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February 16 - 22, 2009 | Volume 23 No. 8
Coverpage
Celebrating our 22nd Year

For the past 21 years, The Filipino Express has provided the Filipino American community the best news, arts and entertainment coverage from around the United States and the Philippines.

This website includes selected articles from this week's edition of the Filipino Express. Not all the stories published in the printed version appear on this site.



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REAPING HONOR
Filipino World War II veterans can go to 14 sites in the Philippines to get their benefits
By Joseph G. Lariosa
CHICAGO – Filipino World War II veterans can claim their benefits in 14 different Philippine Veterans Affairs Offices in the Philippines, according to a press release issued Wednesday (Feb. 18) by the office of Sen. Daniel K. Akaka (Dem.-HI), chairman of U.S. Senate Veterans Affairs committee.

Jesse Broder Van Dyke, press secretary of Senator Akaka, issued a press release, quoting the U.S. Embassy in Manila, identifying the sites and dates where veterans can go to apply for their benefits from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The benefits that were included in The Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 by Sen. Daniel K. Inouye (Dem.- HI), U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee chair, is being facilitated for distribution because most of the recipients are aged between 85 and 90 and are very sickly.

Meanwhile, Vice Consul Roberto T. Bernardo of the Philippine Consulate in Chicago, Illinois was informed by Philippine Ambassador to the United States Willie C. Gaa that Rep. Bob Filner (Dem.-Calif.), Chair of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, will be hosting a reception on Wednesday, Feb. 25, for the Filipino veterans at the Veterans’ Affairs Committee Hearing Room (Room 335, Cannon House Office Building) at the Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. Mr. Filner, co-chair of the Philippines-United States Congressional Friendship Caucus, has expressed the wish that Filipino American leaders attend the reception.

Except for the Philippine
Veterans Affairs Office (PVAO) Central Office at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City and the Veterans Memorial Medical Center at North Avenue, Quezon City, where veterans can apply from Feb. 19 to 27, 2009 and from Feb. 19 to 20, 2009, respectively, the veterans can also visit the following Philippine Veterans Affairs Offices between Feb. 24 and 26, 2009 in the following addresses:

1. National Highway cor. Diversion Rd., Pagdaraoan, San Fernando City, La Union;

2. USAFIPNL Camp Henry T. Allen, Baguio city, Benguet;

3. Old Provincial Capitol Bldg., Iloilo City, Iloilo;

4. CENTCOM, Camp Lapu-Lapu Lahug, Cebu City, Cebu;

5. 126 Gomez St., Tacloban City, Leyte;

6. SOUTHCOM Upper Calarian, Zamboanga del Sur;

7. Door 4, Gutierrez Compound, Abad Santos Avenue, Davao City, Davao del Sur;

8. Provincial Capitol, Batangas City, Batangas;

9. 1-A Callangan Bldg., Bonifacio St., Tuguegarao City, Cagayan;

10. Cleofer’s Bldg., Gen. Hizon Extension, San Fernando City, Pampanga;

11. ANST Bldg., Washington Drive, Legazpi City, Albay; and

12. Camp Evangelista, Patag, Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental.

The press statement says, “the United States Department of Veterans Affairs is reaching out to all Filipino WWII veterans regarding the new one-time lump-sum benefit payment signed into law on February 17, 2009.

“The United States has great respect for the bravery and service of Philippine WWII veterans and for their partnership with the U.S. military in defending freedom.”

This new legislation, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, signed by President Barack Obama Tuesday, Feb. 17, in Denver, Colorado, formally recognizes the service of Filipino WWII veterans as active military service in the Armed Forces for purposes of this law.

In accordance with the new law, for an individual to be eligible for payment, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs must receive the individual’s claim no later than February 16, 2010, which is one year from the date U.S. President Obama signed the historic legislation.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is working toquickly implement the new U.S. law. Filipino WWII veterans can inquire about and submit claims for the new lump-sum benefit at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Manila Regional Office located at the U.S. Embassy in Manila. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Manila Regional Office will also have representatives available to accept claims at 14 locations throughout the Philippines.

All Filipino WWII veterans are requested to bring the following information and documentation (if applicable) when filing their claims:

• Two forms of Identification (such as passport, driver’s license, Senior Citizen ID, Bureau of Post ID, Voter
ID, etc. )

• VA Claim number

• Service Number

• Philippine Veterans Affairs Office claim number

• Philippine Veterans Affairs Office Pension bank account
number

• U.S. Passport (if a U.S. Citizen)

In order to provide effective, transparent service, claims will only be accepted from Filipino WWII veterans.

All Filipino WW II are encouraged to apply in person at one of the locations listed above on
the dates indicated. If a veteran is unable to appear in person, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Manila Regional Office will arrange to obtain the application in an appropriate manner.

