A Long March
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
Winding through a seldom told history of the Philippines and United States, Celestino Almeda, Rudy Panaglima, and Feliciana Reyes find themselves inducted into U.S. Armed Forces during WWII. After their service, Congress declared them, and hundreds of thousands more, to be “not on active duty.” These veterans were denied backpay, GI benefits, and promised citizenship. Today, Celestino, Rudy and Feliciana's continued fight represents the tens of thousands of elderly Filipino veterans who remain unacknowledged despite their evidence of service. As judicial solutions hit a brick wall and all eyes turn to Congress, A LONG MARCH asks the hard questions: will America stand up for the values it claims, and will these veterans get the recognition they deserve before they are all dead?
Westminster College | Eleonor G. Castillo, PhD, Asst Professor, Westminster College
“As a longtime educator, both in PreK-12 and higher education, I critically reflect upon the histories and lived experiences that have been readily excluded from such disciplines as social studies and U.S. history in the American school system. The documentary, A Long March, provides a way to foster critical thinking and dialogue within a classroom setting that addresses U.S. history often untold, as the film brings forth the story of Filipinos who fought and died for the United States during World War II. Additionally, A Long March raises our consciousness of the unkept promises made to Filipino-U.S. soldiers by the U.S. government. Thus, incorporating the documentary as a curriculum piece would enhance teaching and learning in U.S. history, Asian American studies, ethnic studies, and justice studies courses.”
Los Angels Asian Pacific Film Festival
“In an honest and heartfelt directorial debut, TS Botkin follows Filipino American veterans as they emotionally trace their paths from war to erasure by the U.S. Government.”
Better Angels Society | Ken Burns
"We live in a turbulent time," said Ken Burns. "There's never been a better moment to lift up and reflect diverse stories from history to provide a greater perspective on what we're experiencing now. Documentary filmmakers help us understand our common history, see one another, and celebrate what makes us similar and different. I am very grateful to Jonathan and Jeannie Lavine and The Better Angels Society for providing a pathway to bring filmmakers from all backgrounds to the table and recognizing that diverse perspectives are integral to telling the breadth of our country’s history.”
Better Angels Society | Jeannie Lavine
“There’s a great hunger for understanding the past right now, and we need compelling history stories that are grounded in research. The documentaries selected through this fellowship allow us to engage with the past in a way that is gripping and enlightening. They also spark conversations that are critical to how we understand the present. This fellowship opens up resources and brings a community of expert filmmakers to those promising filmmakers who apply for the Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film.”
Asian Avenues Magazine
"Uncovering historical relics in a basement led to the long awaited documentary called A Long March."
KPBS
"They want respect. They want to be recognized as having served. So, the Rescission of 1946, when repealed, will right the wrong that was done," said Joe Garbonzos.
San Diego Tribune
“I feel personally that we have an obligation to our ancestry to heal the wounds of the past,” Botkin said, “by recognizing what we’ve done and making restitution where we can.”
ShoPowSho Podcast | Patrick Strange/aka Kuya P
Check out the conversation with A Long March, Kuya P, and Viva Valentina as they speak with T.S. Botkin about the lost history of Filipino American veterans.
Greatest Memories Podcast | Ben Sandifer
A Long March film and its mission of restoring benefits to Filipino-American veterans.
Citation
Main credits
Botkin, T. S. (film director)
Botkin, T. S. (screenwriter)
Botkin, T. S. (film producer)
Upson, Amanda (film producer)
Bautista, Benito (film producer)
Other credits
Original score, Michael Dadap; cinematographer, Tamara Benitez; editor, Gregg Stouffer.
Distributor subjects
Filipino Americans; AANHPI; AAPI; Social Justice; Veterans Studies; Women's Studies; History; WWII; Imperialism; Racism; Human RightsKeywords
00:00:10.969 --> 00:00:14.889
-[Feliciana] Dear Sir or
Ma'am, peace be with you.
00:00:14.889 --> 00:00:18.935
[Solo guitar and typing]
My name is Feliciana Reyes,
00:00:18.935 --> 00:00:22.105
a World War II veteran
in the Philippines,
00:00:22.105 --> 00:00:24.315
and I was with the Medical Corps
00:00:24.315 --> 00:00:27.986
75th Infantry in
Dumaguete, Negros Oriental.
00:00:29.070 --> 00:00:32.032
I was helping, treating,
and assisting...
00:00:32.032 --> 00:00:36.953
I was born a national of the
United States of America,
00:00:36.953 --> 00:00:39.414
American history is my history.
00:00:40.248 --> 00:00:44.127
I enlisted and served under
the flag of the United States
00:00:44.127 --> 00:00:49.132
during World War II. That
service was not recognized.
00:00:49.591 --> 00:00:53.553
I'm hoping for your kind
understanding and patience.
00:00:53.553 --> 00:00:55.138
More power to you.
00:00:55.138 --> 00:00:58.975
There are many like me,
but most Americans
00:00:58.975 --> 00:01:00.935
don't know about us.
00:01:01.853 --> 00:01:04.022
Our story has been buried in time,
00:01:05.106 --> 00:01:06.983
waiting for you to discover.
00:01:09.277 --> 00:01:12.280
[Enigmatic low notes]
00:01:24.375 --> 00:01:28.630
-[Victor Fulford] These paintings
have been in my basement since 1980.
00:01:30.507 --> 00:01:32.634
When I got married,
several years ago,
00:01:32.634 --> 00:01:35.970
my wife brought out this big crate
00:01:37.013 --> 00:01:38.973
and I asked her what was in it,
00:01:38.973 --> 00:01:39.974
she said, oh, they're some paintings.
00:01:39.974 --> 00:01:41.935
I didn't think anything about it,
00:01:41.935 --> 00:01:43.770
stuffed them in the basement.
00:01:43.770 --> 00:01:46.022
I said, where did you
get these painting?
00:01:46.022 --> 00:01:48.108
She said, George give 'em to me.
00:01:48.108 --> 00:01:51.986
Okay, George was her ex-boss.
00:01:51.986 --> 00:01:55.031
I did ask her, why
George give 'em to you?
00:01:55.990 --> 00:01:58.743
There is the mystery that
will never be answered.
00:02:00.161 --> 00:02:01.621
Yeah, I said, Let's get rid of 'em.
00:02:01.621 --> 00:02:02.413
No.
00:02:03.248 --> 00:02:08.128
She wouldn't talk about them,
and I just ended up with 'em.
00:02:08.128 --> 00:02:11.131
[Mysterious low notes]
00:02:12.215 --> 00:02:14.884
When she passed away I
looked at the paintings
00:02:14.884 --> 00:02:16.970
and realized there
was something there.
00:02:16.970 --> 00:02:21.599
They were actually
very striking, very,
00:02:21.599 --> 00:02:23.476
they're just plain
terrible paintings.
00:02:24.477 --> 00:02:26.980
Then I started researching George
00:02:26.980 --> 00:02:29.858
and they come out it was
Colonel George Kinsey,
00:02:29.858 --> 00:02:32.861
the man that gave the
paintings to my wife,
00:02:32.861 --> 00:02:36.739
was the commanding officer at
the time that these paintings
00:02:36.739 --> 00:02:39.701
were made at Hamilton
Field in San Francisco,
00:02:39.701 --> 00:02:43.997
in February, March,
and April, 1944.
00:02:46.124 --> 00:02:50.295
So, I started studying them,
researching the best I could,
00:02:50.295 --> 00:02:52.755
and I didn't know what I was doing.
00:02:52.755 --> 00:02:56.009
You talk about like a
billygoat in the wash machine,
00:02:56.009 --> 00:02:58.011
I didn't know what I was doing.
00:02:58.011 --> 00:03:01.097
-[Feliciana] Tracing the
dates and inscriptions,
00:03:01.097 --> 00:03:04.309
Victor learned what
he had were depictions
00:03:04.309 --> 00:03:06.060
of a once censored story
00:03:06.060 --> 00:03:09.105
of troops who
escaped from POW camps
00:03:09.105 --> 00:03:12.984
in the Philippines, after the
Bataan Death March.
00:03:12.984 --> 00:03:15.778
- They didn't believe any
of us would live to tell
00:03:15.778 --> 00:03:18.072
the horrible things they did.
00:03:18.072 --> 00:03:19.824
Thank God we have.
00:03:19.824 --> 00:03:22.952
-[Feliciana] Stunned by
his new understanding,
00:03:22.952 --> 00:03:26.956
and seeking more answers,
Victor dug deeper.
00:03:26.956 --> 00:03:28.958
-[Victor] Bataan didn't
mean anything to me,
00:03:28.958 --> 00:03:33.379
just like any American, you
never heard about in school.
00:03:33.379 --> 00:03:37.842
I went to this Bataan
memorial convention.
00:03:37.842 --> 00:03:39.510
I never could get a
straight answer out
00:03:39.510 --> 00:03:43.139
of all these quote-unquote
military experts.
00:03:43.139 --> 00:03:44.974
They have no clue that these type
00:03:44.974 --> 00:03:47.101
of paintings and artwork exist.
00:03:47.101 --> 00:03:48.311
I'm gonna show some paintings
00:03:48.311 --> 00:03:50.480
that you are not going to believe.
00:03:50.480 --> 00:03:52.023
I had hit a dead end.
00:03:53.066 --> 00:03:57.612
And then when
Frank Francone got involved
00:03:57.612 --> 00:04:00.365
then the whole picture
started coming together.
00:04:01.282 --> 00:04:03.493
-[Frank Francone] A fellow, named Jim,
00:04:03.493 --> 00:04:06.329
I had talked to him about
some of my experience
00:04:06.329 --> 00:04:07.372
in the Philippines.
00:04:07.372 --> 00:04:09.415
Jim says, well you know,
I've got this friend
00:04:09.415 --> 00:04:12.835
he keeps talking
about having paintings.
00:04:12.835 --> 00:04:16.256
I said, well, that's interesting.
00:04:16.256 --> 00:04:19.008
Philippines?
I said, I don't know.
00:04:19.008 --> 00:04:21.886
I've never heard of anybody
having paintings like that.
00:04:23.554 --> 00:04:25.807
I wasn't really expecting that much
00:04:25.807 --> 00:04:27.225
and now all of a sudden
he starts bringing out
00:04:27.225 --> 00:04:32.021
these huge paintings of scenes
00:04:32.021 --> 00:04:35.316
that were obviously from
the Bataan Death March.
00:04:37.735 --> 00:04:42.532
I was given the opportunity
the way you are in the Army.
00:04:42.532 --> 00:04:45.159
I was given the opportunity
to go to the Philippines
00:04:45.159 --> 00:04:49.372
and I ended up there
in September of '46
00:04:49.372 --> 00:04:53.126
by then I was 19 years old.
[Distant horn with drums]
00:04:53.126 --> 00:04:56.129
They are depicting an
actual scene that occurred
00:04:56.129 --> 00:04:59.382
in the Philippines in World War II,
00:04:59.382 --> 00:05:03.052
right after the Japanese took
over the Philippine islands,
00:05:03.052 --> 00:05:04.971
and this was
basically the beginning
00:05:04.971 --> 00:05:06.764
of the Bataan Death March.
00:05:08.308 --> 00:05:09.851
Yeah, it's pretty gruesome.
00:05:12.020 --> 00:05:17.025
This painting is really amazing
because it depicts
00:05:17.066 --> 00:05:21.821
the situation that, and the
emotions involved by these men,
00:05:21.821 --> 00:05:24.407
you can really understand
where they were coming from.
00:05:27.535 --> 00:05:29.162
I was assigned to an organization
00:05:29.162 --> 00:05:33.041
called the Philippines Scouts
as a Second Lieutenant,
00:05:33.041 --> 00:05:35.460
Company Commander,
Battalion Adjutant,
00:05:35.460 --> 00:05:39.255
stationed at Camp O'Donnell.
00:05:39.255 --> 00:05:42.008
It turns out that Camp
O'Donnell was the place
00:05:42.008 --> 00:05:44.093
where the Death March ended.
00:05:44.093 --> 00:05:47.055
When I arrived there of course,
fortunately, the battles,
00:05:47.055 --> 00:05:48.723
the fighting was over.
00:05:48.723 --> 00:05:52.977
The camp was basically under
control of the U.S. Army,
00:05:52.977 --> 00:05:54.854
primarily the Philippine Scouts.
00:05:56.314 --> 00:05:58.941
All the troops were Filipinos,
00:05:58.941 --> 00:06:02.653
many of the troops had been
involved in the Death March.
00:06:02.653 --> 00:06:04.697
Because I was there,
00:06:04.697 --> 00:06:07.283
I developed a heart
for what had happened.
00:06:07.283 --> 00:06:12.038
I spent a lot of time studying
it and saw the destruction
00:06:12.038 --> 00:06:14.040
that had taken place there,
00:06:14.040 --> 00:06:16.125
because it's only by
looking at those,
00:06:16.125 --> 00:06:19.379
that you can say, oh my
God, look at this happened?
00:06:19.379 --> 00:06:21.089
I never knew about that.
00:06:23.091 --> 00:06:25.009
-[Victor] When I
started learning about it,
00:06:25.009 --> 00:06:30.014
what the government did to,
actually they were Americans,
00:06:30.098 --> 00:06:33.017
you know, that they
fought for this country
00:06:33.017 --> 00:06:36.854
and then they get treated
this way the government did.
00:06:36.854 --> 00:06:41.067
I was glad I had sense
enough to realize they
00:06:41.067 --> 00:06:42.985
had historical value to 'em.
00:06:42.985 --> 00:06:45.530
'Cause it's definitely not taught.
00:06:45.530 --> 00:06:48.116
I thought I'd studied
World War II, but I didn't.
