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Pinoy exchange studes relish their stay in US
By Jose Katigbak
WASHINGTON — Forty-one high schoolers from across the Philippines, many
of them poor, some of them disabled but all of them smart as a whip, are heading
back home with a lifetime of happy memories after a year as exchange students
in the United States.
The Filipinos were among 454 students from countries with significant Muslim populations
awarded full scholarships under the State Department’s Youth Exchange and
Study (YES) program to spend one academic year in various US states.
They lived with host families and attended local high schools to learn about US
society and values and help educate Americans about their own countries and cultures.
Started in the aftermath of terrorist attacks in New York and Washington on Sept.
11, 2001 the YES program aims to build bridges of understanding between Americans
and other peoples.
In the 2003-04 academic year 160 students from Indonesia, Malaysia, Nigeria, Tunisia,
Lebanon, Jordan, West Bank/Gaza, Egypt, Kuwait, Syria, Yemen, Turkey and Pakistan
participated in the program.
The number of participants rose to 454 in 2004-05 and the list of countries expanded
to include the Philippines, Iraq, Morocco, Afghanistan, Algeria, Bangladesh and
the Israeli Arab community.
The majority of the students are Muslims, but there are also many Christians.
The Filipinos said they were chosen from among 360 of their own peers after hurdling
divisional, regional and national essay competitions.
While in the US they received a monthly allowance of $125. They said a key lesson
they learned and the one they would carry with them the rest of their lives was
the importance of being independent and self-reliant.
All agreed they had the time of their lives in America and given half the chance
would want to come back.
Some were so overwhelmed by their experience they were moved to tears.
Joel Francia, 17, of Sampaloc, Manila said the first time it snowed in Buffalo,
New York where he lived, he ran into the streets with his arms outstretched, catching
snowflakes. Then he burst into tears at the thought he was doing something he
never dreamed was possible.
Now, of course, he’s a ‘seasoned’ veteran and nonchalantly told
The Manila Mail that Buffalo had eight feet of snow this winter “but it
wasn’t too bad.”
He can’t wait to tell his father Raul Francia, a taxi cab driver, and his
mother Imelda Acosta his experiences.
Armieyah Ayob, 16, a Muslim from Cotabato, lived in Wisconsin and said she never
once felt discriminated against because of her religion or the color of her skin.
“It was great because they treated me just like they treated everyone else,”
she said.
“They gave me every opportunity to practice my religion. They encouraged
me to go to the mosque regularly and my American mom even accompanied me to the
mosque,” she added.
But for Carla de la Cruz, 17, of Quezon City, who studied in Maryland, her initial
reaction at being treated just like everyone else was one of shock.
She expected special treatment, she said, because she suffers from spinal bifeda
and is wheelchair-bound.
Marlon Celso, 18, of Manila also expected special treatment in Michigan because
he suffers from dwarfism and has to move around in a wheelchair.
Celso, whose father Diosdado is a tricycle driver, has a scholarship waiting for
him at Lyceum University in the Philippines as soon as he graduates from Villamor
High School.
Recounting her first experience on reaching the home of her host parents, De la
Cruz, one of 11 children of Pedro and Adoracion de la Cruz, said when she asked
for a glass of water she was shown the fridge and told to get it herself.
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