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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.filipino
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!nntp.Stanford.EDU!calliope
- From: calliope@leland.Stanford.EDU (Joanna Salgado)
- Subject: Re: FIL-AMS
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.202641.27867@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Organization: DSG, Stanford University, CA 94305, USA
- References: <1993Jan21.080737.6533@schbbs.mot.com> <C17w3y.MzG@inews.Intel.COM>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 20:26:41 GMT
- Lines: 74
-
- In article <C17w3y.MzG@inews.Intel.COM> sedayao@chopin.intel.com writes:
- >In article <1993Jan21.080737.6533@schbbs.mot.com>, R11334@waccvm.corp.mot.com (Cycle-Time-Sys Sh-Shuy) writes:
- >
- >
- >> Here's an interesting article I saw on the paper today. Some portions have
- >> been deleted:
- >
- >They have a skewed sample. Stanford, as an elite, expensive
- >private school, has a different set of Filipino Americans than a public school
- >would. Drastically different. I know this from experience, having attended
- >a private college and a public one. If they visited U.C. Berkeley (just across
- >the bay), I suspect they would get some very different answers.
- >
- >> STANFORD, California - To talk about Filipino culture is to painstakingly
- >> wring out details of a complicated society where traditions are closely
- >> linked with a Spanish colonial heritage and whose popular culture is
- >> unmistakably American influenced.
- >
- >> One would think that there is no Filipino culture to speak of, in the first
- >> place. This is the reason they have earned the monicker 'brown Americans'.
- >> Filipinos are so exposed to American culture that culture shock ranges from
- >> negligible to zero when they come to the United States.
- >
- >I was born here in the state, but from my experiences with friends, relatives,
- >and others who have immigrated here, culture shock exists and is not negligible.
- >
- >> For most Filipino-American students in Stanford University who grew up
- >> here, the so-called problem of "cultural identity" among children of
- >> immigrants has been resolved. Or it never existed at all.
- >
- >> They consider themselves Americans. "I am an ethnic American and being of
- >> an ethnic minority is a facet of my being an American," declared Julius
- >> Paras, president of Pilipino-American Student Union based at Stanford. "I
- >> am more American than I am Filipino." "I am definitely more American than
- >> Filipino," said Laurie Anne Dee, a sophomore in Florida. "I know my
- >> lifestyle is different from my cousins in the Philippines. I have accepted
- >> that I am an American." Paras, however, said he knows he will never
- >> realize the ultimate American dream - to become President of the United
- >> States -because he was not born here.
- >
- >> Filipino-Americans consider themselves Americans but they do not totally
- >> belong to the country as Americans do. They cannot consider themselves
- >> Filipinos because their only link to the Philippines are their parents, who
- >> in fact did not encourage them to talk and act Filipino. They know that in
- >> the Philippines, the only thing they have in common with the people,
- >> including members of their extended families, is the color of their skin.
- >
- >I would not say this for all Fil-Ams born here. I am not even sure that this
- >applies to the majority. There are a number of reasons that the Filipinos do
- >not teach their Fil-AM kids to speak Tagalog. I know some parents were
- >discouraged (wrongly, in my opinion) by American teachers from speaking to
- >their children in Tagalog. Some Filipinos are more comfortable in English
- >than in Tagalog. One reason my mother did not teach me Tagalog is that she
- >doesn't speak it very well. She is from Mindanao, and she only learned
- >Tagalog here in the US!
- >
- >> Paras said the cultural framework of Filipino-Americans is something that
- >> will always crop up, notwithstanding the fact that they consider themselves
- >> Americans. "There will really be no complete resolution," he said.
- >> "Throughout our lives, we will be faced with this question."
- >
- >> [end of article]
- >
- >> Nice, huh ? How about changing the name of this newsgroup to
- >> SOC.CONFUSED.FILIPINOS ? or maybe REC.TRAVEL.PI (as in "pee-eye"). After
- >> all, vacations, travel and tourist spots are favorite topics.
- >
- >--
- >Jeff Sedayao
- >Intel Corporation
- >sedayao@chopin.intel.com
- >..!uunet!intelhf!chopin!sedayao
-
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