Claims from spouses, widows and children of Filipino WWII veterans will not be accepted.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is working to implement this new law in a timely and efficient manner to ensure all eligible veterans receive their rightful benefits as soon as possible. Although claims are now being accepted, information regarding the actual release of payments will be provided as it becomes available. This information will be available on the US Embassy website at http://manila.usembassy. gov

For more information please dial (632) 528-2500 within Metro Manila or from outside Manila toll-free at 1-800-1888-5252. Or contact VA via e-mail at https://iris.va.gov. (lariosa_jos@sbcglobal.net)

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Filipino Youth Tie Yellow Ribbons 'Round
Jersey City

JERSEY CITY - Contrary to the popular notion in the United States on yellow ribbons as symbols of support for American troops and the desire to bring them back home, members of the progressive Filipino youth group Anakbayan New York/ New Jersey offered community members of Jersey City yellow ribbons in remembrance and celebration of the 1986 People Power. Yellow ribbons with the inscription, "People Power Lives!" were handed out to Filipinos on Westside and Newark Avenue last February 16, 2009.

"Yellow is the color of one of the most momentous event in Philippine history. It is the symbolic color of our united voice saying enough is enough, our collective action, which ended a 21-year rule of the Marcos Regime. It has been more than two decades and we are still very proud of it. We should be constantly reminded of this historic affair to draw lessons from and give us hope that change is possible." Yancy Gandionco, Anakbayan NY/NJ vice-president stated.

As in Marcos' reign, Anakbayan believes that during Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's eight unproductive years in office, Filipinos have remained poor, Political repression and execution of those who oppose the administration's corrupt and inhumane practices have been perpetrated.

"The impoverished conditions in which Filipinos find themselves in for the past years, has been a testament that the Arroyo government has done nothing to lift up the economy of the nation, and instead, even widely opened its doors to neoliberal policies, exposing our country to worsening exploitation by the US imperialist and other foreign capitalist entities. To this, we say enough is enough!" Gandionco added.

To commemorate the 1986 People Power Revolution, Anakbayan encourages Filipinos in the US to wear yellow ribbons on February 25th as a sign of the Filipino people's resolve for genuine change in the system of the Philippine government.

In addition, Anakbayan NY/NJ, in cooperation with the New York Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (NYCHRP), will be holding "Pagpupugay" on February 21, 2009 as a tribute to the anti-Martial Law activists who tirelessly fought from the First Quarter Storm movement of January 1970, and who still continue to fight up to the present, for the realization of true national democracy in the Philippines.

The event will be held in Gallery 1199 at 310 West 43rd street from 1PM to 5PM. Anakbayan New York/ New Jersey is one of the US chapters of Anakbayan Philippines, a comprehensive national democratic mass organization fighting for the rights, welfare and basic needs of the Filipino youth around the world. Other US chapters include Honolulu, Los Angeles, San Diego, Seattle, Las Vegas and East Bay.

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Filipinos and the Cult of Jollibee
By Ted Reyes
NEW YORK– James Bernais stands in front of the counter looking at the different menu items on the big menu board that graces the newly opened Jollibee restaurant in Woodside, Queens. He mumbles a few words in his attempt to remember the items he would be ordering once his turn comes: “Chickenjoy (Jollibee’s famous fried chicken that is arguably the best seller in all their stores worldwide) ,” he said. “ I must have Chickenjoy.”
Upon uttering those words, he looks back at the long line formed outside the fast food chain, shakes his head, smiles, and summons a sigh of relief– a sigh that can only mean one thing: He finally made it to the promised land.

James, like all the customers who have been into this first-ever Jollibee restaurant in the East Coast since it opened last February 14, have braved the cold and waited in line for at least five hours just to be served. Five hours. Almost equivalent to time spent at work.

For a Filipino fast food chain to get that kind of adoration in the US, it must have made such deep impact with its customers resulting in a sense of profound loyalty to the product– a loyalty similar to that of Apple fans whenever the electronics giant unveils a new cool product. It is a kind of loyalty that is almost cultic often times irrational, but all together great.

“I know people would come but I did not expect them to line up for five hours under the chilly weather,” says Maria Lourdes Villamayor, East Coast General Manager of Honeybee Foods Corporation. “And that’s overwhelming and heartwarming at the same time.”

But what is special about the food that it deserves long lines and camp outs

“A taste of Jollibee is literally a taste of home,” Villamayor continues. That’s how they miss the brand.”

Jollibee became famous in the Philippines in the early 1980s with their Yumburgers– Filipino style burgers. These burgers are uniquely Filipino in a way that it is not made of just 100% ground beef like how Americans make it.

Instead, it is a composite of different ingredients very much like how Filipinos make homemade burgers– with eggs that serve as extenders, and perhaps some chopped onions, a little bit of flour, or garlic for taste.

Why add extenders? Filipinos are not the richest people on earth and putting pure beef in between two buns is a luxury that they cannot afford, hence the “patch.”

