When in Manila posted about Tiffany Grace Uy, the UP student who just made history. She broke the record for the highest General Weighted Average since 1927! While some commenters expressed shock and admiration, some were quick to throw racist remarks. Others simply pointed out her ethnicity.
Butthurt Pinoy, a satirical blog, posted a photo of our readers’ comments following our feature of Tiffany.
A number of comments in the article were not intentionally racist, but proves that many Filipinos do not recognize Chinoys as fellow Filipinos. Case in point:
“A perfect example of a Pinoy student. Maybe another icon.”
“She’s Chinese.”
“She’s not Pinay.”
Another commenter, Hilda F. Dordas, was unhappy with another “Chinese blood” listed in the history of UP. According to her, UP is supposed to be a place for Filipinos and for the poor. But if ethnicity plays such a big part in determining who the “real Filipino” is, then who will be suited to be called a Filipino? Who is sure that all of their ancestors are 100% of Filipino ethnicity? If surnames determine who the real Filipinos are, what about Spanish surnames that were simply assigned to the Filipinos?
I still believe that the Chinese-Filipinos are true Filipinos. With the debates and the tension involving China and Philippines, should Filipinos still question the allegiance of the Chinoys like what national artist F. Sionil Jose suggests? In the article When in Manila published recently, 7 Debunked Myths about Chinoys that You Need to Know, I wrote about how the most troubling myth about Chinoys is that they are not “true” Filipinos:
The failure to acknowledge the Chinese-Filipinos as true Filipinos is the root cause of racism and xenophobia. Many Chinese-Filipinos have decided to stay here for good. The Philippines is the country they call home. Nationalistic quotes like “Filipino for Filipinos” and “Itaguyod ang sariling atin” seem great–until people demand exclusivity regarding who the “true Filipinos” are. Who are the “true” Filipinos? This is not a question of citizenship, of ethnicity, of jus sanguini or jus soli. It is a question of belongingness and exclusivity. I think it should be about choice. We do not choose the countries that we are born into. But we do get to choose what country we pledge our allegiance to, what country we choose to stay in. Are these decisions less important than the color of our skin or the size of our eyes? Shouldn’t our choices count more than circumstances we could not control?