00:06:48.116 --> 00:06:50.993
[Horns & drums fade]
00:06:55.039 --> 00:06:57.375
[Church bells & horse feet clopping]
00:07:06.134 --> 00:07:10.638
-[Gen. Antonio Taguba] Well, it goes
back to 1898 and the Treaty of Paris,
00:07:10.638 --> 00:07:12.640
because they had the
Spanish American War.
00:07:14.725 --> 00:07:18.855
Spain ceded the Philippines
to the United States,
00:07:18.855 --> 00:07:22.608
whereby the United States
became the colonial power
00:07:22.608 --> 00:07:26.654
of the Philippines back
in 1898 up until 1946.
00:07:28.698 --> 00:07:31.993
-[Dr. Colleen Woods] The Philippines is
taken as part of the
00:07:31.993 --> 00:07:33.077
Spanish American War.
00:07:33.077 --> 00:07:35.997
So, in 1898, the U.S.
fights a war in Cuba,
00:07:35.997 --> 00:07:37.957
and it fights a war
in the Philippines.
00:07:39.542 --> 00:07:43.045
The U.S. Navy, Admiral Dewey,
quickly routes the Spanish
00:07:43.045 --> 00:07:46.382
and fights alongside
Filipinos who are like, yes,
00:07:46.382 --> 00:07:48.259
the U.S. is going to
help us get independence,
00:07:48.259 --> 00:07:51.471
instead the U.S. buys the
Philippines for $20 million.
00:07:52.972 --> 00:07:55.975
[Ominous low notes]
00:07:56.976 --> 00:08:00.480
And, so what quickly
ensues is a war between
00:08:00.480 --> 00:08:03.983
Filipino Independence
activists and the U.S. Army,
00:08:03.983 --> 00:08:07.028
and it turns into a really,
really bloody and brutal war.
00:08:10.031 --> 00:08:12.700
[Guns firing]
00:08:12.700 --> 00:08:15.369
[Crowd shouting]
00:08:19.874 --> 00:08:20.875
-[Feliciana] It was an Alliance
00:08:20.875 --> 00:08:22.543
that became a shocking betrayal.
00:08:23.961 --> 00:08:28.966
Rather than be our own
people, after 300 years,
00:08:29.509 --> 00:08:33.846
we would be unwillingly sold
from one empire to another.
00:08:40.061 --> 00:08:44.815
The reality that we would
remain a colony was secured
00:08:44.815 --> 00:08:47.610
by the blood of about
a million Filipinos.
00:08:51.948 --> 00:08:54.742
- Filipinos actually
did declare independence
00:08:54.742 --> 00:08:56.702
after the Spanish American war,
00:08:56.702 --> 00:09:00.039
it was just never recognized
by the United States.
00:09:00.039 --> 00:09:02.083
The colonization of the
Philippines was predicated
00:09:02.083 --> 00:09:04.377
on the idea that Filipinos
were not yet ready
00:09:04.377 --> 00:09:05.711
for governing themselves.
00:09:05.711 --> 00:09:09.131
And so, Americans, though
they would recognize
00:09:09.131 --> 00:09:12.260
they had a colony, it was
always an exceptional colony.
00:09:12.260 --> 00:09:14.762
[Sweeping orchestral music]
00:09:14.762 --> 00:09:17.139
-[Feliciana] In an
effort by U.S. officials
00:09:17.139 --> 00:09:21.936
to gain public support for the acquisition
of the Philippines as a colony,
00:09:21.936 --> 00:09:26.107
an exhibition was constructed
at the World's Fair in 1904.
00:09:29.986 --> 00:09:33.030
This exposition's goal
was to demonstrate
00:09:33.030 --> 00:09:36.242
that we, "Little Brown Brothers,"
00:09:36.242 --> 00:09:39.120
were not ready for
self-governance.
00:09:42.164 --> 00:09:47.169
After the fair, in further
acts of paternal racism,
00:09:47.169 --> 00:09:51.591
some tribes were conned into
participating in human zoos
00:09:51.591 --> 00:09:53.593
from Chicago to Coney Island.
00:09:56.095 --> 00:09:58.014
Back home as we rebuilt,
00:09:58.014 --> 00:10:00.975
we were learning English
and American history.
00:10:04.478 --> 00:10:06.147
- Americans are not
all that comfortable
00:10:06.147 --> 00:10:07.857
acknowledging or
talking about empire,
00:10:07.857 --> 00:10:10.026
and to understand the
Philippines, you have to know
00:10:10.026 --> 00:10:11.944
that it was a possession
of the United States
00:10:11.944 --> 00:10:13.779
that was under U.S. sovereignty.
00:10:17.158 --> 00:10:20.870
They were helping to bring
the Filipinos into modernity,
00:10:20.870 --> 00:10:24.707
and that justification
rested entirely on a belief
00:10:24.707 --> 00:10:26.584
that Filipinos, as a racial group,
00:10:26.584 --> 00:10:28.336
weren't ready to do it themselves.
00:10:28.669 --> 00:10:31.672
[Marching, horses trotting]
00:10:33.215 --> 00:10:38.220
-[Gen. Taguba] So, over time, the United
States organized military forces
00:10:38.304 --> 00:10:40.097
in the Philippines, as
a matter of defending
00:10:40.097 --> 00:10:42.808
the United States in the Pacific.
00:10:44.810 --> 00:10:46.854
It created the Philippines Scouts,
00:10:46.854 --> 00:10:48.981
Philippine Commonwealth
Army, and the like,
00:10:48.981 --> 00:10:50.399
because they needed a presence.
00:10:50.399 --> 00:10:53.986
You don't colonize a country
without military presence.
00:10:58.032 --> 00:10:59.950
-[Feliciana] We began
to flourish once again
00:10:59.950 --> 00:11:03.120
in the Philippines with our
new identity as Americans.
00:11:04.372 --> 00:11:08.501
But, in the U.S. we
met with struggles.
00:11:08.501 --> 00:11:11.462
-[Dr. Woods] As a U.S. colony,
Filipinos were called U.S. Nationals
00:11:11.462 --> 00:11:14.131
and they could move freely
between U.S. territories.
00:11:14.131 --> 00:11:17.301
So, imagine that the depression
hits and you have Filipinos
00:11:17.301 --> 00:11:19.220
that can move between U.S. territories
00:11:19.220 --> 00:11:21.972
and Filipinos are paid lower
wages than white workers
00:11:21.972 --> 00:11:22.973
in the United States.
00:11:22.973 --> 00:11:25.059
So, there's a series of
really, really violent
00:11:25.059 --> 00:11:27.978
anti-Filipino race
riots in California.
00:11:27.978 --> 00:11:28.938
And they're all based on the idea
00:11:28.938 --> 00:11:30.398
that these are not Americans.
00:11:31.982 --> 00:11:34.068
In 1934, the U.S.
passes what's called
00:11:34.068 --> 00:11:36.987
the Tydings-McDuffie Act
and it's signed by FDR.
00:11:36.987 --> 00:11:41.534
The Tydings-McDuffie Act was
in part, racial exclusion law.
00:11:41.534 --> 00:11:43.786
- We're committed to
a policy of complete
00:11:43.786 --> 00:11:45.496
independence for the Philippines.
00:11:45.496 --> 00:11:46.997
They have asked for it.
00:11:46.997 --> 00:11:49.333
They must decide now.
00:11:49.333 --> 00:11:52.044
They can't have their
cake and eat it too.
00:11:52.044 --> 00:11:55.089
- Once Tydings-McDuffie is signed,
00:11:55.089 --> 00:11:57.842
Filipinos are no
longer U.S. nationals.
00:11:57.842 --> 00:11:59.969
They're essentially
treated as foreigners
00:11:59.969 --> 00:12:02.054
in terms of immigration and in fact,
00:12:02.054 --> 00:12:04.598
a number of them are repatriated
from the United States.
00:12:04.598 --> 00:12:05.349
What does it do?
00:12:05.349 --> 00:12:07.601
It says that the Philippines
is going to be a Commonwealth,
00:12:07.601 --> 00:12:10.938
it's going to be on a 10-year
timetable to independence,
00:12:10.938 --> 00:12:12.565
and Filipinos, and the
Filipino assembly
00:12:12.565 --> 00:12:15.526
is going to entirely
govern the sort of domestic
00:12:15.526 --> 00:12:16.944
order in the Philippines.
00:12:18.696 --> 00:12:20.030
What it left to
the United States
00:12:20.030 --> 00:12:22.742
in terms of sovereignty
was foreign policy.
00:12:22.742 --> 00:12:24.952
Manuel Quezon, who is the
president of the Commonwealth
00:12:24.952 --> 00:12:28.080
tries numerous times to
get the United States
00:12:28.080 --> 00:12:30.124
to declare Philippine independence,
00:12:30.124 --> 00:12:33.043
in hopes that it somehow
could spare the Philippines
00:12:33.043 --> 00:12:36.297
from a war between Japan
and the United States.
00:12:36.297 --> 00:12:39.467
And he asked again, and again,
until finally FDR is like,
00:12:39.467 --> 00:12:41.969
we're not gonna bring
up this subject again.
00:12:41.969 --> 00:12:43.637
You are under U.S. sovereignty,
00:12:43.637 --> 00:12:45.389
you know, sort of,
end of question.
00:12:45.389 --> 00:12:47.224
At this moment when the
United States is saying,
00:12:47.224 --> 00:12:49.268
yes, the Philippines is
going to be independent,
00:12:49.268 --> 00:12:51.812
they're still sort
of returning back
00:12:51.812 --> 00:12:54.940
to this imperial rule
again, and again.
00:12:54.940 --> 00:12:58.068
[Music swells]
00:12:59.153 --> 00:13:01.238
[Military drums]
00:13:01.238 --> 00:13:06.160
-[Gen. Taguba] On July 26, 1941, in
pending Japanese attack
00:13:06.160 --> 00:13:09.038
on the United States
in the Philippines,
00:13:09.038 --> 00:13:11.957
President Franklin Roosevelt
issued a military order
00:13:11.957 --> 00:13:16.462
ordering General Douglas MacArthur
to mobilize all organized
00:13:16.462 --> 00:13:19.048
military forces in the Philippines.
00:13:19.048 --> 00:13:23.010
Organize, meaning Philippine
Scouts, Constabulary,
00:13:23.010 --> 00:13:24.970
and the Philippine Commonwealth Army
00:13:24.970 --> 00:13:28.557
to be part of that force,
called the U.S. Army Forces
00:13:28.557 --> 00:13:29.975
in the Far East.
00:13:29.975 --> 00:13:32.853
So, thereby a promise was made
00:13:32.853 --> 00:13:35.105
that if you defend our country,
00:13:35.105 --> 00:13:37.358
meaning not just the Philippines,
00:13:37.358 --> 00:13:40.986
but the United States, we
will provide you with certain benefits.
00:13:43.364 --> 00:13:46.617
-[Feliciana] As recruitment
increased in 1941,
00:13:46.617 --> 00:13:49.161
forces in the
Philippine campaign grew
00:13:49.161 --> 00:13:52.790
to 120,000 Filipino troops,
00:13:52.790 --> 00:13:55.334
plus 30,000 from
the U.S. mainland.
00:13:56.877 --> 00:14:01.048
In a country where rations
were low, the new military was
00:14:01.048 --> 00:14:05.135
outfitted with used clothing
and World War I weaponry.
00:14:07.596 --> 00:14:11.809
We were ill-prepared for
the attack on December 8th,
00:14:11.809 --> 00:14:16.021
just eight hours after the
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.
00:14:16.021 --> 00:14:24.029
-[Radio address by FDR] December 7th, 1941
a date which will live in infamy.
00:14:24.029 --> 00:14:28.117
Japan has undertaken
a surprise offensive
00:14:28.117 --> 00:14:31.412
extending throughout
the Pacific area.
00:14:31.412 --> 00:14:34.957
The facts speak for themselves.
[Bombs exploding, flames roaring]
00:14:53.934 --> 00:14:56.854
-[Joy Romero Meyers] My father
was a dental surgeon, yes,
00:14:56.854 --> 00:15:00.232
and he was drafted when
he was 37 years old.
00:15:01.233 --> 00:15:03.944
Of course, I was in
grade school at the time.
00:15:05.321 --> 00:15:09.116
We were there until it came
up to be evacuation time
00:15:09.116 --> 00:15:11.076
and we were wanted families.
00:15:17.166 --> 00:15:19.335
We went to my grandmother's farm,
00:15:20.961 --> 00:15:23.881
we were in hiding for
the rest of the war.
00:15:26.467 --> 00:15:28.761
-[Feliciana] Over the
course of four months,
00:15:28.761 --> 00:15:31.764
forces fell back from
the Bataan peninsula
00:15:31.764 --> 00:15:33.474
to defend Manila Bay.
00:15:33.474 --> 00:15:36.977
On half rations,
with a diminished arsenal
00:15:36.977 --> 00:15:39.980
and no hope for reinforcements,
00:15:39.980 --> 00:15:44.777
entrenched troops surrendered
on April 9th of 1942
00:15:44.777 --> 00:15:47.655
the beginning of
what would notoriously
00:15:47.655 --> 00:15:51.742
be known as the Bataan Death March.
00:15:51.742 --> 00:15:55.704
-[Frank F.] Considering the situation
of their troops, malnutrition,
00:15:55.704 --> 00:15:59.959
ammunition, and the overwhelming
forces of the Japanese,
00:15:59.959 --> 00:16:02.086
they had made the
decision to surrender.
00:16:04.046 --> 00:16:07.633
-[Feliciana] From Mariveles,
70,000 captured soldiers
00:16:07.633 --> 00:16:11.345
were marched 62 miles
to San Fernando.
00:16:11.345 --> 00:16:15.015
There, they were loaded
into box cars for transport
00:16:15.015 --> 00:16:18.143
to Capas, and then
marched another six miles
00:16:18.143 --> 00:16:19.561
to Camp O'Donnell.
