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    U.S. to pay 'forgotten' Filipino World War II veterans

    U.S. to pay 'forgotten' Filipino World War II veterans

    * (CNN) -- More than 60 years after reneging on a promise to the hundreds of thousands of Filipinos who fought for the United States during World War II, the U.S. government will soon be sending out checks -- to the few who are still alive.

    Veteran Franco Arcebal says,

    Veteran Franco Arcebal says, "we are loyal to the United States, except that the United States has forgotten us."

    "For a poor man like me, $15,000 is a lot of money," said 91-year-old Celestino Almeda.

    Still, he said, "After what we have suffered, what we have contributed for the sake of democracy, it's peanuts. It's a drop in the bucket."

    During the war, the Philippines was a U.S. commonwealth. The U.S. military promised full veterans benefits to Filipinos who volunteered to fight. More than 250,000 joined.

    Then, in 1946, President Truman signed the Rescission Act, taking that promise away.

    Today, only about about 15,000 of those troops are still alive, according to the American Coalition for Filipino Veterans. A provision tucked inside the stimulus bill that President Obama signed calls for releasing $198 million that was appropriated last year for those veterans. Those who have become U.S. citizens get $15,000 each; non-citizens get $9,000.

    "I'm very thankful," said Patrick Ganio, 88, the coalition's president. "We Filipinos are a grateful people."

    Ganio was among the tens of thousands of Filipinos at the infamous battle of Bataan, a peninsula on Manila Bay opposite the Philippine capital. He was captured and beaten by Japanese troops before ultimately being freed, suffering from malaria and then resuming his service to the U.S. military.
    "The record of the Philippine soldiers for bravery and loyalty is second to none," Truman wrote to the leaders of the House and Senate in 1946. "Their assignment was as bloody and difficult as any in which our American soldiers engaged. Under desperate circumstances they acquitted themselves nobly."

    Though Truman said the Rescission Act resulted in "discrimination," he signed it.

    "There can be no question but that the Philippine veteran is entitled to benefits bearing a reasonable relation to those received by the America veteran, with whom he fought side by side," he said. "From a practical point of view, however, it must be acknowledged that certain benefits granted by the GI bill of rights cannot be applied in the case of the Philippine veteran."

    Some historians say financial concerns were paramount: The cost of funding full veterans benefits to all those Filipinos, particularly in the wake of the costly war, would have been a heavy burden.

    The National Alliance for Filipino Veterans Equity offers a different explanation. "In 1946, discrimination against people of color was the rule of law," the group says in a document it submitted to the Obama-Biden transition team in November.

    "The second-class treatment of Filipino World War II veterans is another example from this historical period."

    For decades, Filipino activists and their supporters have fought for the full benefits. They've petitioned and picketed. Almeda, a widower who now lives in Virginia with his daughter, once chained himself to the fence outside the White House.

    "I was fined $50 for civil disobedience and was arrested," he says now, chuckling. He says he was just looking for answers.

    Despite encouraging words from U.S. presidents, including George W. Bush and Bill Clinton, the benefits were never restored.

    "Only 70,000 Philippine veterans remain alive, and they hope to stay alive long enough to see those benefits reinstated," CNN reported in 1997. "There's a bill, stuck in committee in Congress, that would do just that."

    That effort, just like so many before, fell apart.

    "We were loyal to the United States. Even up to now, we are loyal to the United States, except that the United States has forgotten us in many ways," said Franco Arcebal, another leader of the American Coalition for Filipino Veterans. "It's only now, because of the insistence of Sen. [Daniel] Inouye in the Senate, he was able to act on this."

    Inouye, D-Hawaii, inserted the language in the stimulus bill, calling it "a matter of honor."

    The honor comes too late for the many Filipino veterans who passed away waiting for this moment. Families of deceased veterans are not eligible to receive the money.

    For those who are alive, the checks could make a real difference.

    "Practically all of us are below the poverty line now at this age. We have no way of earning a living," Arcebal said.

    But, he emphasized, "it does not correct the injustice and discrimination done to us 60 years ago. ... We were not granted school benefits. We were not granted hospital benefits. ... And in the 60 years, several billion dollars were saved by the U.S. government for not paying 250,000 of us.

    "Now we are only 15,000. And the amount that they're giving us is a small amount. But we appreciate that. Because it will finally recognize our services ... as active service in the armed forces of the United States."

    #2
    Thanks for posting this text.
    All I can say, It is about damn time.

    Comment


      #3
      Last man standing to see color of money

      By Tonette Orejas
      Philippine Daily Inquirer
      First Posted 07:57:00 03/01/2009

      Filed Under: Veterans Affairs

      CITY OF SAN FERNANDO, Pampanga—It took 10 minutes for the retired colonel to walk from the door of his house to the gate and open it for the Inquirer.

      Retracing the six-meter distance, Samuel Quiwa, 92, stopped thrice and leaned heavily on his cane, catching his breath.

