A little San Francisco Filipino American History for you: South Park’s Gran Oriente Filipino Hotel https://www.sfheritage.org/cultural-districts/soma-pilipinas/landmark-tuesdays-gran-oriente-filipino-hotel/ #FAHM
Have you seen this? - ✨ Join us for a Filipino American History Month Flag Raising Ceremony, coordinated by the Human Relations Commission:
📅 Tuesday, October 28
🕔 5 p.m.
📍 Chula Vista City Hall
Let’s come together to honor and uplift the Filipino American community!

#ChulaVista #FAHM #FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth #Community
📍 Chula Vista City Hall
Let’s come together to honor and uplift the Filipino American community!

#ChulaVista #FAHM #FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth #Community

Octubre es #MesDeLaHistoriaFilipinoEstadounidense, un mes para honrar la primera presencia registrada de filipinos en Estados Unidos en 1587. Estamos orgullosos de celebrar el impacto duradero que la comunidad filipinoamericana ha tenido en nuestras comunidades.

🌸 For #FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth, join us at an insightful talk with Prof. Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales, hosted by NYSEAN and Sulo at NYU! Discover the radical roots and growing influence of Pinayism across art, activism, and academia.

Register here: https://bit.ly/allysontc-24

#FAHM #Pinayism #AsianAmericanStudies #NYSEAN #PhilippineStudies

Radical Epistemologies of Pinayism: Stories of Self-Love, Shapeshifting, and Solidarity Registration Form

Celebrate Filipino American History Month with us and Professor Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales and discuss Pinay stories of struggle, survival, and service. When: Tuesday, October 23, 2024 | 6:00 PM Where: Kimmel Center at NYU, Room 914, 60 Washington Square S, New York, NY 10012 Open to the public, but registration is required. About the lecture: Pinayism, developed by Dr. Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales, explores the notion of a RADICAL PINAY SISTERHOOD that connects the GLOBAL, LOCAL, and PERSONAL stories of PINAY struggle, survival, service, SELF-LOVE, SHAPESHIFTING, SOLIDARITY, and strength to mentally, physically, politically, and spiritually UPLIFT ourselves (Tintiangco-Cubales & Sacramento, 2021). In this interactive presentation, Allyson will share the epistemology journey of Pinayism through vulnerable and poetic storytelling. She will also share how Pinays have expanded the scope of Pinayism in the worlds of art, activism, and academia. About the speaker: Dr. Tintiangco-Cubales was born and raised on Ohlone land with parents who were immigrants from the Philippines--womb (Batangas) and seed (Tarlac). She is a distinguished professor in the College of Ethnic Studies at San Francisco State University. Since 2000, she’s been teaching Asian American Studies focusing on Filipina/x/o (American) Studies and also courses on Ethnic Studies, women studies, arts, and pedagogy. She is also interim Chair of Secondary Education and an affiliated faculty member in the Educational Leadership. She is currently the director of curriculum for UCLA’s Foundations and Futures: Asian American and Pacific Islander Multimedia Textbook. In 2024, she was honored with the Wang Family Award, one of the most prestigious honors faculty can receive in the California State University (CSU) system for her teaching, service, and scholarship. Also, in 2024, she became an American Educational Research Association Fellow. She was also featured in this year's Asian Women Are Strong event. And just yesterday, she received the announcement that she is being honored with the Association of Asian American Studies Mentorship award. She has mentored hundreds of critical undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral students who are now teaching and working in schools, colleges, and community organizations across the nation. Prior to her position at SFSU, she did her undergraduate work at UC Berkeley in Ethnic Studies and received her Ph.D. from UCLA in Education. In 2001, she founded Pin@y Educational Partnerships (PEP), a “barangay” that provides Ethnic Studies courses and curriculum, develops radical educators, and creates resources for Filipina/x/o communities and similarly marginalized people. She has worked with many educators, schools, and school districts throughout the nation to co-develop curriculum and frameworks that center pedagogies rooted in Ethnic Studies, social justice, wellness, artivism, praxis, solidarity, and humanization. She is also the co-founder and director of Community Responsive Education (CRE), a national firm that supports the development of responsive, equitable, and justice-driven educators. Dr. Tintiangco-Cubales is also a producer for Larry the Musical and the Art of Work Film, both premiering in 2024. She is the author of many books, articles, and essays focused on the applications of critical pedagogy, the Ethnic Studies curriculum, Motherscholarship, and Pinayism. She has also served as an editor and author for several anthologies and journals such as At 40: Asian American Studies, the Journal of Asian American Studies, Asian American and Pacific Islander Nexus, and co-editor for the Sage Encyclopedia of Filipina/x/o American Studies. Allyson is a loving partner to Val Tintiangco-Cubales, a phenomenal teacher and leader, and the mother of Mahalaya, a prolific dancer and artist. Organized by: Sulo: The Philippine Studies Initiative at NYU Co-sponsored by: New York Southeast Asia Network (NYSEAN) and NYU Silver School of Social Work.

Google Docs
While I'm not going to be putting much out for Filipino American History Month. Don't miss out on so much great content from others by following #FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth or #FAHM during the month of October.
you’ve probably seen this norman rockwell painting before called “freedom from want,” but did you know that it had an accompanying essay by a Filipino American writer?

the essay was written by Carlos Bulosan, probably the most renowned Filipino American novelist and poet. you can read it here:
https://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2017/12/carlos-bulosans-freedom-want/

#FilipinoAmerican #FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth #FAHM #TootSEA

RT @[email protected]: CW: Anti-Asian & anti-Black racism, body shaming.

Sometimes, learning to love yourself means unlearning the hate you've been taught & letting go of the people in your circles who teach it.

(Please don't repost my work. RTs always appreciated)
#FilipinoAmericanHistoryMonth #FAHM

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/Joshua_Luna/status/1055873318539137024