00:16:19.561 --> 00:16:24.566
During the week-long march,
without food or water,
00:16:24.650 --> 00:16:26.944
and at the mercy
of the merciless,
00:16:26.944 --> 00:16:31.949
some 700 Americans and 10,000
Filipino soldiers died.
00:16:34.994 --> 00:16:37.121
-[Sean Amutan] My grandfather
went missing
00:16:37.121 --> 00:16:39.331
and my grandmother
was never informed
00:16:39.331 --> 00:16:44.294
that he was either killed
or missing for a few years.
00:16:45.045 --> 00:16:48.382
- My father really
was a man of few words.
00:16:48.382 --> 00:16:52.886
He didn't really talk about
the war that much with me,
00:16:52.886 --> 00:16:54.847
I'm pretty sure he
shared it with my mother,
00:16:54.847 --> 00:16:58.559
and I know he got shot,
because I saw the mark.
00:16:58.559 --> 00:17:03.564
-[Frank F.] The Japanese had a policy,
I think it's called bushido,
00:17:03.981 --> 00:17:06.025
which was a policy that,
00:17:06.984 --> 00:17:10.946
basically as far as the
prisoners were concerned,
00:17:10.946 --> 00:17:15.951
if you ever surrendered, then
you were basically a coward
00:17:17.536 --> 00:17:20.289
and it really didn't matter
what happened to you,
00:17:20.289 --> 00:17:25.294
your life was insignificant.
And I think the atrocities
00:17:25.961 --> 00:17:28.756
that happened, many of
them were because of that.
00:17:28.756 --> 00:17:32.134
In the process of walking
in the Death March,
00:17:32.134 --> 00:17:36.555
they would strike people
for no reason at all.
00:17:36.555 --> 00:17:41.018
Citizens would try to hand
food to the men that were
00:17:41.018 --> 00:17:45.064
in the Death March and
sometimes they would kill them.
00:17:45.064 --> 00:17:48.025
In fact, there was one woman
that they actually stabbed
00:17:48.025 --> 00:17:49.943
with a bayonet and
she was pregnant.
00:17:51.028 --> 00:17:54.490
- He said that one time,
he was trying to help,
00:17:54.490 --> 00:17:57.034
I don't know if he was a
Filipino or an American,
00:17:57.034 --> 00:18:01.371
he was trying to help him
and a Japanese came down
00:18:01.371 --> 00:18:04.833
and bayoneted him and
he just went like this
00:18:04.833 --> 00:18:08.087
and you could see
the scar on his hand.
00:18:08.087 --> 00:18:11.590
- The troops had been on
quarter rations now for a month,
00:18:11.590 --> 00:18:16.595
and, as a result of that,
they were physically incapable
00:18:16.595 --> 00:18:17.638
of fighting back.
00:18:17.638 --> 00:18:20.057
Then, occasionally, there
would be some water source,
00:18:20.057 --> 00:18:23.060
maybe a creek they
would run to there
00:18:23.060 --> 00:18:25.646
and they maybe stick
their heads in it.
00:18:25.646 --> 00:18:27.648
Sometimes the Japanese
would come over
00:18:27.648 --> 00:18:29.817
and just shove their
head down into the water
00:18:29.817 --> 00:18:30.984
until they drowned.
00:18:32.611 --> 00:18:36.615
Then when the Japanese
took over Corregidor
00:18:36.615 --> 00:18:39.952
General Wainwright was
forced to surrender
00:18:39.952 --> 00:18:41.036
all the Philippines.
00:18:43.997 --> 00:18:46.792
-[Feliciana] This began
a new occupation
00:18:46.792 --> 00:18:48.085
of the Philippines.
00:18:50.087 --> 00:18:53.757
-[Radio address by Gen. Wainwright]
Yesterday, I tendered to the Commander in
00:18:54.550 --> 00:18:59.096
of the Imperial Japanese
forces in the Philippines,
00:18:59.096 --> 00:19:02.015
the surrender of Corregidor.
00:19:02.015 --> 00:19:04.268
[soldiers cheering]
00:19:04.268 --> 00:19:06.937
-[Dr. Woods] It was an enormous
defeat for the U.S. Army,
00:19:06.937 --> 00:19:08.814
a crushing defeat for the U.S. Army
00:19:08.814 --> 00:19:10.983
and an enormous victory for Japan.
00:19:11.984 --> 00:19:14.319
The military plans several
years in advance for this,
00:19:14.319 --> 00:19:16.029
and they were planning
for a conflict with Japan.
00:19:16.029 --> 00:19:18.240
It wasn't a huge surprise.
00:19:18.240 --> 00:19:20.242
And the plan was,
they said, you know,
00:19:20.242 --> 00:19:22.411
we don't have the resources
to protect the Philippines.
00:19:22.411 --> 00:19:24.413
These people are under
U.S. sovereignty,
00:19:24.413 --> 00:19:26.248
yet you're going to
say, in a conflict,
00:19:26.248 --> 00:19:29.042
you're not going to
fully protect them?
00:19:29.042 --> 00:19:30.627
[Dissonant music]
00:19:30.627 --> 00:19:33.297
-[Feliciana] Thousands
more captured soldiers
00:19:33.297 --> 00:19:37.134
and civilians were held
at various POW camps
00:19:37.134 --> 00:19:39.511
in deplorable conditions.
00:19:42.055 --> 00:19:44.975
-[Frank C.] After the March,
after the long walk,
00:19:44.975 --> 00:19:48.520
he said they were just in
this field in Camp O'Donnell,
00:19:51.940 --> 00:19:54.359
they would sleep on the field,
00:19:54.359 --> 00:19:56.028
and there were so many of them,
00:19:56.028 --> 00:19:57.654
they were like sardines.
00:19:58.947 --> 00:20:02.492
All you hear is moaning
and you didn't know
00:20:02.492 --> 00:20:05.996
whether the person next
to you is gonna die,
00:20:05.996 --> 00:20:07.331
you know, he might be dead,
00:20:07.331 --> 00:20:09.499
you know, by the time
the morning came.
00:20:11.043 --> 00:20:13.003
-[Frank F.] Of course, in the
camps themselves
00:20:13.003 --> 00:20:17.049
there were terrible stories
that occurred there,
00:20:17.049 --> 00:20:20.969
you know, dysentery, the
hospitals that they supposedly had
00:20:20.969 --> 00:20:23.513
were really death wards in a way.
00:20:23.513 --> 00:20:25.849
Once you went in a hospital,
00:20:25.849 --> 00:20:28.477
there was no way you were
going to come out alive.
00:20:28.477 --> 00:20:31.980
Of course, the mosquitoes
were terrible, the maggots,
00:20:33.232 --> 00:20:35.400
the lack of hygiene was,
00:20:38.946 --> 00:20:41.823
something that we can't
even relate to in a way.
00:20:41.823 --> 00:20:44.034
The Americans, there
were about 50 men a day
00:20:44.034 --> 00:20:47.287
that were dying at one
point, and the Filipinos,
00:20:47.287 --> 00:20:50.874
they were dying at a much
higher rate than that of Americans,
00:20:50.874 --> 00:20:53.627
and at that point, the
Japanese decided to move men
00:20:53.627 --> 00:20:56.880
out of that camp and move
them into Camp Cabanatuan.
00:20:56.880 --> 00:20:59.758
The Japanese were then decided,
well, we're gonna release
00:20:59.758 --> 00:21:03.136
some of these Filipinos, one
we wanna make it appear like
00:21:03.136 --> 00:21:06.515
we like them and trying
to get them to support
00:21:06.515 --> 00:21:10.519
our taking over the
Philippines, but also
00:21:10.519 --> 00:21:14.022
they wanted to cut down
on their obligations
00:21:14.022 --> 00:21:16.108
of taking care of these prisoners.
00:21:18.235 --> 00:21:21.488
-[Frank C.] My dad, when he was
released, in order for him
00:21:21.488 --> 00:21:25.826
to stay in Manila, would
work unloading trucks,
00:21:25.826 --> 00:21:30.038
he would work all day
long and he would have,
00:21:30.038 --> 00:21:35.043
enough wage for us to have a meal.
00:21:35.961 --> 00:21:38.463
And he says, the rice
would be about this big,
00:21:38.463 --> 00:21:41.008
and he says,
because you were so small,
00:21:41.008 --> 00:21:43.760
he says, you would
eat most of that,
00:21:43.760 --> 00:21:46.471
and my dad would eat some
and my mom would eat some,
00:21:46.471 --> 00:21:48.557
but that's the whole
meal that they had.
00:21:51.310 --> 00:21:54.104
A Japanese officer
took a liking to me
00:21:55.814 --> 00:21:59.067
because, I guess when I was
small, I was kind of cute.
00:21:59.985 --> 00:22:03.530
And he took a liking
to me and asked my mom
00:22:03.530 --> 00:22:07.951
if he could trade me
for 100 sack of rice.
00:22:09.745 --> 00:22:14.041
100 sack of rice was a lot of
money at that particular time.
00:22:14.041 --> 00:22:17.294
You don't defy the
Japanese during that time.
00:22:17.294 --> 00:22:20.547
My mom says, oh, no, no, no.
00:22:20.547 --> 00:22:21.965
[Dramatic drumbeats]
00:22:21.965 --> 00:22:25.052
The Japanese just
smiled and let me go.
00:22:28.305 --> 00:22:30.599
-[Feliciana] Though
Filipino prisoners on parole
00:22:30.599 --> 00:22:34.936
from POW camps swore not to
oppose the new occupation,
00:22:34.936 --> 00:22:39.983
some regrouped with escaped
soldiers and guerrilla troops.
00:22:39.983 --> 00:22:44.071
Many of us did, and guerrilla
numbers began to swell
00:22:44.071 --> 00:22:45.614
into the hundreds of thousands.
00:23:22.150 --> 00:23:24.861
[Guns firing]
00:23:26.113 --> 00:23:28.115
-[Frank F.] The guerrillas
had done such
00:23:28.115 --> 00:23:29.408
a great job interfering
00:23:29.408 --> 00:23:32.786
with the Japanese ammunition
dumps, food dumps,
00:23:32.786 --> 00:23:34.037
obtaining information
on the movement
00:23:34.037 --> 00:23:36.039
of the Japanese troops,
00:23:36.039 --> 00:23:40.877
passing that on to MacArthur
who was in Australia.
00:24:27.048 --> 00:24:29.676
[Drums continue with female vocal]
00:24:31.470 --> 00:24:34.055
-[Feliciana] I too
joined the guerrillas
00:24:34.055 --> 00:24:36.975
to serve the sick and
the wounded soldiers.
00:24:37.434 --> 00:24:40.479
I was assigned as a Ward Attendant,
00:24:42.981 --> 00:24:45.275
treating wounds and
tending the sick.
00:24:50.363 --> 00:24:53.033
[Gunfire and burning]
00:24:53.950 --> 00:24:58.955
-[Feliciana] On October 28, 1944,
Commonwealth President Osmena,
00:25:00.624 --> 00:25:03.168
issued an executive order:
00:25:03.168 --> 00:25:05.629
all persons who are
actively serving
00:25:05.629 --> 00:25:08.715
in recognized military forces to be
00:25:08.715 --> 00:25:11.092
on active service in
the Philippine Army.
00:25:13.094 --> 00:25:17.349
All guerrilla units recognized
by General MacArthur,
00:25:17.349 --> 00:25:20.936
like mine, were now
officially part of the war.
00:25:23.063 --> 00:25:27.734
Guerrilla troops, having gained
back huge swaths territory,
00:25:27.734 --> 00:25:30.070
coordinated the
resistance with the U.S.
00:25:30.070 --> 00:25:32.822
until their return
with allied forces.
00:25:32.822 --> 00:25:37.827
[Guns firing]
[Plane engine roaring]
00:25:39.162 --> 00:25:42.415
[Shells firing and exploding]
00:25:44.376 --> 00:25:49.214
-[Feliciana] By September of
1945, the enemy was crushed.
00:25:49.214 --> 00:25:52.092
[Patriotic band]
00:26:02.519 --> 00:26:06.022
Though devastated, the
Philippines remained.
00:26:11.611 --> 00:26:14.489
-[Joy] The war was over, peacetime,
and my mother wouldn't talk
00:26:16.074 --> 00:26:17.951
because she was
waiting for my father.
00:26:18.994 --> 00:26:23.373
I heard that vivid
story of my father,
00:26:23.373 --> 00:26:25.875
how my father was killed.
00:26:25.875 --> 00:26:27.586
He was an early casualty.
00:26:27.586 --> 00:26:31.089
He was in the hospital when
the Japanese bombed Bataan.
00:26:32.591 --> 00:26:34.217
My mother didn't talk.
00:26:34.217 --> 00:26:37.554
For the longest time
she refused to talk.
00:26:37.554 --> 00:26:40.974
She just felt like my
father probably had amnesia
00:26:40.974 --> 00:26:42.809
and could not find his way home.
00:26:42.809 --> 00:26:45.854
[Melancholy instrumentals]
00:26:53.737 --> 00:26:56.531
-[Sean] As administrations
changed, the decisions
00:26:56.531 --> 00:26:57.949
were not going to be easy.
00:26:57.949 --> 00:27:00.952
For Congress to had kind
of changed their mind
00:27:00.952 --> 00:27:04.539
on what was promised to
the Filipino veterans.
00:27:07.959 --> 00:27:11.838
-[Gen. Taguba] In February of 1946,
the 79th Congress passed
00:27:11.838 --> 00:27:14.049
the Rescission Act,
that Filipino soldiers
00:27:14.049 --> 00:27:16.635
were not to have
been on active duty.
00:27:16.635 --> 00:27:20.055
If you're not on active duty
is as if you did not exist.
