By Cristina DC Pastor Feet in Two Worlds Even by Filipino standards, Jen Furer’s immigration journey is one colossal heartache: Her entire family, meaning her parents and five brothers, were deported after living in the U.S. for several years. The worst episode came when a brother in California and another in New Jersey got their […]
By Shakira Andrea Sison I learned early on that I could never be American. I knew I could never tell the story of having been teased by a boy named Jimmy Chestnut who would later give me a Crackerjack ring while eating snow cones after a football game. I didn’t know this when I arrived […]
By Cristina DC Pastor In Los Angeles, the center for cultural activity among Filipinos is an area called Historic Filipinotown, a stretch of roadway where the population of 25,000 is 60 percent Latino, 25 percent FilAm and the other 15 percent a mix of ethnicities such as African Americans and Armenians. Dennis Arguelles, director of […]
By Cristina DC Pastor In the lethargic town of Ridgway, Pennsylvania – which is closer to Canada than to New York City – the mayor is a Filipino. The 72-year-old Guillermo Udarbe is also a doctor and so his town runs like clockwork. Mornings, this family practitioner tends to patients, and evenings he holds court […]
Filipinos were the third largest immigrant group to acquire U.S. citizenship by naturalization in 2011, according to the Department of Homeland Security. A total of 42,520 Filipinos were naturalized last year, representing a 20 percent increase from a year ago. Mexico and India were the top two countries of birth of new U.S. citizens, says […]