Categories
Idioms...Hokkien style

When words fail, use idioms… Hokkien style (57)

Hokkien, on the tongues of Tsinoys, has grown and evolved, taking on a life of its own. Sometimes words simply fail us. With some creativity, Tsinoys have strung together words to form colorful phrases that simply hit the bull’s eye. Here are some expressions unique to Hokkien as favored by Tsinoys. 學好三年,學壞三日 ô ho san […]

Categories
Health

How to use natural family planning

(First of two parts) In one of our medical missions, we visited a poor family living beside the Sta. Mesa railway. They have seven children, all with tuberculosis. The father and mother also have TB. We helped them for a span of six months. The last time I saw them, the mother was again pregnant […]

Categories
History

How to be a rookie cop in Hong Kong

Hong Kong has long been a favorite travel destination for many Filipinos. In 2016 alone, 791,171 Filipino tourists visited Hong Kong for shopping bargains, gourmet treats and Disneyland. The city is also a popular destination for overseas Filipino workers. They comprise Hong Kong’s largest migrant worker community with a population of 184,081. So it makes sense […]

Categories
Gems of History

Sayao and Dapitan

During our research on old names of places in the Philippines mentioned in ancient Chinese records, we encountered a pair of names – 沙瑶 (Sayao) and 呐嗶嘽 (Dapitan). 呐嗶嘽 is easy to locate because Dapitan is pronounced almost exactly like Na-pi-tan in Hokkien or Na Bi Dan in Mandarin. This Zamboanga del Norte city is […]

Categories
Tsinoy Beats and Bytes

‘We will not be intimidated’

The title of this column is the title of the statement signed and released by 31 women, all awardees of The Outstanding Women in the Nation’s Service (TOWNS). I take pride in being one of the signatories of this statement that comes amid assaults by the President no less on various sectors, including women. TOWNS […]

Categories
History

Remembering history helps build a nation

W e have long forgiven Japan for the tragedy it caused us – our country and our people – during World War II. But it does not mean we should just forget the atrocities and crimes visited upon us during the Japanese Occupation. This was my position in the letter I sent to the Department […]

Categories
History

The plight of comfort women

I first heard about comfort women in a conference on Asian Relations in Korea. They had invited a comfort woman to talk about her experience during the Japanese Occupation. I felt the tension as the translator attempted to censor the woman’s anti-Japanese sentiments because there were Japanese delegates present but we were all moved by […]

Categories
Life

Coming home to hope

The Christmas holidays was marred by a tragedy when Typhoon Urduja pounded the Eastern Visayas region with torrential rains that resulted in widespread flooding and landslides. The storm recorded 40 casualties. In Ormoc City, over 20 areas were badly affected, prompting the local government to declare a state of calamity. Residents of the Great Love City, […]

Categories
History

Remembering Japan’s war dead: Shrines in the Philippines

The controversy raised by the Comfort Woman Statue at Roxas Blvd., Manila sparked an even more explosive reaction by supporters of comfort women. These included women’s organizations like Lila Filipina and Gabriela, descendants of Filipino and Chinese-Filipino war veterans, Chinese and Tsinoy organizations. “Why do we question the presence of a statue that pays tribute […]

Categories
History

Other comfort woman statues

Since 1992, Korean comfort women groups and their supporters had been staging protests at the Japanese Embassy every Wednesday, earning the Guinness Book of World Records title for the longest sustained protest on a single issue. In 2016, Korea, and in 2017, San Francisco, put up statues of comfort women, both of which sparked controversies, […]