00:27:21.306 --> 00:27:23.892
And they also took away
their U.S. nationality.
00:27:23.892 --> 00:27:25.518
They were not citizens.
00:27:25.518 --> 00:27:26.978
Why was that?
00:27:26.978 --> 00:27:29.814
Because it would have
taken $3 billion
00:27:31.358 --> 00:27:33.985
to pay those who fought
in the Philippines
00:27:33.985 --> 00:27:37.113
over a period of time,
about 30 years.
00:27:37.113 --> 00:27:42.118
It's cheaper to give them $220
million as their back-pay.
00:27:42.869 --> 00:27:45.455
History says that the
Philippine government
00:27:45.455 --> 00:27:47.374
turned down that money.
00:27:47.374 --> 00:27:50.585
-[Feliciana] The Rescission
Acts created a new law
00:27:50.585 --> 00:27:54.047
that left most Filipino
troops who had served
00:27:54.047 --> 00:27:58.051
with no rights to back-pay,
benefits or recognition.
00:27:59.094 --> 00:28:02.138
For those who could receive
pay it was not equal
00:28:02.138 --> 00:28:04.974
to that of mainland Americans,
00:28:04.974 --> 00:28:08.520
and the military
deducted costs, too.
00:28:08.520 --> 00:28:11.773
- Just one word more,
it's a word that covers
00:28:11.773 --> 00:28:14.943
a lot of ground,
it covers 48 states,
00:28:14.943 --> 00:28:19.072
it covers 7,000 islands.
The word is American.
00:28:20.031 --> 00:28:24.077
The Filipinos are American,
treat them like Americans.
00:28:24.077 --> 00:28:28.081
- There were lots of ways that
Congress could rationalize,
00:28:28.081 --> 00:28:30.083
essentially, the Rescission Act.
00:28:30.083 --> 00:28:32.085
Immediately after the
war Congress is like,
00:28:32.085 --> 00:28:33.253
we're spending so much money.
00:28:33.253 --> 00:28:35.588
We're not gonna spend
all this money anymore
00:28:35.588 --> 00:28:37.966
on essentially irregular armies.
00:28:39.801 --> 00:28:41.261
Truman didn't want the
Rescission Act, right?
00:28:41.261 --> 00:28:43.054
I mean, it's signed over his veto
00:28:43.054 --> 00:28:44.055
and he sees it as essentially
00:28:44.055 --> 00:28:47.767
kind of an embarrassment
for the United States.
00:28:50.019 --> 00:28:51.938
They decide that the U.S. is
going to give the Philippines
00:28:51.938 --> 00:28:55.024
250 million in war
reconstruction funds.
00:28:55.024 --> 00:28:58.278
And that is not the same as
guerrilla recognition, right?
00:28:58.278 --> 00:29:00.405
This has to do
with damaged property.
00:29:01.322 --> 00:29:04.075
One of the things to know about
the war rehabilitation fund
00:29:04.075 --> 00:29:08.455
was that the U.S. government
pegged it to a law
00:29:08.455 --> 00:29:11.040
that they wanted the
independent Philippines to pass,
00:29:11.040 --> 00:29:13.376
and this law was
called the Parity Law,
00:29:13.376 --> 00:29:15.295
sometimes in the Philippine
press it would be called
00:29:15.295 --> 00:29:17.964
the Equal Rights Amendment,
which I find really interesting.
00:29:17.964 --> 00:29:21.968
And what it essentially said
is that Americans would have
00:29:21.968 --> 00:29:26.014
the same rights as Filipinos
to do business in the country,
00:29:26.014 --> 00:29:28.224
and they do get that bill passed.
00:29:28.224 --> 00:29:30.935
-[Feliciana] At the
same time, U.S. officers
00:29:30.935 --> 00:29:34.314
who were to grant
naturalization to Filipinos
00:29:34.314 --> 00:29:39.027
who served honorably in the
U.S. Armed Forces during the war,
00:29:39.027 --> 00:29:40.987
had their authorization revoked.
00:29:42.030 --> 00:29:46.034
Only 4,000 Filipino
soldiers were naturalized
00:29:46.034 --> 00:29:49.454
before the window of
opportunity closed.
00:29:49.454 --> 00:29:54.042
- The U.S. is already using its
position to sort of leverage
00:29:54.042 --> 00:29:55.043
the Philippine government
00:29:55.043 --> 00:29:58.254
to get the kind of
Philippines that they want.
00:29:58.254 --> 00:30:01.049
The cost is that essentially the
individual Filipino
00:30:01.049 --> 00:30:04.010
and the individual guerrilla
is put to the side.
00:30:05.011 --> 00:30:06.971
Congress is certainly saying,
00:30:06.971 --> 00:30:09.891
well, we gave them $250 million.
00:30:09.891 --> 00:30:13.144
So, I do think it gets
used as a sort of leverage
00:30:13.144 --> 00:30:16.731
to justify, you know, not
paying the guerrillas.
00:30:16.731 --> 00:30:18.942
The colonial or imperial
relationship with the Philippines
00:30:18.942 --> 00:30:22.821
did not end with World
War II; it just adapted.
00:30:22.821 --> 00:30:27.116
So, leading up to independence,
which is July 4th, 1946,
00:30:27.116 --> 00:30:28.868
a date picked by the United States.
00:30:28.868 --> 00:30:33.248
-[Man at podium] I am authorized
and directed by the president
00:30:34.082 --> 00:30:38.253
of the United States to
proclaim the independence
00:30:40.296 --> 00:30:45.134
of the Philippines as a separate
and self-governing nation.
00:30:46.970 --> 00:30:49.848
[Crowd cheering]
00:30:49.848 --> 00:30:52.100
-[Dr. Woods] They continually
uphold the Philippines
00:30:52.100 --> 00:30:55.061
as a sort of example
of American benevolence
00:30:55.061 --> 00:30:58.731
and American foreign policy
good at work in place of
00:30:58.731 --> 00:31:02.861
the sort of bigger policies
having to do with economics
00:31:02.861 --> 00:31:05.029
and the staging of
U.S. military bases
00:31:05.029 --> 00:31:06.781
and rebuilding the
Philippine Army.
00:31:08.408 --> 00:31:13.413
-[Feliciana] In 1946, the U.S.
Army began the arduous task
00:31:13.788 --> 00:31:17.375
of reconstructing guerrilla
rosters that had been lost
00:31:17.375 --> 00:31:19.544
or destroyed during the war.
00:31:19.544 --> 00:31:22.505
This required those
of us who served
00:31:22.505 --> 00:31:26.467
to complete a
Philippine Army affidavit.
00:31:26.467 --> 00:31:31.097
Over 1.2 million
affidavits were collected.
00:31:31.097 --> 00:31:36.102
Of those claims, only
260,000 were added
00:31:36.311 --> 00:31:37.979
to the reconstructed roster.
00:31:39.856 --> 00:31:41.816
-[Dr. Woods] The numbers was an issue.
00:31:41.816 --> 00:31:44.986
They're saying 250,000, just
in central Luzon, right?
00:31:44.986 --> 00:31:48.489
Guerrillas, is that
number quantifiable?
00:31:48.489 --> 00:31:52.368
I don't know, but it's much,
much larger than 260,000.
00:31:54.287 --> 00:31:57.123
But you have to imagine
this is a place
00:31:57.123 --> 00:31:59.584
that's been devastated by the war.
00:31:59.584 --> 00:32:00.543
Outside of Poland,
00:32:00.543 --> 00:32:03.463
it was, sort of, the most
destroyed Allied country.
00:32:03.463 --> 00:32:05.465
There's an enormous displacement
00:32:05.465 --> 00:32:07.967
of people in the Philippines.
00:32:07.967 --> 00:32:12.972
So, it's a very messy
and complicated situation
00:32:13.306 --> 00:32:14.974
and so how do you
imagine guerrilla
00:32:14.974 --> 00:32:16.726
recognition process working?
00:32:17.727 --> 00:32:19.562
Add to that they
put a timeline on it.
00:32:19.562 --> 00:32:23.066
And that's designed to,
I think, exclude people.
00:32:23.066 --> 00:32:25.026
[Cinematic music]
00:32:25.026 --> 00:32:26.069
I mean, this narrative
of World War II
00:32:26.069 --> 00:32:28.363
is that the United States,
like, saved the world
00:32:28.363 --> 00:32:31.240
from fascism, it saved
the world for democracy.
00:32:32.492 --> 00:32:33.993
Well, the Filipinos contributed
00:32:33.993 --> 00:32:37.413
to that effort to enormous degree.
00:32:42.168 --> 00:32:43.586
And they have been essentially
00:32:43.586 --> 00:32:45.964
written out of that story entirely.
00:32:45.964 --> 00:32:50.051
The, sort of, most celebrated
figure in U.S. politics
00:32:50.051 --> 00:32:52.053
is like the veteran
in the U.S. military,
00:32:52.053 --> 00:32:53.346
it's like the sacred cow.
00:32:53.346 --> 00:32:55.848
These are veterans
of the United States.
00:32:55.848 --> 00:32:57.725
They're not just veterans
of the Philippines, right?
00:32:57.725 --> 00:32:59.852
They fought under U.S. command,
00:32:59.852 --> 00:33:01.562
they fought under the U.S. flag.
00:33:01.562 --> 00:33:04.857
And yet these are an enormous
population of veterans
00:33:04.857 --> 00:33:06.943
who not only have
they not been given
00:33:06.943 --> 00:33:08.111
what they were promised,
00:33:08.111 --> 00:33:10.530
but they have largely been
written out of history.
00:33:10.530 --> 00:33:12.949
[Rhythmic drums]
00:33:14.325 --> 00:33:18.162
-[Gen. Taguba] You go back
through history, the Tuskegee Airmen,
00:33:18.162 --> 00:33:21.582
African American, considered
to be non-citizens
00:33:21.582 --> 00:33:23.001
even though they were citizens.
00:33:23.001 --> 00:33:26.796
So, they fought for our country.
00:33:26.796 --> 00:33:30.967
The Japanese American, 120,000
were interned during the war,
00:33:30.967 --> 00:33:34.137
so 16,000 decided I'm
gonna fight for my country,
00:33:34.137 --> 00:33:37.056
regardless of whether my
family member is interned
00:33:37.056 --> 00:33:39.517
in those 11 camps, so they fought.
00:33:40.351 --> 00:33:43.354
The Women Air Service
Pilots considered
00:33:43.354 --> 00:33:44.355
almost non-citizens, right?
00:33:44.355 --> 00:33:46.774
'Cause they didn't have
women's rights at the time.
00:33:46.774 --> 00:33:49.652
Well, 3,000 of them flew
jets across the country.
00:33:51.821 --> 00:33:53.865
Puerto Rican soldiers did that.
00:33:55.950 --> 00:33:57.535
Navajo code talkers.
00:34:01.247 --> 00:34:05.084
Even today, we cannot fight alone.
00:34:06.878 --> 00:34:09.756
Why do people have to
prove their citizenship,
00:34:09.756 --> 00:34:12.550
immigrants and native-born Americans,
00:34:12.550 --> 00:34:15.094
to prove that they
love their country.
00:34:15.094 --> 00:34:18.014
Unequivocally they're willing
to die for their country.
00:34:18.014 --> 00:34:21.059
There are 57,000 that
were killed in action.
00:34:21.059 --> 00:34:23.770
Thousands more were wounded for life.
00:34:23.770 --> 00:34:27.982
Even to this day. And thousands
more are missing in action.
00:34:27.982 --> 00:34:30.026
How do you ameliorate that?
00:34:30.026 --> 00:34:30.943
How do you mitigate that?
00:34:30.943 --> 00:34:35.114
How do you reconcile the
fact that 57,000 died,
00:34:35.114 --> 00:34:36.699
yet you won't recognize them?
00:34:39.410 --> 00:34:40.953
[Intrepid guitar]
00:34:40.953 --> 00:34:42.497
-[Jon Melegrito] I'm the
son of a veteran.
00:34:42.497 --> 00:34:45.958
My father, Gregorio Melegrito,
served as a guerrilla
00:34:45.958 --> 00:34:47.126
during the war.
00:34:47.126 --> 00:34:51.589
I realized that there
was this grave injustice
00:34:51.589 --> 00:34:56.010
that he and his comrades
were a victim of,
00:34:56.010 --> 00:34:58.596
and that is the Rescission Act,
00:34:58.596 --> 00:35:00.014
that they were
deprived of benefits,
00:35:00.014 --> 00:35:01.641
they weren't given recognition.
00:35:01.641 --> 00:35:05.144
So, slowly I became
engaged and involved
00:35:05.144 --> 00:35:09.023
with community organizations
that were advocating
00:35:09.023 --> 00:35:13.569
to repeal the Rescission Act,
to really make Congress aware
00:35:13.569 --> 00:35:16.364
that they did a
very humiliating
00:35:16.364 --> 00:35:18.491
and an unjust act
to these veterans.
00:35:19.867 --> 00:35:21.702
Working with Congress
was a challenge
00:35:21.702 --> 00:35:26.707
because we were essentially
a community that was
00:35:26.749 --> 00:35:31.754
just beginning to be aware
of our potential capacity
00:35:33.881 --> 00:35:38.469
to influence legislation, so
we have to overcome the sense
00:35:38.469 --> 00:35:41.055
of, you know,
we're just Filipinos.
00:35:41.055 --> 00:35:43.015
Who are we to even
make a difference?
00:35:43.015 --> 00:35:47.103
Who are we that would even
somehow make an impact
00:35:47.103 --> 00:35:50.064
on these people in Congress?