      Once seated, he presented a list of 17 names—“World War II veterans, native sons of San Fernando (Pampanga),” he said.

      Of the 17 men, Quiwa is the only one alive.

      “They didn’t live long enough to hear the good news,” he said, referring to the lump sum of $9,000 for Filipino war veterans.

      Quiwa did not comment on the amount, but said that with the financial crisis gripping the United States, he would have to see the cash before believing.

      ‘They’re all dead’

      Then he paused, staring sadly at the visitor through his thick eyeglasses.

      “Col. Emerenciano Singian, Col. Miguel Pingol, Lt. Col. Pedro Yumul, Architect Norberto David, Doctor Pamintuan, Engineer Manabat, Maj. Jorge Santos, Master Sgt. Fred Polintan, Capt. Isidro Polintan, Lt. Col. Modesto Polintan, Col. Pacifico Marin, 1st Lt. Abel Quiwa, Maj. Mario Esguerra, Capt. Antonio David, 1st Lt. Primitivo Bamba, Dr. Eduard Normandy,” he said, reciting the names in a respectful tone.

      “They’re all dead, mostly of old age,” Quiwa said.

      Some of them fought in the 31st Division of the Philippine Army, either in its “E” Company or “H” Company, which Quiwa had led.

      That they died waiting and without getting anything doubles the pain, he said.

      The list represents the assistance that Quiwa has managed to extend to Mayor Oscar Rodriguez, who is gathering names for a planned monument to the heroism of World War II veterans.

      63 years

      “It took 63 years before the equity is given. It was given in 1946 and recalled although the Philippines was a commonwealth of the US during the war. [UK Prime Minister Winston] Churchill even extolled us.” Quiwa said.

      “I’m happy. God gave me a long life to see this. If not for [US President Barack] Obama, we would not get the equity. Other US presidents did not give a damn. All these years, I was hoping and hoping. It’s too late, really. If we didn’t work after the war, we would not have received pensions,” he said.

      The common impression is that the veterans lived on measly pensions. But in truth, many of those who survived the intense assault of the Japanese Imperial Army went back to active military service or worked to support their families.

      Quiwa fought in Bataan and Corregidor.

      When Bataan fell to the Japanese on April 9, 1942, he slipped out of the Death March that started in Mariveles.

      Crawling down the mountains to the coast, he begged three boatmen to give him a ride to Corregidor.

      Sailing out at 7 p.m. on April 9 amid the calm sea, they reached the island at 5 a.m. the next day, slowly cruising to avoid floating mines.

      Prisoners of war

      For 27 days after the fall of Bataan, the Japanese shelled Corregidor day and night until May 16, when the Filipino and American soldiers surrendered.

      Recalled Quiwa: “I thought we were going to die by firing squad. The Japanese slapped the US officers. We stayed on the island for 20 days as prisoners of war, were brought to Manila, and then to Camp O’Donnell (Capas, Tarlac).

      “There, 500 to 600 soldiers died each day from malnutrition, tuberculosis or malaria.”

      Quiwa said they drank the water that sick soldiers used in bathing, “so we had to boil the water for a long time.”

      “The timetable of the Japanese [to defeat] the Philippines was one month. We prolonged the fighting to five months),” he said.

      Released on Aug. 28 while afflicted with malaria, Quiwa joined the guerrilla forces of Maj. Robert Lapham in northeastern Pangasinan and in Muñoz and Bongabon towns in Nueva Ecija during the Japanese occupation.

      Striking force

      After returning to the military on Feb. 17, 1945, Quiwa was assigned to the 103rd Military Police command, which evolved into the striking force of the Central Luzon command in Bamban, Tarlac.

      He became part of the anti-Huk campaign by the First Military Area Command and later by the First Philippine Constabulary Command in Camp Olivas.

      He was logistics officer of the Task Force Milagrosa led by Gen. Ricardo Papa, to whom Huk Supremo Luis Taruc surrendered.

      Quiwa devoted 22 years in counterinsurgency in Central Luzon and Cagayan Valley.

      His military service awards are neatly kept in a glass panel. A letter from the late President Ramon Magsaysay is among the cherished possessions gathered in 30 years of military service until his retirement in 1969.

      No bribes

      Alejandria Quiwa, 88, said her husband refused many bribery attempts in his career.

      “One time, he seized three trucks of smuggled cigarettes. The offer was P50,000. He did not take the money. He arrested the culprits and burned the cigarettes. He said he’d like to retire being able to look people straight in the eye,” she said.

      When Quiwa arrived in his areas of assignments, he never demanded furniture or free electricity from residents, according to his wife.

      He used his retirement fund to build a few apartment units so the rentals could pay for the education of their seven children, she said.

      Because the pension from the US government was not much, Quiwa sold life insurance.

      Goodwill and his track record of honesty in the military service served him well in his stint at National Life Insurance, his wife said.


      Copyright 2009 Philippine Daily Inquirer.

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