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THE FILIPINO CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION

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CINDY ELLEN RUSSELL / CRUSSELL@STARBULLETIN.COM
J.J. Sanbay and Renalyn Gascon, both 9 years old, paused yesterday for applause after performing a traditional Filipino bamboo dance at the Filipino Community Center. The entertainment was part of the kickoff ceremony for the Filipino Centennial Celebration, which will be a year-long celebration commemorating Filipinos' immigration, culture, historical contributions and advancements in the United States. Also pictured are bamboo clappers Christian and Joshua Boromeo.


Success and sacrifice

Events over the next year will celebrate
a century's worth of isle Filipino milestones

WAIPAHU » Benjamin Saguibo credits everything he has accomplished in life to his parents' decision to leave the Philippines for Hawaii in 1946 in search of a better life.

He credits them for the 60-cents-an-hour wage he made pumping gas when he was 18, and for the $2.75 an hour he later got as a construction worker building military homes at Schofield Barracks.

"It's a good thing our parents came to Hawaii," said Saguibo, 69, now business manager and secretary-treasurer for the Laborers' International Union Local 368, a position to which he rose from his construction worker days. "It was lucky for us."

Next year will mark 100 years since a group of 15 farm workers, also known as "sakada," left the Philippines in 1906 and came to the Big Island to work in sugar cane fields.

Waves of immigrants that followed brought the state's Filipino-American population to more than 275,000, second only to California, where more than 1 million live.

To commemorate the stories of struggle and success of Filipino immigrants, the Filipino Centennial Celebration Commission is planning festivities for a year beginning Dec. 10.

At a news conference yesterday at the Filipino Community Center, the commission unveiled the events planned for 2006, including concerts, parades, cultural exhibits, a film festival and a historical dramatization of the first Filipinos to arrive in Hawaii.

"This is a way for us to look back on where we came from, where we are today and what the future holds for the next generation of Filipino youth," said Elias Beniga, chairman of the commission.

The celebration has also received state support.

Gov. Linda Lingle, honorary chairwoman of Hawaii's Filipino Centennial Celebration, gave the commission a $50,000 check on top of the $150,000 in state appropriations she released last year.

The Filipino migration to Hawaii, Lingle said, is "really the story of America, a country where a group of people ... had the opportunity to excel."

"Their willingness to sacrifice paid off," Lingle said, also announcing she would make her first trip to the Philippines in January.

Jeoffrey Cudiamat, president of the Filipino Junior Chamber of Commerce, praised the achievements Filipinos have made, noting that many have become doctors, lawyers, lawmakers and even governor.

Former Gov. Ben Cayetano, who served from 1994 to 2002, was the first Filipino American to win a state's highest office.

"We are at a better advantage compared to what the sakada had to go through," Cudiamat said.

Lito Alcantara, founder and president of the contracting firm Group Builders, also said he owed all he has acquired in his career to Filipino immigrants.

"We have accomplished a lot," he said. "Without their sacrifice there would have been no opportunities."



Filipino Centennial Celebration
www.filipinosinhawaii100.org



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