|
Study to link remittance, Filipino spirituality
by JEREMAIAH OPINIANO
SAN
JOSE, California, USA–CRISANTA Allas’s arm shot
forward to stop the roll of an empty softdrink can –one
of several garbage the 78-year-old Filipino picks up so she
can send money to her daughter in Manila.
Allas, a staff of the Northside Community Center here, is
one of several hundred elderly Filipinos coming out of retirement
to perform odd jobs to sustain their role as the link to life
by their loved ones across another continent.
There is something spiritual in what people like Allas does,
so thinks Dr. Joaquin Gonzalez who is studying the link between
immigration and the spirituality of Filipino-Americans.
The preliminary results of the ongoing study by Gonzalez,
director of Philippine Studies at the University of San Francisco,
reveals the connection between the value of giving and being
Filipino in the heart of the country’s colonizers is
less tenuous.
For Allas, however, sending money to her ailing daughter in
the Philippines, home for her once, is a duty she silently
performs.
“My daughter can’t walk, you know; she needs money,”
Allas said adding this week would be the third time this year
she would remit US$100 (P5,000 at US$1=P50) to the Philippines.
“I just don’t complain that I don’t have
money,” Allas said trudging inside the 250-square meter
social hall.
She spoke to the OFW Journalism Consortium while cleaning
up after several of her compatriots mulled patriotism and
pined for a brighter Philippines during the South Bay's celebration
last October 21 of the centennial of the Filipinos' first
arrival to the US in the 20th century.
Hunched back over plastic cups, half-eaten chicken sandwiches,
and disposable straws, Allas could only sigh.
The irony escapes her.
But it doesn’t with Gonzalez who said he is keeping
an open-mind since he has so far surveyed only 1,457 Filipino
Catholics from the dioceses of San Jose, Oakland, and San
Francisco.
Looking into these Filipinos socio-economic condition, citizenship,
employment, and religious activities, Gonzalez initially discovered
that over half of those surveyed send at least $100 to $500
monthly to the Philippines.
These initial findings, presented during the Fil-Am immigration
centennial forum at the University of San Francisco early
last month, would be presented early next year.
Remitting
GONZALEZ surveyed 342 respondents in San Jose, 391 in Oakland,
and 717 in San Francisco. The three dioceses have 280,301
Filipino Catholics (including 76,060 in San Jose), says the
American bishops’ migrants and refugees office.
Some 57 percent or 822 of the respondents said they send a
minimum US$100 to a maximum $500 (P25,000) every month. Those
who said they send a minimum US$500 up to US$1,000 (P50,000)
a month formed 23 percent (340 respondents) of the total.
Gonzalez’s research stands to affirm the 2004 Asian
Development Bank’s study Enhancing the Efficiency of
Overseas Filipinos’ Remittances, which found that some
40 percent remit monthly, and that the average remittance
amount was $342.
ADB surveyed 413 Filipinos in the San Francisco consular jurisdiction,
as well as Filipinos in Singapore, vacationing overseas Filipinos,
and families with dependents abroad.
ADB study team leader Ildefonso Bagasao, however, thinks that
Filipinos in the US are different because many of them have
reunited with their families here, unlike Filipinos in other
countries who primarily fend for families back home in the
Philippines.
These Filipinos are like Mara Mendoza and Consuelo Dacanay.
Mendoza, who works for a non-profit organization in San Jose,
told the Consortium she sends US$100 to siblings in Manila
“only when the need arises.”
Meanwhile, Dacanay sends home between US$100 to US$200 four
times a year.
This, she said, she does religiously despite having lost a
security-related job three years ago at the Mineta San Jose
International Airport.
Gonzalez’s study is expected to bare the spiritual values
behind such resilience.
Some 47 percent of Gonzalez’s respondents send their
money through money transfer companies like Western Union
and Filipino-run Bayanihan Cargo International Inc. and Luzon
Brokerage Co. (LBC). The other 32 percent on the other hand
send their money through bank channels.
The remaining 21 percent send money through courier channels
like the US Postal System, FedEx and American Express, as
well as through the Filipino immigrant practice of padala
(personally entrusting of money to vacationing compatriots
at no cost but at high risk).
Responding
SUPPORTING grandparents and parents is the reason some 24
percent of total respondents say why they send money to the
Philippines.
Gonzalez’s study noted that other purposes of remittances
include relatives’ health care needs (22 percent), housing
mortgage, and school payments of direct children and nieces
or grandchildren (18 percent each).
When May and October come along, a month each before classes
in Philippine universities open, undocumented immigrant worker
Wigberto (not his real name) sends $2,000 to fully pay the
tuition and other fees of his five children, including three
in college. Earnings from doing home service electrical work
also enable the electrical engineer to send $1,000 monthly
to his family in Angeles City, Pampanga province (northeast
of Manila).
As for the respondents’ total annual earnings, 14 percent
earn between $50,001 and $60,000; 13 percent take home $20,001
to $30,000; and 12 percent earn incomes in each of these ranges—$30,001
to $40,000 and $40,001 to $50,000.
These varied annual incomes are, for 75 percent of respondents,
a product of one job. Some 15 percent of respondents have
two jobs while 2 percent have three or more jobs.
Some 21 percent of respondents are in hotel, restaurant, and
government service jobs; 20 percent are in legal, accounting
and consultancy professions; and 13 percent are in marketing,
retail and sales, engineering, information technology and
electronics.
Dacanay receives a monthly pension of more than $800. All
her eight professional children are employed.
Recently, she said, they sent $600 to Dacanay’s sister
for the repair of her home destroyed when typhoon Xangsane
entered the Philippines.
“My eight kids pitched in $50 each, and I gave $200,”
Dacanay said.
For the former public school teacher, with or without a work
here, sending –sharing, as she says–her money
makes her “feel good and happy”.
While Gonzalez’s remittance datasets are what US- and
Philippine-run companies have been looking for, the professor’s
study would look at the motivation for the act of sending
money.
The Philippines, colonized for more than a century by Spanish
friars and soldiers, remains the only country in Asia with
majority of its 87 million people following the beliefs and
traditions of the State of Vatican. end
OFW Journalism Consortium and the Yuchengco Media Fellows
Program,
University of San Francisco-Center for the Pacific Rim
|