Saturday 19 July 2008

A world without Filipinos

Public Lives
A world without Filipinos

By Randy David
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 01:30:00 07/05/2008

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All over the world, the nations that Filipino overseas workers have served well by their labor, talent and dedication never fail to express their appreciation for the cheerful way Filipinos perform their duties while contending with the vicissitudes of living in strange cultures. While they note the immense contributions Filipino workers make to their countries, however, even the most appreciative among them tend to be oblivious to the personal suffering that migrant workers often bear as a result of their isolation from their families and communities.

Once in a while, one comes across a reflective piece that articulates the gratitude of host communities that have greatly benefited from the labor of Filipino guest workers. Such is the short essay written by Abdullah Ai-Maghlooth for a local newspaper in Saudi Arabia. The author muses:“Whenever I see Filipinos working in the Kingdom, I wonder what our life would be without them. Saudi Arabia has the largest number of Filipino workers—1,019,577—outside the Philippines. In 2006 alone, the Kingdom recruited more than 223,000 workers from the Philippines and their numbers are still increasing ….Nobody here can think of a life without Filipinos …. We could die a slow death if they chose to leave us.”

These are heartwarming sentiments, and they could form the basis of a global solidarity with migrant workers everywhere. But they are necessarily self-referential: they note the indispensable contributions that Filipinos make to the wellbeing of the host nation. They single out Filipino workers for their skill, their tenderness and their loyalty. But they do not see the human being that performs all these services and possesses all these traits. They do not see the families these workers have left behind, the relationships they have put on hold because of migration, and the experience of humiliation and helplessness they often go through as virtual exiles in strange lands. Away from their loved ones and circle of intimates, their lives tend to be bare. Wrenched from the culture that is their medium, their identities tend to wither.

They help maintain and reproduce the social systems that host them, but these societies do little to integrate them as members. Their service is needed, but not their person, or—to be more precise—not the cultural practices that reproduce them as individuals with identities of their own.

A world without Filipinos may seem unimaginable to those nations whose lives have been greatly enriched by their presence. But, impossible as it may be, a world that allows every Filipino to take his loved ones along wherever he may choose to work would be a far richer world. Better still, a Philippine society that affords every Filipino the chance to grow and to use his talents without having to leave his country would be a far richer society.

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