Watts the idea of inventing a steam engine.

A swinging lantern in a tower gave rise to a pendulum, and an apple that fell off a tree, landing on the head of Isaac Newton, gave impetus to Newton’s defining the law of gravitation.

We often minimize our potential, saying, “I am just one person.” You may be just one person, but you are, nevertheless, an important person. It’s proper for you to understand you are a person of value and worth because that is the way God feels about you.

In the Old Testament, a young man by the name of Samson took the jawbone of a donkey and killed a thousand Philistines. It was not because he looked himself in the mirror that morning and said, “I am going to be a success today.” The Bible tells us that he had given his life to God, and the victory was the result of God’s power that came through the indwelling Holy Spirit.

Have you forgotten the youthful shepherd boy, David, taking five stones and a leather-thonged slingshot to kill Goliath?

Should I remind you of a beautiful Jewish girl by the name of Esther who saved a multitude of Jews and averted an ancientBuchenwald, or Auschwitz, by her courage? A Moabite girl by the name of Ruth became the great-grandmother of David and a progenitor of Christ, because of her bravery.

Here is the insight: Something weak in the hands of God becomes a great and powerful weapon for good. You may actually feel that your life does not amount to much. In a sense that is good, because you will not be so prone to yield to pride.

Then, it will be easier for you to trust God, and lean on His direction and guidance. Trusting God gives you some backbone so that you can say—as Paul did–“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:13)