00:35:50.064 --> 00:35:53.025
-[Feliciana] 45 years
after the Rescission Acts,
00:35:53.025 --> 00:35:57.321
Senator Daniel Inouye, a
Japanese American veteran
00:35:57.321 --> 00:36:00.074
of World War II, who
served with distinction
00:36:00.074 --> 00:36:01.951
and was all too familiar
00:36:01.951 --> 00:36:05.997
with race-based U.S.
governmental policy, recognized
00:36:05.997 --> 00:36:10.751
and took up the cause of
Filipino veterans in Congress.
00:36:10.751 --> 00:36:13.963
-[Marie Blanco] I started at the very
bottom, staff assistant.
00:36:13.963 --> 00:36:17.091
I did a lot of secretarial work.
00:36:17.091 --> 00:36:19.969
Then I asked the Senator,
if I could start
00:36:19.969 --> 00:36:24.974
working on casework, then I
moved to legislative director,
00:36:27.268 --> 00:36:32.231
and then from there I became
like the Deputy Chief of Staff
00:36:32.231 --> 00:36:35.568
and the last year and a half,
00:36:35.568 --> 00:36:38.988
I was his Chief of Staff
until the day he passed.
00:36:40.072 --> 00:36:44.994
-[Jon] Congress really had no sense
whatsoever of the history
00:36:44.994 --> 00:36:48.497
of Filipinos fighting
under the American flag.
00:36:48.497 --> 00:36:52.376
They had no history of
Filipinos fighting side by side
00:36:52.376 --> 00:36:54.295
with American soldiers.
00:36:54.295 --> 00:36:55.630
They have no history
of that the Philippines
00:36:55.630 --> 00:36:58.049
was even a
Commonwealth United States.
00:36:58.049 --> 00:37:00.635
How do we deal
with this opposition
00:37:00.635 --> 00:37:03.387
to even opening up their
minds, to the possibility
00:37:03.387 --> 00:37:06.057
that these Filipino veterans
deserve to be recognized,
00:37:06.057 --> 00:37:09.602
and they deserve the benefits
that was promised to them.
00:37:11.312 --> 00:37:14.023
-[Marie] We worked on a bill that
would give them naturalization.
00:37:14.023 --> 00:37:16.984
And there was a small
provision that was inserted
00:37:16.984 --> 00:37:19.153
in the Immigration Act of 1990.
00:37:23.115 --> 00:37:27.370
It wasn't a full bill, it was
a provision that was inserted
00:37:27.370 --> 00:37:31.958
into the a bigger bill, so,
we took what we could get.
00:38:03.030 --> 00:38:06.117
-[Feliciana] Veterans
still faced obstacles
00:38:06.117 --> 00:38:09.745
to naturalization, but
with the help of lawyers
00:38:09.745 --> 00:38:13.708
and advocates, some began
to meet with success.
00:38:54.540 --> 00:38:57.460
-[Feliciana] With the passage
of the Immigration Act,
00:38:57.460 --> 00:39:00.963
more than 25,000 aging
veterans
00:39:00.963 --> 00:39:03.966
arrived over a
period of 10 years.
00:39:03.966 --> 00:39:08.220
For many, spouses and
children lagged behind,
00:39:08.220 --> 00:39:12.475
and some still do as provisions
for our family members
00:39:12.475 --> 00:39:14.060
were not included in the bill.
00:39:15.102 --> 00:39:19.023
Rudy's wife lagged
behind him for two years
00:39:19.023 --> 00:39:21.317
and his children even longer.
00:39:40.753 --> 00:39:43.339
-[Feliciana] With our
new naturalization
00:39:43.339 --> 00:39:48.344
and an average individual
SSI payment of $450 per month
00:39:48.636 --> 00:39:51.972
to live on, our battle
for full rights
00:39:51.972 --> 00:39:56.268
and recognition as U.S.
veterans continued.
00:39:56.268 --> 00:39:58.479
-[Jon] You know, there would
be small victories,
00:39:58.479 --> 00:40:02.316
like they would approve
burial benefits for instance.
00:40:02.316 --> 00:40:05.027
And of course, you know,
they argue that they'd
00:40:05.027 --> 00:40:08.989
rather give them burial benefits
than healthcare pension.
00:40:08.989 --> 00:40:12.076
They would promise to
repeal the Rescission Act,
00:40:12.076 --> 00:40:16.122
but then again, because the
nature of Congress is that
00:40:16.122 --> 00:40:17.623
well, we don't have
the money for this,
00:40:17.623 --> 00:40:19.375
you know, it's always
about the money.
00:40:19.375 --> 00:40:22.086
We have Filipino American veterans
00:40:22.086 --> 00:40:25.005
from all over the United States.
00:40:25.005 --> 00:40:27.383
What do we want?
- Equity.
00:40:27.383 --> 00:40:30.052
- When do we want it?
- Now.
00:40:30.052 --> 00:40:32.096
-[Jon] And we always
posed it as, you know,
00:40:32.096 --> 00:40:36.100
this is a matter of honor,
this is a matter of justice,
00:40:36.100 --> 00:40:39.854
this is a matter of
fulfilling a promise
00:40:39.854 --> 00:40:41.981
that you made to these soldiers
00:40:41.981 --> 00:40:46.235
when you swore them in
as part of the U.S. Army.
00:40:46.235 --> 00:40:49.280
- It is contrary to
what America stands for.
00:40:49.280 --> 00:40:54.285
Against Equal Protection,
against Due Process,
00:40:54.285 --> 00:40:56.036
Civil Rights extended to everybody.
00:40:56.036 --> 00:40:59.331
We know that Due Process
and Equal Treatment
00:40:59.331 --> 00:41:01.375
are universal in character.
00:41:01.375 --> 00:41:04.128
And so no group in
the same situation
00:41:04.128 --> 00:41:05.963
should be discriminated against.
00:41:05.963 --> 00:41:10.050
And we, only the Filipinos,
are not receiving the benefits.
00:41:10.050 --> 00:41:12.761
-[Marie] Year after
year, I mean, we'd get
00:41:12.761 --> 00:41:17.141
that bill ready and every
Congress, he would reintroduce it,
00:41:17.141 --> 00:41:19.518
but it would just be
referred to committee
00:41:19.518 --> 00:41:22.271
and die in committee.
00:41:22.271 --> 00:41:24.940
-[Feliciana] The battles
for recognition and benefits
00:41:24.940 --> 00:41:29.945
were incremental and veteran
disenfranchisement continued.
00:41:38.412 --> 00:41:40.164
-[Feliciana] Refusing
to be dissuaded,
00:41:40.164 --> 00:41:45.044
nationalized veterans would
attend every hearing possible,
00:41:45.044 --> 00:41:49.256
fully engaging our newfound
rights as Americans.
00:41:49.256 --> 00:41:52.301
But again, we met
with obstructions
00:41:52.301 --> 00:41:55.804
and were shut out of
many of the talks.
00:42:45.145 --> 00:42:49.066
-[Jon] I remember in one of the
hearings on one of the bills,
00:42:49.066 --> 00:42:52.987
and they voted it down,
and there were hundreds
00:42:52.987 --> 00:42:55.990
of Filipino veterans
amassing in the hallway.
00:42:55.990 --> 00:43:00.035
And after the hearing,
despite the negative vote,
00:43:01.161 --> 00:43:02.705
these veterans were still singing
00:43:02.705 --> 00:43:05.124
God Bless America, right?
00:43:05.124 --> 00:43:06.458
I mean, it was a powerful,
00:43:06.458 --> 00:43:10.045
emotional outpouring of gratitude.
00:43:10.045 --> 00:43:13.048
And yet, you know, deep in
their hearts, they were hurt.
00:43:14.758 --> 00:43:19.054
-[Jackie Speier] Out of thin air
they started singing God Bless America,
00:43:19.054 --> 00:43:20.514
that is who they are.
00:43:21.390 --> 00:43:23.934
They are Americans and we owe them.
00:43:26.020 --> 00:43:30.065
-[Jon] They still believe that
somewhere, sometime, somehow
00:43:30.065 --> 00:43:33.277
America will do the right thing.
00:43:33.277 --> 00:43:35.362
And I think for the
living veterans today,
00:43:35.362 --> 00:43:37.990
even if they didn't
get their benefits,
00:43:37.990 --> 00:43:39.241
I think deep in their hearts,
00:43:39.241 --> 00:43:41.160
they still believe that the America
00:43:41.160 --> 00:43:45.372
that they fought for will
somehow do the right thing
00:43:45.372 --> 00:43:46.957
and they haven't given up on them.
00:43:49.877 --> 00:43:52.963
- There was a promise,
a solemn promise
00:43:53.964 --> 00:43:58.636
on the part of Americans
and by congressional action,
00:43:58.636 --> 00:44:00.012
we break that promise.
00:44:02.139 --> 00:44:07.144
Here we have a bill before us
that will restore this honor.
00:44:09.104 --> 00:44:12.775
And as I speak here,
men are dying.
00:44:14.360 --> 00:44:17.112
And by the time we consider
this measure and pass it,
00:44:17.988 --> 00:44:20.616
there'll be hundreds
more who will die.
00:44:21.700 --> 00:44:24.161
It's not a matter of
money, Mr. President,
00:44:24.161 --> 00:44:25.412
it's a matter of honor.
00:44:28.040 --> 00:44:32.002
-[Feliciana] Almost 20 years
after the Immigration Act,
00:44:32.002 --> 00:44:35.130
it seemed like advocates
were getting someplace
00:44:35.130 --> 00:44:36.131
in the passing of the
00:44:36.131 --> 00:44:39.259
Filipino Veterans
Equity Compensation Act.
00:44:39.259 --> 00:44:43.055
This bill provided for
a one-time payment,
00:44:43.055 --> 00:44:45.599
offered to individual
Filipino veterans
00:44:45.599 --> 00:44:47.935
to settle the debt
once and for all,
00:44:47.935 --> 00:44:52.064
but without changing our
service to active duty.
00:44:53.357 --> 00:44:55.067
Filipino American troops
00:44:55.067 --> 00:44:58.028
still were not
given the distinction
00:44:58.028 --> 00:45:00.948
of Veteran of the United States.
00:45:00.948 --> 00:45:05.035
-[Marie] When they did appropriate
the $198 million,
00:45:05.035 --> 00:45:08.038
at the time, Senator Inouye was told
00:45:08.038 --> 00:45:09.748
that there may be a shortage.
00:45:10.999 --> 00:45:16.004
So the way that they funded
this thing, the VA could
00:45:16.588 --> 00:45:21.593
look within the department
for any additional funds.
00:45:21.593 --> 00:45:25.222
-[Feliciana] To date, of
the nearly 43,000 claims,
00:45:25.222 --> 00:45:29.017
fewer than 19,000
had been approved.
00:45:29.017 --> 00:45:32.980
I was one of the
56% who were denied.
00:45:32.980 --> 00:45:37.067
-[Seth Watkins] 56% of them
have been denied the benefit.
00:45:37.067 --> 00:45:38.652
How can that be?
00:45:40.112 --> 00:45:43.323
We're still fighting
about who is eligible
00:45:43.323 --> 00:45:46.076
from those applications
that were filed.
00:45:49.079 --> 00:45:52.374
In order to properly
fight for Filipinos,
00:45:52.374 --> 00:45:55.711
you have to know the
history, you can't avoid it.
00:45:55.711 --> 00:46:00.716
It's the center of the
entirety of the legal case
00:46:01.133 --> 00:46:04.052
or the legislative case
for why to do something.
00:46:04.052 --> 00:46:05.971
Well, I tell you when I
was looking for the needle
00:46:05.971 --> 00:46:08.891
in the haystack kind of stuff,
when you get a box like this,
00:46:08.891 --> 00:46:11.810
it's like, oh God, it's gonna
take me an hour and a half.
00:46:11.810 --> 00:46:14.855
It's the definitive report
00:46:14.855 --> 00:46:16.648
on the Guerrilla
Recognition Program,
00:46:16.648 --> 00:46:19.943
it tells sort of in blunt terms,
00:46:19.943 --> 00:46:22.070
why some decisions were made,
00:46:22.070 --> 00:46:24.490
why some people were
included and others weren't.
00:46:25.491 --> 00:46:30.454
56% were told no, you're
not eligible under the law
00:46:30.621 --> 00:46:32.456
to receive the payment.
00:46:32.456 --> 00:46:35.542
And that usually is
because you're missing one
00:46:35.542 --> 00:46:37.836
of two pieces of evidence:
00:46:37.836 --> 00:46:42.049
your name on a reconstructed
roster from the war
00:46:42.049 --> 00:46:43.509
from your guerrilla unit
00:46:44.343 --> 00:46:49.014
and a document called a
PAAGO Form 23 affidavit.
00:46:52.768 --> 00:46:55.479
The material presented in
this report has been secured
00:46:55.479 --> 00:46:58.315
from official records and
the knowledge obtained
00:46:58.315 --> 00:47:00.275
in the investigation
of over a million
00:47:00.275 --> 00:47:03.070
and a quarter claims for
guerrilla recognition.
00:47:04.029 --> 00:47:07.032
First of all, the original
rosters were almost
00:47:07.032 --> 00:47:10.160
entirely lost during the war.
00:47:10.160 --> 00:47:13.080
They didn't exist by the
time the war was over,
00:47:13.080 --> 00:47:15.999
but even when they
set up the rules,
00:47:15.999 --> 00:47:18.627
history shows that
what actually happened
00:47:18.627 --> 00:47:20.963
was a lot of politics
came into play.
00:47:20.963 --> 00:47:24.550
And unfortunately, the
rosters were limited
00:47:24.550 --> 00:47:26.468
in the number of people
who could actually
00:47:26.468 --> 00:47:31.473
be listed on them, and so
it became very arbitrary.
