ANTI-IMPERIALIST STRUGGLE AND RESISTANCE AMONG THE FILIPINO COMMUNITY IN THE US

 

By Jay Mendoza

Executive Director, Pilipino Workers’ Center (PWC)

Spokesperson, Alliance of Filipino Immigrants

and Advocates—Southern California (AFIA-SC)

November 28, 1999

Seattle International People’s Assembly ’99

Seattle, Washington, USA.

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“The people are the makers of history.”

 

And this applies to the anti-imperialist struggle of the Filipino people, or Filipino community, living, residing and working in the United States.  The history of the Filipino people's anti-imperialist struggle in the US, is a history of migration, strikes, exploited labor, racism, hate crimes and systematic oppression and repression by none other than US monopoly capitalism. 

 

The history of the Filipino people’s anti-imperialist struggle in the US, is a history of workers versus capitalist, migrants versus imperialists, the oppressed versus the oppressor. 

 

And, this history of anti-imperialist struggle has a beginning—a root—and it began in the Philippines.  In the Philippines, where the Katipuneros (or Filipino revolutionaries), originally led by the worker Andres Bonifacio, turned their guns, bolo knives, bamboo rods, and fists against the US military. 

 

Against American military imperialist aggression, which brutally killed over one million Filipinos, one-seventh (1/7) of the Filipino population.  Against American imperialism, which coveted the Philippine Islands for its strategic military position in the Asia Pacific and its economic importance for cheap raw materials and a dumping ground for overproduced US commodities.

 

The Fil-Am War Is Not Yet Over!

 

This was the Filipino-American War of 1899-1902.  A war which is not yet over, my friends!  A war which continues today in the anti-imperialist struggle of the Filipino people living in the US today!

 

In the 1900s, before the first “wave” of migrant Filipinos went to the US (who were by and large landless peasants who became farm workers in a foreign country), the militant Filipino working class in the Philippines staged mass anti-imperialist demonstrations.  “Down with US Imperialism!”  “Down with US Imperialism!”  They shouted this on May 1, 1905, International Workers’ Day.  In solidarity with workers of the world.  This was the clear call of the Filipino proletariat in Manila, the capital of the Philippine colony.  Down with US Imperialism!

 

And if you happened to be taking the boat to America on that day, or on any other day when Filipino workers took to the streets.  Then that is what you would see.  That is what you will remember.  As your boat left Manila Bay in the hopes of finding the “American Dream,” you would hear “Down with US Imperialism”!  And this would foreshadow the militant Filipino farm worker’s strikes, which pierced the sides of US imperialism, and forced the agri-industrial business, Planters and Growers, to cave in to the demands of the workers.

 

“The people are the makers of history!”

 

If we look back into the history of the anti-imperialist struggle of Filipinos in the US, when the first Filipino migrant workers came to Hawaii, we can see its anti-imperialist character.  For Hawaii was just a colony.  The Philippines was just a colony.  Two colonial territories of US imperialism. 

 

So if you were recruited and contracted to be a sugar worker in Hawaii, you were one among tens of thousands.  You were going from one colony to another.  Cheap, exploited labor.  Your peasant background and crisis of landlessness forced you into transplanted labor…on order by US Planters and Growers, who were backed by the US government.  For Hawaii was not forced to become a State of the US until the 1950s.  And who controlled Hawaii?  The Growers and Planters of the US monopoly capitalists in the agricultural industry.

 

And the Filipino people, the workers, fought back, struggled and resisted against the imperialist Growers.  And this is the anti-imperialist character of the Filipino farm workers’ struggle against the Growers.  Workers strikes on the colonies!  Down with US imperialism!  Workers strikes on the colonies!  In 1920, 2,600 Filipino farm workers went out on strike in 5 plantations.  Eight more strikes followed in the next five years.  This was the movement of the masses.  This was the Filipino people’s resistance against imperialism.

 

And we can see more clearly the participation of the masses through the eyes and words of an eleven-year-old little Filipino girl.  A little girl whose life was swept up by the strike of 1920.  She writes:

 

        “Dear Diary:  we just arrive here today, here, at the ‘Strike Camp.’  There are so many Filipinos here, married-couples and unmarried men.  They’re from all parts of Oahu.  There are five other young girls here too.  I became friends with two of them already.  Their first names are Esperanza and Victoria.  They are, both, very nice girls.  They showed me the place around here, as soon as we settled, I mean, found our sleeping quarters.  You see, we all live in one big house, and so all we did was put curtains around our bed, and that will have to serve as our room for how long, we don’t know.  I guess we have to stay here until this strike is over.”

 

And so this little girl participated in the Great Strike of 1920.  She helped wash clothes, cook, played, endured the struggle of a militant mass movement.  Along with other little girls and thousands of Filipino farm workers.  The workers demanded 75 cents a day, and waged the classic duel between wage-labor and capital. 

 

And so, the point is this: the paper tigers of imperialism and monopoly capitalism cannot destroy the will of the masses.  They cannot destroy the desire that is born into the experience of the basic masses of peasants and workers to one day be liberated from the chains of oppression.  And this is a fact of history.  That change is always in the making.  And the people are the makers of this change.

 

“The struggle against modern racism is a struggle against modern imperialism.”

 

And to this fact we must awake the masses, to this political consciousness and undertaking.  To eliminate racism, we must fight imperialism!  Unmask racism to reveal its imperialist core!  This is the call of the Filipino anti-racist!

 

And what was the historic struggle, the anti-imperialist resistance, against the white supremacist society, which Filipino immigrants in the US experienced?

 

In the 1930s, “No Filipinos Allowed” were the signboards that MY grand uncles read on the doors of restaurants and apartments.  “Go to the other side of town!”, “No orientals allowed”, “It is illegal for Filipinos to marry white women!”  “Just go back to your own country, you’re not wanted here!” 

 

The monopoly capitalists and the US government spearheaded state violence against the Black man, against the Red woman, against the Yellow man, against the Brown woman.  Thousands died.  The US state government ran a high-level psy-war propaganda campaign that even the masses, in some respects, had turned against each other.  White workers were telling Filipino workers: “You’re the reason I don’t have a job.  You’re the reason wages are low.  You’re the reason I don’t have money in my pocket!”  But this is an illusion created by the imperialists.  A paper illusion which can be swatted away by organizing the masses in their millions, to fight racism with an anti-imperialist perspective…to fight racism with an anti-imperialist perspective.

 

With Imperialist Globalization Comes Racism

 

For the Filipino American experience of oppression from modern racism, began with the US colonization of the Philippines.  While the African American’s began with the slave trade.  The Indigenous Native Americans began with Columbus and the Yellow man’s from imperialist expansion.  So each man, and each woman, and each child and each grandchild, from all different races, have their own experiences of how they were abducted into modern US racism. 

 

But, each abduction is linked to a global history.  Global history of the developing imperialist powers to conquer the world market.  “Globalization” of the capitalist market—the world economy which changed into monopoly capitalism at the turn of the 20th century.  And this is the point where Filiipnos began their anti-racist struggle.  An anti-racism that is rooted in anti-imperialism.

 

In 1938, a 17-year old Filipino boy was shot, by an angry mob of 500 white persons.  Race riots against Filipinos erupted in Stockton, Exeter, Watsonville and other cities in California. 

 

And what was the answer of the Filipinos?  First, was to immediately quell the riots—organize church persons and community leaders to denounce the anti-Filipino rioters. 

 

But at a deeper level, some Filipinos heeded the call of their times.  They joined the Communist Party.  The Communist Party of the USA, in the 1930s, which was filled with immigrants who demanded justice.  Because, they saw in the Communist Party that racism and imperialism were linked.  One ism existed because of the other.  This is the experience of the anti-imperialist and anti-racist Filipinos in the US at that time.   And speaking of one of the most prominent and well-known Filipino anti-imperialist and Communists, is none other than Carlos Bulosan.  The author of “America is in the Heart.”  For Bulosan had heeded the call for struggle against US monopoly capitalism.  And, he wrote first-hand of his experiences of racial oppression and subjugation in the US.   And, Bulosan was not alone in joining the CPUSA, hundreds of other Filipino workers in the US joined. 

 

And, let us not forget, that the Communist Party of the Philippines was founded by Crisanto Evangelista, shortly before the writings of Bulosan.  Meaning that, the steady stream of new Filipino immigrants to the US would bring with them the militant tradition of anti-imperialist resistance to join in the anti-racist struggles.

 

“The people are the makers of history.  The people are the agents of change.”

 

After the Second Imperialist War, a.k.a. World War II—in the 1950s, Filipinos in the US continued their anti-imperialist struggles.  For one, the struggle of Union Local 7, an Alaskan Cannery Workers Union, which encompassed 3,000 Filipino workers, stood as a threat to the stability of US monopoly-capitalist business-as-usual.

 

A Union Had to be Anti-Imperialist

 

Filipinos answered the call of Unionization, and from the mass perspective of Filipino immigrants, a Union had to be anti-imperialist.  And because Union Local 7 was anti-imperialist, the US government launched a campaign to bust the Union.  They launched a unique campaign, only one in which an imperialist oppressor can take advantage of its Third World immigrant workforce. 

 

One by one, the US government had indicted Filipino Unionists of Local 7 in an attempt to brand them subversives and deport them back to the Philippines.  The US tactic was to use the McArren Act, otherwise known as the Internal Security Act of 1950.  The McArren Act was McCarthyism aimed at immigrants.  It contained clauses of “alien subversion” and “espionage.”  Soon after the indictments, raids and arrests began to take place by state police and government agents against Filipino Unionists of Local 7. 

 

The US government cooked up the “Communist bogey man” and the “red scare.”  And the US imperialists were on the defensive, because by this time 2/3 of all the world’s peoples were led by Communist Parties; and, for this the US feared the anti-imperialist Unionism of Local 7.  Brown brothers in the US connected to Yellow brothers of Mao Zedong’s revolution, connected to the Soviet Brothers under the Stalin administration.  The Local 7 anti-imperialist Filipino unionism of fish cannery workers stood as a David vs. Goliath within the belly of the US imperialist beast—but it stood as a single branch of a great tree that included the majority of the world’s peoples undergoing socialist construction.

 

In the ‘60’s, the US imperialist invasion of Vietnam was a pill of its own destruction.  The Vietnamese people rose up in arms, and this, coupled with the Chinese Revolution led by Mao Zedong, had an enormous impact on Filipinos in the US, and Filipinos in the Philippines.  The legacy of Mao Zedong Thought continued to ricochet across many Third World nations, and inspired and sparked revolutions against US imperialism, feudalism and bureaucrat capitalism. 

 

The anti-war movement in the US radicalized a generation of Filipinos, and Americans.  Many of whom are standing in this room together with us today.  And too, China and Vietnam were inspirations to the reestablishment of the Communist Party of the Philippines in 1968.

 

The radicalization of Filipinos in the US in the ‘60s and the newly launched national-democratic movement of the Philippines produced more mass activists for the anti-imperialist struggles of Filipinos in the US. 

 

As the world crisis and Philippine crisis intensified, so did Filipino migration to the US intensify.  More and more Filipinos, forced to leave their homeland as economic refugees, were fast becoming the number one Asian immigrant population in the US.  And, the constant flow of immigrant experience in organizing against fascism and dictatorship of the US-Marcos regime became a pool of knowledge and experience, from which thirsty activists could quench their thirst for strategies, tactics and political leadership.

 

Filipino anti-imperialist unity was broad, deep and wide, putting into action Filipinos across sectoral and class lines.  Filipino professionals and students as well as Filipino workers and their families took to the streets and protested against US imperialism.  Before, it was “US Out of Vietnam!” and then it was “US Out of the Philippines!”

 

Anti-Imperialist Consciousness Taking Root

 

The seeds of a new burgeoning anti-imperialist consciousness had taken their root.

 

The new anti-imperialist consciousness of Filipinos was based and rooted in the new-democratic struggle of the Filipino people in the Philippines.  The new-democratic struggle of the Filipino people outlined the principles for a national-democratic movement—for sovereignty from foreign imperialism and genuine people’s democracy. 

 

It analyzed the three basic problems of the Philippines to be feudalism, imperialism and bureaucrat capitalism.  And, it was this analysis and the mass mobilizations of Philippine peasants and workers in the face of death squads, salvagings, and vigilante violence, that spurred the anti-imperialist solidarity movement in the US, both among Filipinos and among all other races, to free the Philippines, and rid it of its three basic evils.

 

Because the Filipino masses in the US were eager to join in anti-imperialist solidarity with the Filipino people, anti-imperialist organizations and their chapters spread in the ‘70s and ‘80s.  The Katipunan ng mga Democratikong Pilipino, CAMD, IAFP, then later, Ugnayan, IMDP, APC—all these organizations were sparked and ignited by the Philippine national-democratic movement and ND activists alive and kicking in the US.

 

But not all the organizations mentioned, in the end, would embrace the true cause of the Filipino masses.  Some were left to whither away, while others continued, learned lessons, and developed their practice sharper and sharper in order to arouse, organize and mobilize Filipinos in the US, Americans, and those living in the US for the anti-imperialist struggle to free the Philippines.  And, they are with us at this conference today!!!

 

The anti-imperialist solidarity movement swelled like a tidal wave.  And some contradictions brought national attention to some and also embarrassment to others.  The Filipino labor leader, Philip Vera Cruz, left the militant United Farm Workers of America, because the “progressive” Cesar Chavez accepted money and awards from the killer despot Ferdinand Marcos.  Vera Cruz put his Union position as Vice-President of the UFW on the line for the Filipino people.  He put the very principles of anti-imperialism, and the human right to live free of dictatorship, above the narrow-mindedness of local Union glory.  It was a matter of principle.

 

The torrential wave of the Filipino anti-imperialist movement played its respective role in the ouster of the killer despot Marcos in 1986.  And the dedicated masses continued to fight against the new US-backed puppet, Cory Aquino.  The Filipino anti-imperialist movement in the US also saw the ouster of the US military bases in 1991.  And it furthered its resolution to fight the US-Ramos regime and presently today the US-Estrada regime.

 

“The people are the makers of history!  And they are the true agents of change!”

 

And as we speak of the US-Filipinos call to action that “to fight racism means to fight imperialism”  And, as we speak of anti-imperialist Unionism.  And, as we speak of the solidarity movement to support the national-democratic struggle of the people of the Philippines.  One great lesson has come about.  One great lesson in the struggle of implementing political principles, in the rise and fall of anti-imperialist organizations, in the struggle of action, in the struggle of experience.  One great lesson. 

 

US Monopoly Capitalism Is the Enemy of All People

 

And that is this: US monopoly capitalism is the enemy of the people—all people.  This is not a new lesson.  It’s the same lesson.  It is the same lesson that Mao Zedong felt.  The same lesson that Lenin felt.  The same lesson that Sally from the Church down the street felt.

 

It is this one great lesson that we have all felt—when we walked the picket line for higher wages.  Felt when we tucked our children in bed and whispered “sweet dreams.”  Felt when we saw the plunders of Third World strip-mining of the environment.  Felt when we passed through customs and got our visa’s stamped.  Felt when we heard that Joseph Ileto was shot dead by a white supremacist. 

 

Anti-imperialism is in our hearts.  It is a driving force of political consciousness that leads us to new friends, new bonds of solidarity, and new experiences in anti-imperialist struggle.

 

I salute all of you here today, who have come together to celebrate this anti-imperialist unity.  We are all here today to say NO to the WTO!  NO to the WTO!  The WTO is the executive committee of imperialism!  Down with imperialism! 

 

And I am also proud today, to see that the People’s Assembly 1999, is part of the Filipino people’s anti-imperialist struggle in the US.  And, it is a joining of all our forces, from countries and peoples around the world. 

 

Together we make change.  “The people are the makers of history.  And today, we have done just that!”

 

DOWN WITH THE WTO!

DOWN WITH US IMPERIALISM!

LONG LIVE THE UNITED PEOPLE’S STRUGGLE FOR LIBERATION AND GENUINE DEMOCRACY!!!

 

Thank you.

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