This improvised take on the all-American hamburger alone makes every Jollibee Yumburger as Filipino as Adobo.
Then came the bird– Chickenjoy.

Chickenjoy pretty much changed the landscape of Philippine fast food. When it debuted, the Filipinos are used to only two kinds of fried chicken: The American variety best marketed by the multi-million corporation KFC, and the Filipino homestyle fried chicken known as Max’s. The differences between the two are extreme. KFC is typical American southern fried chicken breaded and tender, while Max’s is whole chicken submerged in hot oil just like how every Pinoy mom or lola fries chicken.

But Chickenjoy changed it all.

Jollibee Chickenjoy is a marketing miracle. A mind-bending invention that made the Filipino fast food chain a billion-peso business and a global brand.

How did it happen, and what is different with this Chickenjoy? How did it erase KFC and Max’s from every Pinoy’s hungry mind?

Chickenjoy killed two brands with one bite. It is an American style breaded fried chicken just like KFC but has something that Colonel Sander’s recipe doesn’t: Crackle.

Chickenjoy is crispy and crispy is how Filipinos want their fried bird. With that simple thing, KFC was TKOed.

Max’s followed shortly. Max’s is high-end stuff for the average Filipino. One cannot get a Max’s three-piece combo of just the leg, thigh and wing. One has to order the whole bird. Again, it is another luxury that most Filipinos cannot have.

In fact, most Filipinos only get a chance to eat at Max’s when there is a wedding or a party held in the restaurant. Max’s is simply too expensive for the cash-strapped Filipinos.

Chickenjoy, on the other hand, is cheap. It can be ordered as a one-piece with a side of rice or spaghetti or a combination of two or three parts, or even a large bucket. But the one-piece meal was what made the Chickenjoy the undisputed Filipino fried chicken. It is both crispy and cheap. And that really made Jollibee what it is now.

But that alone does not explain why James braved the cold and waited five hours in line just to get his Chickenjoy. There are two other factors why Jollibee is such a hit here in the US: Sentimentality and identity.

Ms. Villanueva is right. A taste of Jollibee is a taste of home. With every crackle of the crispy skin of the Chickenjoy, Filipinos who grew up in the Philippines are transported back to a time when everything was peaceful and secure. Perhaps they remember all the Jollibee birthday parties they had when they were little and perhaps the little rewards they got from their parents with every A+ grade they received at school. For every Filipino born and raised in the 7,000 plus islands, it is the very definition of comfort food. This is sentimentality. This is what makes Filipinos working and living abroad crave for the Jollibee spaghetti, Yumburger, or Chickenjoy every time they think of home.
But what about the Filipinos born here in the US? How come they also stood in line with the Philippine-born Jollibee fans? They have no memories of Jollibee growing up, yet how come they are there?

The answer: Identity.

If Jollibee is part of being a Filipino, Filipino-Americans, who are in search of their own identity, will surely be drawn to it as well. It may not give them the same comfort as it gives their parents, but it will make them understand where their parents are coming from– and thus completes them in a way.

Recently, Filipino-Americans have stepped up their resolve in re-connecting with the homeland. These kids have began to express the Filipino side of their being whether it be in the form of adulation for Manny Pacquiao or admiration for Charice Pempengco, Arnel Pineda, or by being aware of the political issues affecting the Philippines.

According to Ms. Villamayor, the ratio of Philippine-born customers and Filipino Americans during the first days of Jollibee Woodside is equal. Both groups are equally excited to be there and eat the food from the homeland no matter how long the wait and how cruel the weather.

Missing home and knowing thyself is indeed a lucrative combination that is set to overturn any bleak economic forecast.

Jollibee’s entrance into the Filipino community in the East Coast is nothing short of phenomenal and profitable.

Consider this: According to Ms. Villamayor, on Jollibee’s opening day, the lines snaked around two avenue blocks from Roosevelt Avenue to 38th from opening to closing. The store opened at 6:00 AM and remained open until 4:00 AM the next day–almost 24 hours. They served their last customer, a Filipino-American at 3:30 AM. It was pretty much the same everyday since the opening.

As of press time, reports came in that due to the very long lines, the management of Jollibee is issuing tickets to people that are lined up outside. According to this report, only ticketed customers will be served. This prevents people who sneak in to the store without falling in line from ordering food. Likewise, the local NYPD was reportedly deployed to monitor the situation in and around the store.

Also, Ms. Villamayor reported that due to the high volume of orders, one of their two deep fryers have malfunctioned. It simply could not fry any more.

Nevertheless, business continues as usual. Despite long lines and the occasional chaos, all of those who came in and ate at Jollibee left with smiles in their hearts and faces.

When asked what advice he would give to the people waiting outside, James said: “I will tell them to be patient. If I made it here, they will make it here. Just wait and they will be rewarded. It is totally worth it.”

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