00:47:32.015 --> 00:47:32.975
-[Feliciana] Because there were
00:47:32.975 --> 00:47:37.604
over 1.2 million affidavits
filed, denial of claims
00:47:37.604 --> 00:47:41.775
for the 2009 Equity
Compensation is believed to be
00:47:41.775 --> 00:47:44.945
because the veteran's
name is not listed
00:47:44.945 --> 00:47:47.364
on the recognized
guerrilla roster.
00:47:48.240 --> 00:47:50.951
-[Seth] So, when they did
recognition, unfortunately,
00:47:50.951 --> 00:47:54.121
what this report says is that
they would only recognize
00:47:54.121 --> 00:47:58.083
a certain number of guerrillas
in a unit because they had
00:47:58.083 --> 00:48:01.587
to match the number of
guerrillas to a standard size
00:48:01.587 --> 00:48:03.589
of a Philippine Army unit.
00:48:03.589 --> 00:48:07.759
So, if you had 300 guerrillas,
but the standard size was 50,
00:48:07.759 --> 00:48:10.053
then you throw away 250 names.
00:48:10.053 --> 00:48:11.054
That's arbitrary.
00:48:13.056 --> 00:48:15.100
-[Feliciana] Celestino's
name, though he served
00:48:15.100 --> 00:48:18.395
in the USAFFE and as a guerrilla,
00:48:18.395 --> 00:48:21.982
did not appear on the
list, nor did mine,
00:48:21.982 --> 00:48:25.986
but we both have the
affidavit that we served.
00:48:25.986 --> 00:48:29.072
Still our claims were denied.
00:48:30.616 --> 00:48:35.621
- The original legislation
provided a modest amount
00:48:36.580 --> 00:48:39.041
of compensation to
those that served.
00:48:39.041 --> 00:48:42.711
It's really important for
us to give these veterans
00:48:42.711 --> 00:48:47.382
the opportunity to show other
evidence that they served.
00:48:47.382 --> 00:48:50.135
- And I've seen their
roster, 5,000 pages of it.
00:48:50.135 --> 00:48:53.472
My dad is on that list,
but not my uncle
00:48:53.472 --> 00:48:57.476
who was also a prisoner
of war, Etikiano Taguba,
00:48:57.476 --> 00:48:59.227
is not on that roster.
00:48:59.227 --> 00:49:02.981
They actually admitted that
they did not do a good job
00:49:02.981 --> 00:49:06.026
of accounting for everybody.
00:49:06.026 --> 00:49:07.945
And they have not
opened that roster,
00:49:07.945 --> 00:49:11.531
or even examined that
roster for its accuracy
00:49:11.531 --> 00:49:15.243
or veracity since
1974 on a memo signed
00:49:15.243 --> 00:49:18.121
by the Secretary of the Army,
his name is Bo Callaway.
00:49:19.957 --> 00:49:22.876
-[Seth] And this document
essentially says
00:49:22.876 --> 00:49:25.879
that the Filipinos
will have no ability
00:49:25.879 --> 00:49:29.049
to fix any problems
with their recognition.
00:49:29.049 --> 00:49:31.093
Why is that a problem today?
00:49:31.093 --> 00:49:32.302
Because in order to get the
00:49:32.302 --> 00:49:36.765
Filipino Veterans Equity
Compensation Benefit,
00:49:36.765 --> 00:49:39.518
you still have to have these
two pieces of evidence.
00:49:39.518 --> 00:49:44.481
What the VA has argued
is that if you can't get
00:49:44.481 --> 00:49:47.651
the benefit right now,
fine, go to the Army Board
00:49:47.651 --> 00:49:49.027
and have them correct
your military records,
00:49:49.027 --> 00:49:51.029
come back to us for the benefit.
00:49:51.029 --> 00:49:53.991
When you're 103 and they're
finished denying you,
00:49:53.991 --> 00:49:55.367
come back and try again.
00:49:55.367 --> 00:49:56.535
This is false hope.
00:49:56.535 --> 00:49:57.619
It's ridiculous.
00:49:58.537 --> 00:50:00.539
The Army won't let you
correct your records
00:50:00.539 --> 00:50:01.623
if you were Filipino.
00:50:06.628 --> 00:50:10.757
-[Jon] My father who died in
1989, never saw an experience
00:50:10.757 --> 00:50:13.301
of some small victory.
00:50:13.301 --> 00:50:16.054
He would drag me to the
Veterans Administration office
00:50:16.054 --> 00:50:17.889
to apply for his benefits.
00:50:17.889 --> 00:50:19.057
And every time we would go visit
00:50:19.057 --> 00:50:22.978
the Veterans Administration,
he would always get turned down
00:50:22.978 --> 00:50:25.981
or they would deny his
claims and he would always
00:50:25.981 --> 00:50:29.067
get frustrated and
then he'd get angry.
00:50:29.067 --> 00:50:32.696
And I was like, what is
really going on here?
00:50:32.696 --> 00:50:37.034
Somebody who was working in
the appeals department said,
00:50:37.034 --> 00:50:38.952
you know what they're
doing to your veterans?
00:50:38.952 --> 00:50:41.038
It's like giving
them ice in winter.
00:50:41.038 --> 00:50:43.040
And I said, what do you mean?
00:50:43.040 --> 00:50:44.624
I mean, it's really nothing.
00:50:44.624 --> 00:50:46.126
You know, it's ice in winter.
00:50:46.126 --> 00:50:47.961
And this was somebody
who was working
00:50:47.961 --> 00:50:52.299
within the Veterans department
who was processing claims.
00:50:53.341 --> 00:50:56.970
And he said, every time
somebody comes up
00:50:56.970 --> 00:51:00.015
with an application for a claim
00:51:00.015 --> 00:51:01.975
and it is a Filipino veteran,
00:51:01.975 --> 00:51:05.812
they would automatically
stamp the word 'gook'
00:51:06.605 --> 00:51:07.606
on the application.
00:51:08.815 --> 00:51:10.984
I said, you know, this is
more than just humiliating.
00:51:10.984 --> 00:51:13.361
It is devastating.
00:51:13.361 --> 00:51:16.782
-[Feliciana] I wrote
endlessly to the VA to appeal.
00:51:19.034 --> 00:51:21.078
Dear Sir or Ma'am.
00:51:21.078 --> 00:51:22.079
Peace be with you.
00:51:23.497 --> 00:51:26.083
I would just like
to make an appeal
00:51:26.083 --> 00:51:28.126
to approve my application.
00:51:28.126 --> 00:51:32.589
I was confirmed and certified
of my military service
00:51:32.589 --> 00:51:35.008
during World War II
in the Philippines
00:51:35.008 --> 00:51:38.095
through Philippine
Veterans Affairs Office,
00:51:38.095 --> 00:51:40.555
and Armed Forces
of the Philippines
00:51:40.555 --> 00:51:42.015
and Department of Defense
00:51:42.015 --> 00:51:45.227
as a Ward Attendant
in the Medical Corps,
00:51:45.227 --> 00:51:49.106
treating and serving the
sick and wounded soldiers.
00:51:49.106 --> 00:51:51.775
- We had the WAVES and the WACs
in the United States, right?
00:51:51.775 --> 00:51:54.986
So, women were not only
serving as nurses, right,
00:51:54.986 --> 00:51:55.987
in the U.S. military.
00:51:55.987 --> 00:51:56.947
They were doing other things.
00:51:56.947 --> 00:51:58.115
They were recognized
as veterans.
00:51:58.115 --> 00:51:59.783
They were part of the war effort.
00:52:02.160 --> 00:52:04.871
-[Feliciana] Dear Honorable
Sir or Ma'am,
00:52:05.622 --> 00:52:10.627
I believe that VA decided
my case incorrectly
00:52:10.961 --> 00:52:15.048
because all documents,
affidavits and proofs,
00:52:15.048 --> 00:52:18.969
I presented them are
valid and authentic.
00:52:18.969 --> 00:52:20.095
Peace be with you.
00:52:21.054 --> 00:52:23.098
I would like to return my case
00:52:23.098 --> 00:52:24.891
to the Board of Veteran Affairs.
00:52:26.017 --> 00:52:28.145
I would like to make this plea
00:52:28.145 --> 00:52:29.980
to please make the right judgment.
00:52:31.064 --> 00:52:34.609
I submitted my most
important documents you need
00:52:34.609 --> 00:52:36.111
to prove my status.
00:52:37.154 --> 00:52:40.949
I am in poor health and in
danger of being homeless.
00:52:42.117 --> 00:52:47.122
More power to you. Truly
yours, Feliciana G. Reyes.
00:52:47.998 --> 00:52:50.000
- She was stuck in our system,
00:52:50.000 --> 00:52:53.879
bouncing around with nothing
productive occurring.
00:52:53.879 --> 00:52:55.380
Everybody was simply concluding
00:52:55.380 --> 00:52:58.049
within the administrative tasks
00:52:58.049 --> 00:53:00.051
of determining, is
she eligible or not?
00:53:00.051 --> 00:53:01.094
She's ineligible.
00:53:02.304 --> 00:53:05.056
I wasn't the first
person who noticed
00:53:05.056 --> 00:53:10.061
that there was something
amiss in the administration
00:53:10.312 --> 00:53:13.064
of this particular
benefit by the VA.
00:53:16.109 --> 00:53:18.987
You're just reading this
sort of history written
00:53:18.987 --> 00:53:21.114
by the United States Army
00:53:21.114 --> 00:53:23.825
that was originally
classified secret.
00:53:23.825 --> 00:53:26.286
The number one piece of
information that jumped out
00:53:26.286 --> 00:53:31.291
at me was if your title
was not Registered Nurse,
00:53:31.583 --> 00:53:34.961
and you were a female,
then you didn't count.
00:53:35.879 --> 00:53:40.342
The close scrutiny given the
functions of women guerrillas
00:53:40.342 --> 00:53:44.971
ultimately led to the belief
that, again excepting nurses,
00:53:44.971 --> 00:53:47.015
no women should be recognized.
00:53:48.099 --> 00:53:50.769
Your service was in nullity.
00:53:50.769 --> 00:53:55.774
It was useless in terms
of being named recognized
00:53:56.149 --> 00:53:58.985
as having served
in the guerrillas.
00:53:58.985 --> 00:54:02.489
We can see: f. That women
guerrillas be excluded.
00:54:04.074 --> 00:54:06.701
Without that document I
never would have known
00:54:06.701 --> 00:54:11.122
of this problem, but I read it
and I read it in enough spots
00:54:11.122 --> 00:54:13.250
in that document to realize,
00:54:13.250 --> 00:54:16.044
this applies to Feliciana Reyes.
00:54:16.044 --> 00:54:17.879
She wasn't a registered nurse.
00:54:17.879 --> 00:54:19.297
She was a ward attendant.
00:54:20.882 --> 00:54:23.051
-[Dr. Woods] There's countless
women guerrillas.
00:54:23.051 --> 00:54:26.054
They don't show up in
the archives as much,
00:54:26.054 --> 00:54:29.099
and they are not recognized
because the U.S. Army's program
00:54:29.099 --> 00:54:31.935
very clearly states like
you cannot both be a female
00:54:31.935 --> 00:54:33.478
and be a soldier.
00:54:33.478 --> 00:54:35.021
But are there female guerrillas?
00:54:35.021 --> 00:54:36.564
100%, yeah.
00:54:36.564 --> 00:54:39.484
-[Feliciana] We know
that women in the U.S.
00:54:39.484 --> 00:54:43.029
were not permitted to serve
in combat roles back then,
00:54:43.029 --> 00:54:47.325
but we, Filipino women, were
thrust into every imaginable
00:54:47.325 --> 00:54:52.038
position from administrative
to medical, to fighting,
00:54:52.038 --> 00:54:55.083
spying, even to
commanding units.
00:54:55.083 --> 00:54:59.087
In some units, one in ten
guerrillas was a woman.
00:55:00.297 --> 00:55:02.549
The Army knew we were there.
00:55:02.549 --> 00:55:06.344
-[Seth] That 23 is the
Form 23 Affidavit,
00:55:06.344 --> 00:55:11.349
should indicate at the beginning
that processee is female,
00:55:11.850 --> 00:55:16.146
duty performed, if processee
has experience as a nurse,
00:55:16.146 --> 00:55:19.566
a detailed statement
of such experience.
00:55:19.566 --> 00:55:24.029
There's a question on the
Form 23 Affidavit and it says,
00:55:24.029 --> 00:55:25.030
are you female?
00:55:25.947 --> 00:55:28.158
And if you answer
that question yes,
00:55:28.158 --> 00:55:31.286
then you have to state what
your responsibilities were
00:55:31.286 --> 00:55:34.039
in your job as a guerrilla.
00:55:34.039 --> 00:55:36.583
But, if you're a male, you don't.
00:55:36.583 --> 00:55:39.085
So, I sent a Freedom of
Information Act request
00:55:39.085 --> 00:55:41.087
to the National Archives.
00:55:41.087 --> 00:55:43.590
And I got a letter back
from the National Archives
00:55:43.590 --> 00:55:46.009
and Records Administration saying
00:55:46.009 --> 00:55:48.803
she's not eligible for the
equity compensation benefit.
00:55:49.804 --> 00:55:50.555
Interesting.
00:55:50.555 --> 00:55:52.015
That's not what I asked.
00:55:52.015 --> 00:55:54.559
I asked you for copies of
the documents in her file
00:55:55.935 --> 00:55:57.312
and I didn't get them.
00:55:57.312 --> 00:56:01.024
So, I filed an appeal
with the National Archives
00:56:01.024 --> 00:56:04.110
and in the end, my appeal
worked and sure enough,
00:56:04.110 --> 00:56:06.988
all of these documents were not
00:56:06.988 --> 00:56:10.075
in the Department of
Veterans Affairs file
00:56:10.075 --> 00:56:13.703
for processing this claim
for equity compensation,
00:56:13.703 --> 00:56:16.998
but they don't seem to care
that all of these records
00:56:16.998 --> 00:56:20.085
proving her service existed
00:56:20.085 --> 00:56:23.046
but were intentionally suppressed.
