Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Commentary - True patriots -- an Asian-Pacific American story
True patriots -- an Asian-Pacific American story

Posted 5/13/2011 Email story   Print story

    


Commentary by Tech. Sgt. Mitchell Mercadal
65th Air Base Wing


5/13/2011 - LAJES FIELD, Azores (AFNS) -- Every Asian-Pacific American has a story to tell of his or her journey to the U.S. -- and most are quite incredible.

My story began with my father in 1954 when he was recruited by the Navy to become a supply cook on the Philippine island of Mindanao.

One day, his friend broke the news the Americans were in town looking for applicants who wanted to join the Navy. At first, my father was reluctant, because it seemed too good to be true, especially for a poor Filipino like him.

Coming from a very humble, poor and hard-working family, my dad learned to strive hard at an early age. He woke up at the break of dawn to do his chores, walked barefoot three miles back and forth to school, and traded fruits and vegetables for a piece of paper or pencil. If he couldn't trade, he used banana or taro leaves to write on, and he would dry the ink in the heat of the sun to read it legibly by the end of the day.

Talk about a hard-knock life. To this day, it still baffles me to imagine those things. With God's blessings, my dad became proficient in speaking and writing Cebuano, Tagalog, two other Filipino dialects, Spanish and English. He eventually passed the U.S. Navy entrance exam.

My father served honorably for 20 years, retiring as a petty officer first class. But shortly before his retirement in 1975, he made the biggest decision of his life ... he became a U.S. citizen, which made and my family and me Asian-Pacific Americans.

I was born in the Philippines a couple years after my dad retired. When I was a kid, I bluntly asked, "So, why are we American citizens? We weren't born there, and we don't look like them."

He looked at me and said, "My son, I didn't exactly know what I signed up for when I joined the Navy. all I knew was to work hard and not complain. I spent years at sea and a lot of times in the Vietnam War side-by-side our fellow Americans. I've also left your mother, brothers and sisters for 16 years in the Philippines, while I was serving this country and fighting for its freedom.

"I sacrificed a lot, and I believe I deserve to be an American citizen," he continued. The United States has done a lot of good things for us. If it wasn't for them, you'd be plowing the fields right now with me using a carabao (water buffalo), so be thankful to God and be proud that you are a Filipino-American."

Last year, I visited my father in the Philippines after my one-year tour in Korea. His body showed signs of age, and I told him, "Dad, without you, we wouldn't be in the states. I wouldn't be an Airman right now, as I dreamed since I was 12. Thank you."

Then, I stood straight up and rendered a salute. To my surprise, while he was sitting in his wheelchair, he looked up at me and returned a salute, without saying anything.

"Diversity, leadership, empowerment and beyond" is this year's theme for Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month, and I think my father's great story encompasses this theme.

For my family and me, it feels great to be American, and it's worth dying for.



tabComments
5/26/2011 3:50:40 PM ET
I really enjoyed reading this. It seems that you truly appreciate what your father did for you and your family. Most people today don't take the time to think about that.
MSgt Wills, Robins AFB
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
New training facility opens in Wyoming

Solar power lights up Southwest Asia

Separate paths bring brothers together for Christmas  1

All I want for Christmas ... Daddy!

Osan community brightens holidays for Korean orphans  |  VIDEO

Deployed Airman receives Christmas phone call from President Obama

Air Force Week in Photos

Premier AF concert band 'wows' fellow musicians at Midwest Clinic  11

Pararescue, security forces Airmen train as one  10

Through Airmen's Eyes: High school reunion ... above Afghanistan

Space Fence program moves forward  1

Kunsan AB, Hurlburt Field Airmen unite to spread holiday cheer

Operation Christmas Drop  1

Air Force Week in Photos

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Legacy of valor  1

There IS an I in team  3


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing