
Exclusive BLOGS
Stories and Lessons about us & for us.
Filipino Rough Riders & The Wild West | Discover A Hidden Chapter in American History
rofessors Emmanuel David and Yumi Janairo Roth have extensively researched this forgotten group, publishing their findings in February 2024 in Playing Filipino: Racial Display, Resistance, and the Filipino Rough Riders in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West .
Exporting Exploitation: The Ugly Truth About Outsourcing to the Philippines
Outsourcing isn’t job creation. It’s wage theft with a passport - even when Filipinos do it to Filipino.
If You’re Going to Open a Filipino Restaurant, Open It in Chicago
Filipino restaurants are making culinary history — from the first Michelin star at Kasama to James Beard wins (Kuya Lord, Abi Balingit) and a flurry of nominations — drawing national attention to a cuisine that’s been here all along.
Respecting Indigenous Sovereignty: What Solidarity Really Looks Like
Indigenous communities are not symbols. They are sovereign nations.
'We are telling a story that is lost': Pinoytown tours uplift long-forgotten history in San Jose
Did you know San Jose once had its own Pinoytown? 🌆 Before Japantown became what we know today, Sixth Street was alive with Filipinos, Japanese, and Chinese families building lives together.
Golf but Make It Filipino | SIPA’s Giving Greens Invitational Tees off For change for the nextGen
On Monday, October 6, 2025, Search to Involve Pilipino Americans (SIPA) invites you to the Giving Greens Golf Invitational, a fundraiser-meets-cultural-homecoming that’s rewriting the rules of philanthropy, visibility, and Filipino American legacy.
The Philippine Ballet Theater Is Bringing Sarimanok and Filipino Fashion Legends to UCLA
Experience Sarimanok, a new ballet inspired by Mindanao myth, plus Pinagmulan, an exhibit of legendary Filipino designers, October 25 at UCLA.
Filipino Student Orgs Have the Sauce And It Could Be the Blueprint for Filipino America’s Future
Every spring, Filipino student orgs across the country fill auditoriums with the rhythms of kulintang and the snap of tinikling sticks. They are beautiful, necessary reminders of who we are in a country that erases us.
Is It a Butterfly, a Snake, or Something Else Entirely?
Discover Attacus lorquini, the giant Philippine moth with wings that look like a snake’s head. Nature’s ultimate optical illusion.
The Forgotten Constituents: How Overseas Filipinos Can Rewrite Philippine Politics
We left the Philippines, but we never left the fight. And if we organize, our ballots could do what billions in financial remittances never will: force the nation to change.
Ate First, Myself Last: The Weight of Being the Eldest Daughter in A FilAm Home
These days there seems to be a “day” for everything. August 26th is the “Eldest Daughter Day.” As the ate (eldest daughter in Tagalog) in my family. It was established to recognize and appreciate the often unseen responsibilities and emotional labor that comes with being the eldest daughter.
From city streets to gallery walls: Filipino resistance in San Francisco reverberates through 'Makibaka' exhibit
Makibaka: A Living Legacy captures the history of Filipinos in the city, which has been and continues to be witness to their activism. Featuring more than 20 artists, the contemporary arts exhibit is on display at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts through Jan. 4, 2026.
The Untold Story of Filipino Fraternities & Sororities and How They Built the Foundation of Asian American Greek Life We Know Today
Filipino students didn’t just join Asian American Greek life. We built it. And if you’ve never heard that before, it’s because history books erased us. Worse, sometimes we erased ourselves.
Inside the First EVER WNBA Filipino Heritage Night with Golden State Valkyries
The community celebrated the inaugural Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) Filipino Heritage Night (FHN), as the Golden State Valkyries took on the Washington Mystics.
Remittances Aren’t Liberation: The Hidden Costs of Sending Money Back Home
In the Philippines, this ritual has become part of our national identity. The Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) is hailed as the modern-day hero, their remittances praised as the “lifeline” of the nation. But beneath the applause lies a harder truth.
10 Ways Environmental and Child Welfare Advocate Gina Lopez Changed the Philippines Forever
On August 19, 2019, the Philippines lost one of its fiercest advocates for children and the environment: Gina Lopez. She was an environmentalist, a media innovator, a fearless public servant, and a mother-figure to countless Filipino children. Her story is one of courage, compassion, and lasting impact.
Manny Pacquiao, Religion, and LGBTQ Rights | The Filipino Dilemma + Why Manny’s Comeback Isn’t Just About Boxing
What happens when a national hero isn’t a hero to everyone? Last month, the PacMan returned to the ring—but so did an old controversy. His past anti-LGBTQ comments resurfaced, prompting many prominent figures and influencers across the diaspora to speak up and ask: Can we celebrate the legend without endorsing his beliefs?
The 12 National Symbols Every Filipino Should Know
Discover the 12 national symbols of the Philippines, from the flag to the sampaguita, and learn the surprising stories behind each one.
What the new resistance looks like: Filipino Entrepreneurs Turning Commerce Into Change
Filipino small businesses aren’t just open for business, they’re open for justice. They may look like cafés, bakeries, restaurants, or barber shops, but I dare you to take one look closer. They’re also community organizers, cultural educators, disaster responders, and mutual aid hubs.
Starving Our Own Power: Why Filipino And Filipino American Nonprofits Keep Getting Left Behind
Filipino nonprofits are fueling change but funders still treat them like an afterthought. But here’s the brutal truth: They’re doing it on shoestring budgets, unpaid labor, and unsustainable hope.