00:56:23.046 --> 00:56:26.132
They were withheld from
the record on appeal.
00:56:26.132 --> 00:56:27.384
How can that be?
00:56:27.384 --> 00:56:30.261
I point this out to the court,
and what does the VA do?
00:56:30.261 --> 00:56:33.807
They oppose my motion
to add these documents
00:56:33.807 --> 00:56:35.975
to the administrative record.
00:56:35.975 --> 00:56:37.143
-[Feliciana] I thought
that after the war
00:56:37.143 --> 00:56:40.939
in the Philippines, perhaps
they did not give my name
00:56:40.939 --> 00:56:42.607
to the U.S. government.
00:56:42.607 --> 00:56:44.734
I thought that might be the problem.
00:56:44.734 --> 00:56:47.862
I was told there was
a fire in St. Louis
00:56:47.862 --> 00:56:50.031
and records were destroyed.
00:56:50.031 --> 00:56:52.367
Then I thought that was the problem.
00:56:52.367 --> 00:56:55.495
I never thought the
problem was being a woman.
00:56:56.287 --> 00:57:00.041
- Ms. Reyes appeal sat fully briefed
00:57:00.041 --> 00:57:02.961
at the U.S. Court of
Appeals for Veteran's Claims
00:57:02.961 --> 00:57:05.630
for 18 months.
00:57:05.630 --> 00:57:09.467
We got a very short opinion,
essentially stating nothing,
00:57:09.467 --> 00:57:11.594
not responding to our arguments.
00:57:11.594 --> 00:57:13.346
So, we went up to the Federal Circuit
00:57:13.346 --> 00:57:17.058
and we asked to expedite her
appeal, which was granted.
00:57:17.058 --> 00:57:20.270
The court placed us
last on the arguments
00:57:20.270 --> 00:57:23.064
for the day of that
argument on December 3rd,
00:57:23.064 --> 00:57:26.067
and the argument ran over an hour
00:57:26.067 --> 00:57:29.028
over double the amount of
time that was allocated
00:57:29.028 --> 00:57:30.864
for it under the rules.
00:57:30.864 --> 00:57:32.824
They were really
interested the appeal.
00:57:34.242 --> 00:57:36.411
-[Co-counsel] This is not a mystery here,
00:57:36.411 --> 00:57:38.413
and this argument
that Mrs. Reyes could
00:57:38.413 --> 00:57:40.165
have gone to the
Army Board for correction
00:57:40.165 --> 00:57:43.042
of military records
is completely bogus
00:57:43.042 --> 00:57:48.089
because they was an announcement
of a rule right after the war
00:57:48.089 --> 00:57:49.174
that Filipinos could not- [voice fades out
00:57:49.174 --> 00:57:51.134
-[Feliciana] After so
many years of appealing.
00:57:51.134 --> 00:57:54.471
Would they finally hear me?
-[Co-counsel] So this is like serpent
00:57:54.471 --> 00:57:57.974
eating its tail-
-[Judge 1] Your Catch 22 argument
00:57:57.974 --> 00:57:59.642
is pretty good.
-[Judge 2] It seems self-evident
00:57:59.642 --> 00:58:04.397
that if the VA secretary
makes a decision based
00:58:04.397 --> 00:58:07.108
on unconstitutional criteria,
00:58:07.108 --> 00:58:09.319
the decision is unconstitutional.
00:58:09.319 --> 00:58:11.112
-[Judge 3] It seems as if
really it's coming down
00:58:11.112 --> 00:58:12.947
to whether somebody is
on the roster or not.
00:58:12.947 --> 00:58:15.575
Is that correct?
-[VA Counsel] Yes, your honor.
00:58:15.575 --> 00:58:17.994
-[Judge 1] If we should decide,
00:58:17.994 --> 00:58:19.579
hypothetically, you understand,
00:58:19.579 --> 00:58:23.124
if we should decide to
vacate and remand this back
00:58:23.124 --> 00:58:27.754
to you all to the VA
to handle it correctly,
00:58:27.754 --> 00:58:32.300
can we get some assurance
that Mrs. Reyes will not,
00:58:32.300 --> 00:58:36.095
she's 91 at the moment,
will not have to make it
00:58:36.095 --> 00:58:38.890
to a hundred in order for
her to get her $15,000.
00:58:40.975 --> 00:58:41.976
-[VA Counsel] Well, your honor.
00:58:41.976 --> 00:58:44.103
I certainly can't
make any promises.
00:58:45.980 --> 00:58:48.983
-[Feliciana] I would
like to say I was hopeful.
00:58:50.276 --> 00:58:54.531
But this has been such a
long march for so many of us.
00:58:57.325 --> 00:59:00.745
- Eddie Dela Cruz lives in Guam.
00:59:00.745 --> 00:59:02.539
He's 95 years old.
00:59:02.539 --> 00:59:05.124
He served as a guerrilla
during World War II
00:59:05.124 --> 00:59:07.043
in the Philippines.
00:59:07.043 --> 00:59:10.588
Eddie Dela Cruz represented
himself at the VA
00:59:10.588 --> 00:59:13.383
trying to get
Equity Compensation Benefit
00:59:13.383 --> 00:59:17.011
and was consistently
denied on his appeal.
00:59:17.011 --> 00:59:20.306
And then I took that appeal
to the U.S. Court of Appeals
00:59:20.306 --> 00:59:22.350
for the Federal Circuit.
00:59:22.350 --> 00:59:24.769
-[Judge 1] Why hasn't your
client gone to the Board
00:59:24.769 --> 00:59:26.646
for Correction of Military Record?
00:59:26.646 --> 00:59:29.274
-[Seth] The Army board has
had a long-standing policy
00:59:29.274 --> 00:59:30.650
that they would not hear
00:59:30.650 --> 00:59:33.611
any appeals from guerrillas, period.
00:59:33.611 --> 00:59:37.407
-[Judge 1] Is your contention
that the Board for Correction
00:59:37.407 --> 00:59:39.951
of Military Records
has not performed
00:59:39.951 --> 00:59:42.996
its statutory obligation?
-[Seth] Yes.
00:59:42.996 --> 00:59:44.455
-[VA Counsel] I understand
from reading this,
00:59:44.455 --> 00:59:47.375
is Congress understood
that it was their problem.
00:59:47.375 --> 00:59:49.002
-[Judge 2] Whose problem?
00:59:49.002 --> 00:59:49.961
The guerrillas?
-[VA Counsel] Pardon me?
00:59:49.961 --> 00:59:52.338
No, it was Congress's problem.
00:59:52.338 --> 00:59:56.301
-[Judge 2] Do you deny the
documentation in which repeatedly
00:59:56.301 --> 00:59:59.971
the Board has told don't
look at the guerrillas.
00:59:59.971 --> 01:00:02.015
-[VA Counsel] I understand
that position
01:00:02.015 --> 01:00:03.558
to be what the Army is saying.
01:00:03.558 --> 01:00:05.351
-[Judge 3] This is truly pathetic
01:00:05.351 --> 01:00:07.812
in the real sense
of the word pathos.
01:00:07.812 --> 01:00:08.980
-[VA Counsel] I understand.
01:00:10.023 --> 01:00:11.024
But, from our perspective,
01:00:11.024 --> 01:00:13.568
what we have here is a
regulation from the secretary of...
01:00:13.568 --> 01:00:15.987
-[Judge 3] Well, there
needs to be a correction.
01:00:15.987 --> 01:00:18.031
- We're waiting for the
Federal Circuit to weigh
01:00:18.031 --> 01:00:19.741
in on these issues,
and if we don't like
01:00:19.741 --> 01:00:22.744
what the federal circuit does,
we have one more shot at it.
01:00:22.744 --> 01:00:24.287
That's the U.S. Supreme Court.
01:00:26.080 --> 01:00:28.958
-[Jon] So, the struggle
that we face in terms
01:00:28.958 --> 01:00:32.086
of not only creating
greater awareness,
01:00:32.086 --> 01:00:36.341
but in accepting them as a story
01:00:36.341 --> 01:00:39.052
that's part of American history,
01:00:39.969 --> 01:00:44.057
is something that will
take a little more time.
01:00:45.725 --> 01:00:48.645
I remember the phrase,
little brown brother
01:00:48.645 --> 01:00:52.065
has always haunted
this conversation about
01:00:52.940 --> 01:00:56.694
these Filipino veterans
as somehow inferior.
01:00:57.570 --> 01:00:59.322
Is this issue a human rights issue?
01:00:59.322 --> 01:01:00.114
Absolutely.
01:01:01.115 --> 01:01:05.328
It's more than just a
question of benefits.
01:01:05.328 --> 01:01:06.746
It's human rights,
because we're talking
01:01:06.746 --> 01:01:10.958
about the lives of human beings,
who sacrifice themselves.
01:01:10.958 --> 01:01:13.002
And it's not just the veterans.
01:01:13.002 --> 01:01:15.838
It's the families of
veterans, their children,
01:01:15.838 --> 01:01:19.050
their spouses, their
relatives, their grandchildren,
01:01:19.050 --> 01:01:20.468
they're all affected.
01:01:21.719 --> 01:01:26.057
-[Marie] I wish there was a way
rather than do it incremental
01:01:26.057 --> 01:01:30.895
to try and do a massive bill,
but given the way Congress was
01:01:31.854 --> 01:01:35.942
the cost involved, I don't
think we could have achieved
01:01:35.942 --> 01:01:39.570
what we've achieved incrementally.
01:01:39.570 --> 01:01:41.989
I would like to see this
whole thing repealed.
01:01:42.740 --> 01:01:44.283
- You know, I serve as the Chair
01:01:44.283 --> 01:01:46.035
of the Military
Personnel Subcommittee
01:01:46.035 --> 01:01:49.455
of the Armed Services Committee,
so I spend a lot of time
01:01:49.455 --> 01:01:52.291
with service members
and their families.
01:01:52.291 --> 01:01:54.252
It's not just the service
member who serves.
01:01:54.252 --> 01:01:56.129
It's the family who serves
01:01:56.129 --> 01:01:58.631
and they have a right
to those benefits.
01:01:58.631 --> 01:02:02.009
Well, the Rescission
Act revoked that benefit
01:02:03.010 --> 01:02:07.724
for no reason, it appears,
than it was a monetary expense.
01:02:07.724 --> 01:02:10.017
Well, we have monetary expenses
01:02:10.017 --> 01:02:12.603
in the Veterans Administration.
01:02:12.603 --> 01:02:17.608
But when you serve, you have a
right to have those benefits.
01:02:18.943 --> 01:02:22.071
[Impactful orchestral]
01:02:23.614 --> 01:02:26.784
- This dark chapter
in American history,
01:02:28.077 --> 01:02:33.082
in order for it to be closed,
has to be accountable,
01:02:33.249 --> 01:02:37.003
because until rescinding and
repealing this Rescission Acts,
01:02:37.003 --> 01:02:40.381
that chapter will
never be totally closed.
01:02:40.381 --> 01:02:44.135
There will always be these
lingering resentments,
01:02:44.135 --> 01:02:47.889
these suspicions, these doubts,
01:02:47.889 --> 01:02:52.894
does America really uphold the
values that it says it does?
01:02:53.019 --> 01:02:55.938
[Cornet solo]
01:02:58.608 --> 01:03:00.568
-[CW Speier] The cost is
really irrelevant.
01:03:01.986 --> 01:03:04.489
You make a promise,
you keep a promise.
01:03:06.073 --> 01:03:09.327
It's much like so
much of our history
01:03:09.327 --> 01:03:12.997
where we make a commitment
and then we renege on it,
01:03:12.997 --> 01:03:18.002
and I find it so offensive, and
it has always been a mystery
01:03:19.170 --> 01:03:23.090
to me how we would
let so much time pass
01:03:23.090 --> 01:03:28.054
and not give these heroes
the just compensation
01:03:29.972 --> 01:03:32.141
and services that they deserve.
01:03:32.141 --> 01:03:33.518
-[Male off-screen] Full recognition.
01:03:35.102 --> 01:03:37.021
Now!
01:03:37.021 --> 01:03:39.982
-[Gen. Taguba] A lot of the
veterans who were disenfranchised
01:03:39.982 --> 01:03:42.485
after the war were
going after benefits
01:03:42.485 --> 01:03:43.945
that were denied to them.
01:03:43.945 --> 01:03:48.574
So, 75 years in the
making, well, in 2014,
01:03:48.574 --> 01:03:50.827
we just decided that
enough is enough,
01:03:50.827 --> 01:03:53.538
that perhaps we should request
Congress to provide them
01:03:53.538 --> 01:03:55.331
with a Congressional Gold Medal.
01:03:55.331 --> 01:03:57.959
-[Feliciana] Through the
Filipino Veterans Recognition
01:03:57.959 --> 01:04:02.296
and Education Project, General
Taguba petitioned Congress
01:04:02.296 --> 01:04:06.467
for a Congressional Gold
Medal on behalf of all troops,
01:04:06.467 --> 01:04:10.972
both American and Filipino,
who served in the Philippines.
01:04:10.972 --> 01:04:13.975
In 2016, that request was granted.
01:04:13.975 --> 01:04:16.060
-[Speaker Ryan] The Congressional
Gold Medal is one
01:04:16.060 --> 01:04:19.730
of our oldest traditions
here in the Capitol.
01:04:19.730 --> 01:04:23.609
It is the highest civilian
honor that this body can bestow.
01:04:23.609 --> 01:04:25.862
-[Feliciana] At the
first award ceremony
01:04:25.862 --> 01:04:30.867
in October of 2017, the
VA ceded recognition
01:04:31.033 --> 01:04:35.246
to Second Lieutenant
Almeda, more than 20 years
01:04:35.246 --> 01:04:37.707
after he became a citizen,
01:04:37.707 --> 01:04:42.003
even though his name still
was not on the roster.
01:04:42.003 --> 01:04:43.963
-[Announcer] Ladies and
gentlemen, Filipino veteran,
01:04:43.963 --> 01:04:46.549
Mr. Celestino Almeda.
01:04:46.549 --> 01:04:49.385
[Crowd applauding]
01:05:47.985 --> 01:05:51.697
- I was representing a
lot of American officers
01:05:51.697 --> 01:05:55.159
that were in the battles,
that were leading the troops
01:05:55.159 --> 01:06:00.164
and many of them did not make it.
01:06:00.790 --> 01:06:03.084
And the sacrifices that they made,
01:06:05.294 --> 01:06:07.296
it was important
to stand up for that.
01:06:11.092 --> 01:06:14.095
-[Announcer] Mr. Frank Francone.
-[Frank F.] In my effort
01:06:14.095 --> 01:06:17.473
to try to locate families
that might be eligible
01:06:17.473 --> 01:06:19.600
for this Congressional Gold Medal,
01:06:19.600 --> 01:06:24.605
I discovered a Nacias family
in San Antonio, Texas,
01:06:24.981 --> 01:06:27.775
and it turns out that
they were the children
01:06:27.775 --> 01:06:30.152
of this Lieutenant Nacias that I knew.
01:06:30.152 --> 01:06:35.157
Now he had since passed away,
but I was given the honor
01:06:35.574 --> 01:06:38.619
of presenting the gold
medal to his family.
01:06:38.619 --> 01:06:39.996
And that was a blessing for me
01:06:42.164 --> 01:06:46.961
because it helped me remember his,
01:06:46.961 --> 01:06:49.130
our relationship in those days.
01:06:49.130 --> 01:06:52.091
[Group sings National Anthem]
01:06:56.095 --> 01:06:58.764
It's been a blessing
to be able to contact
01:06:58.764 --> 01:07:01.892
some of these families
that don't know about
01:07:01.892 --> 01:07:05.604
their eligibility, that's
still part of my mission.
01:07:06.605 --> 01:07:10.109
♪ And the home of the brave ♪
01:07:17.074 --> 01:07:19.994
[Crowd applauding]
01:07:21.287 --> 01:07:23.080
-[Male Speaker] Ladies and gentleman,
welcome to the
01:07:23.080 --> 01:07:26.083
Congressional Gold
Medal Award presentation
01:07:26.083 --> 01:07:27.793
of the Filipino Veterans Recognition
01:07:27.793 --> 01:07:30.504
and Educational Project Region Six.
01:07:30.504 --> 01:07:34.091
We're here to honor the
families of five Filipinos
01:07:34.091 --> 01:07:36.969
and American veterans who are
deceased for their loyalty
01:07:36.969 --> 01:07:40.014
and honorable service and
duty to their country.
01:07:42.141 --> 01:07:46.270
-[Frank C.] We heard it on TV and I said,
01:07:46.270 --> 01:07:50.649
wow, it's about time that we
had gotten an honor for that.
01:07:50.649 --> 01:07:52.943
- I'm very honored
and very humbled,
01:07:52.943 --> 01:07:56.405
and it just goes to show all
the sacrifice and service,
01:07:57.573 --> 01:08:02.536
that he did for the Philippines
and the United States,
01:08:02.995 --> 01:08:06.040
and we're getting to kind of
enjoy some of that this week.
01:08:08.793 --> 01:08:13.464
-[Joy] I would be very proud that
my father who gave the ultimate
01:08:13.464 --> 01:08:16.092
sacrifice for the
freedom we now enjoy.
01:08:17.259 --> 01:08:20.054
I am so proud of his memory.
01:08:20.054 --> 01:08:23.974
-[Frank C.] I am absolutely thrilled
that the United States
01:08:23.974 --> 01:08:26.936
recognize the service of my dad.
01:08:26.936 --> 01:08:31.482
It would have been important
for him to receive the medal.
01:08:31.482 --> 01:08:33.234
We all suffered.
01:08:33.234 --> 01:08:36.529
We are all in this together.
01:08:36.529 --> 01:08:39.740
- So, I'm just glad that a
lot of our living veterans
01:08:39.740 --> 01:08:42.493
and the next of kin
are able to receive it.
01:08:42.493 --> 01:08:47.081
We've done 52 ceremonies
now, since October 25, 2017.
01:08:48.707 --> 01:08:51.127
And we have three or
four more to go.
01:08:51.127 --> 01:08:53.129
And I'm sure the community
01:08:53.129 --> 01:08:54.964
would want to have more ceremonies.
01:08:56.882 --> 01:09:00.469
-[Diwa Carabio] I think it means
more to me because of what my father did,
01:09:01.220 --> 01:09:03.472
but I think that as far
as my father's concerned,
01:09:03.472 --> 01:09:07.226
a medal is really, it's
just an ornament type thing.
01:09:07.226 --> 01:09:09.979
He just did what
his duty called for.
01:09:09.979 --> 01:09:10.980
And that was that.
01:09:10.980 --> 01:09:12.815
That's why I'm here.
01:09:13.983 --> 01:09:15.025
To celebrate it for him.
01:09:15.025 --> 01:09:17.111
Let's put it that way.
01:09:38.007 --> 01:09:43.012
- The Congressional Gold Medal
was essentially the symbolic
01:09:43.262 --> 01:09:47.975
act that provided recognition
to these Filipino veterans.
01:09:47.975 --> 01:09:51.520
So, I'm proud to be
part of these initiatives,
01:09:51.520 --> 01:09:54.732
even if the Rescission Act remains
01:09:54.732 --> 01:09:59.695
to be the one Act that
still has to be repealed.
01:10:00.070 --> 01:10:03.741
At least over the years, we
felt that we did our best
01:10:04.575 --> 01:10:08.954
to at least achieve a
small measure of justice.
01:10:08.954 --> 01:10:11.123
To secure the recognition,
01:10:11.123 --> 01:10:14.335
it is not by any means
the end of this story.
01:10:15.961 --> 01:10:17.546
-[Feliciana] Though,
the Congressional Gold
01:10:17.546 --> 01:10:20.049
Medal was awarded,
01:10:20.049 --> 01:10:24.011
it failed to change the
veteran status for Filipinos
01:10:24.011 --> 01:10:27.056
still seeking recognition
from the VA.
01:10:31.894 --> 01:10:35.022
[Low guitar chords echo]
01:10:59.296 --> 01:11:01.382
-[Gen. Taguba] This is a
national issue.
01:11:01.382 --> 01:11:02.967
This is not a Filipino issue.
01:11:02.967 --> 01:11:06.971
This is an American issue
because who did they fight for?
01:11:06.971 --> 01:11:07.972
The United States.
01:11:09.473 --> 01:11:10.975
-[Jon] This isn't just a
struggle for Filipinos.
01:11:10.975 --> 01:11:15.020
This is really a struggle
for all Americans.
01:11:15.020 --> 01:11:17.147
And when you see the
American people galvanized
01:11:17.147 --> 01:11:19.608
and mobilized to say,
we agree with you
01:11:19.608 --> 01:11:23.779
and let's fight together
and let's achieve something
01:11:23.779 --> 01:11:27.825
to honor them, then to me,
over the years,
01:11:27.825 --> 01:11:31.078
this activism is
what it's all about.
01:11:31.078 --> 01:11:33.289
[Crowd applauding]
01:11:33.289 --> 01:11:35.249
And, I recollect Independence
Day in the Philippines
01:11:35.249 --> 01:11:37.793
when they were lowering the
flag of the United States
01:11:37.793 --> 01:11:40.379
and they were raising the
flag of the Philippines.
01:11:41.755 --> 01:11:43.799
And they got entangled
in the middle.
01:11:45.092 --> 01:11:50.055
So yes, we cannot separate
the two countries,
01:11:50.055 --> 01:11:53.058
the narratives somehow
are entangled in a way,
01:11:53.058 --> 01:11:57.604
and it needs to be untangled
in a more rational way
01:11:57.604 --> 01:12:01.775
that really gives due
respect to these two peoples
01:12:01.775 --> 01:12:05.863
so that we could have the
America that we dreamed about.
01:12:16.582 --> 01:12:19.043
- Nobody ever wanted the
contents of those files
01:12:19.043 --> 01:12:20.336
to see the light of day.
01:12:20.336 --> 01:12:23.130
I can guess the reason:
because they tell a story
01:12:23.130 --> 01:12:24.840
that's not a flattering story
01:12:24.840 --> 01:12:26.633
for the United States government.
01:12:26.633 --> 01:12:30.637
That we've disenfranchised all
of these people for decades,
01:12:30.637 --> 01:12:32.222
like 75 years.
01:12:32.222 --> 01:12:34.016
It's not a good story.
01:12:35.809 --> 01:12:38.020
-[Dr. Woods] I think the
Congressional Gold Medal was huge
01:12:38.020 --> 01:12:40.522
because it was recognition.
01:12:40.522 --> 01:12:44.151
These individuals had been
fighting just to be recognized
01:12:44.151 --> 01:12:46.987
that they fought behind enemy
lines for three years.
01:12:46.987 --> 01:12:48.030
So is that significant?
01:12:48.030 --> 01:12:49.490
Yes, but it has nothing to do
01:12:49.490 --> 01:12:50.532
with the Rescission Acts, right?
01:12:50.532 --> 01:12:54.161
It's not an acknowledgement
that the Rescission Acts was
01:12:54.161 --> 01:12:56.997
this, you know, sort of
grave injustice, right.
01:12:56.997 --> 01:13:00.876
That it was a broken promise,
100% a broken promise.
01:13:00.876 --> 01:13:03.045
- I'm still mad about this.
01:13:04.004 --> 01:13:08.801
I would like to see the
Rescission Acts repealed.
01:13:08.801 --> 01:13:11.345
You know, it took 75
years for them to even
01:13:11.345 --> 01:13:14.473
just get a
Congressional Gold Medal.
01:13:14.473 --> 01:13:16.850
Why can't we just
repeal it already?
01:13:17.768 --> 01:13:20.562
You know, to me, it's
like a stain there.
01:13:23.732 --> 01:13:26.777
-[Victor] It just was an
embarrassment to me to realize
01:13:26.777 --> 01:13:29.029
our own country had treated
01:13:29.029 --> 01:13:32.032
our own American people this way.
01:13:32.032 --> 01:13:34.034
They promised it and backpedaled.
01:13:35.577 --> 01:13:37.121
And a promise is a promise.
01:15:47.000 --> 01:15:49.962
- So, the bill I've
introduced would provide
01:15:49.962 --> 01:15:53.966
any service member during World
War II of Filipino descent
01:15:53.966 --> 01:15:56.510
that could provide
information about the fact
01:15:56.510 --> 01:15:59.012
that they served would
be in a position
01:15:59.012 --> 01:16:03.976
to receive veterans benefits,
and widows and children
01:16:04.560 --> 01:16:07.938
of that veteran would
receive the same benefits,
01:16:07.938 --> 01:16:12.943
that a veteran that he served
with shoulder to shoulder
01:16:13.485 --> 01:16:16.863
during the war
would have received.
01:16:18.115 --> 01:16:22.494
It's a bipartisan issue, the
bill has bipartisan support.
01:16:22.494 --> 01:16:27.082
We have over 25
sponsors on the bill
01:16:27.082 --> 01:16:29.126
and we could have far more.
01:16:31.962 --> 01:16:35.048
There's about 11,000 Filipinos
01:16:35.048 --> 01:16:38.051
who served in
World War II, still alive.
01:16:38.051 --> 01:16:40.095
-[Jon] All I can
remember is he said
01:16:40.095 --> 01:16:42.014
we never wanted to surrender.
01:16:42.014 --> 01:16:46.101
And so that's the one thing
that always stays with me.
01:16:46.101 --> 01:16:49.229
He said, despite the odds
against them, you know,
01:16:49.229 --> 01:16:54.234
no, no weapons, no equipment,
no forces to rescue them.
01:16:54.943 --> 01:16:59.239
And yet the sense of we
want to keep on fighting,
01:17:00.949 --> 01:17:02.576
they kept it alive.
01:17:02.576 --> 01:17:05.954
And that told me that I
should continue the mission
01:17:07.039 --> 01:17:10.167
that he started, and it's a
mission that we will continue,
01:17:10.167 --> 01:17:12.294
and we cannot give up.
01:17:12.294 --> 01:17:13.837
We have to keep on fighting.
01:17:16.840 --> 01:17:19.343
-[CW Speier] I think
there's a pathway
01:17:19.343 --> 01:17:22.054
by which this
legislation can move.
01:17:22.054 --> 01:17:24.765
It's about fairness and equity.
01:17:24.765 --> 01:17:28.393
And it's about putting
yourself in the shoes
01:17:28.393 --> 01:17:30.103
of one of these veterans.
01:17:31.146 --> 01:17:35.859
-[Gen. Taguba] Recognition means
I took away your dignity and your honor
01:17:35.859 --> 01:17:37.736
fighting and dying
for your country.
01:17:39.029 --> 01:17:40.614
It's called pride.
01:17:40.614 --> 01:17:41.615
It's called identity.
01:17:41.615 --> 01:17:42.866
It's called your legacy.
01:17:44.826 --> 01:17:47.120
If we don't tell their
stories, it's gonna die.
01:17:50.290 --> 01:17:52.167
-[Feliciana] More power to you.
01:17:52.167 --> 01:17:54.044
And may God bless you a lot.
01:17:55.462 --> 01:17:56.463
Truly yours,
01:17:57.255 --> 01:17:58.715
Feliciana Reyes.
01:18:03.095 --> 01:18:06.014
[Mournful guitar and violin melody]