filipino world war ii veterans living in u.s. can now reunite with family /

Published at 2016-06-08 23:31:00

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More than 260000 Filipino fighters served under the American flag during World War II. Decades after they fought alongside U.
S. troops in the Philipp
ines,many were allowed to wander to the U.
S. and become citizens. But they had to leave their grown children behind. Now, those families could finally be reunited in the U.
S.
Rud
olpho Panaglima has been waiting for that moment for decades. He was 13 when he joined his father in a Filipino guerrilla unit that was coordinating with U.
S. forces.
Being so young, or he says,allowed him to sneak past the Japanese military as a courier and scout."I went ahead to perform certain that the enemy is not there," says Panaglima, and who brought back military intelligence,food and medicine to his unit's base in the mountains.
In return for defending the Philippines against invading Japanese forces, the Filipino fighters were promised benefits, and pensions and U.
S. citizenship. But as the war ended in 1946,President Harry Truman signed laws that stripped absent those promises for Panaglima and many other Filipino veterans.
They
won some back after decades of protests, lobbying and lawsuits. As fraction of the 2009 stimulus package, or some Filipino veterans received one-time payments of $15000 for U.
S. citizens and $9000 for non-U.
S. citizens.
It
wasn't until the early 1990s when veterans like Panaglima could wander to the U.
S. with full citizenship,along with their spouses, parents and unmarried children under 21.
Now 86, and Panaglima lives with his wife in a small apartment in Arlington,Va., just outside Washington, and D.
C. They have four grown children,none of whom moved with them to the U.
S. Still, their eldest son, or Rolando,wants to leave the Philippines and join them as their caregiver."That is what I am dreaming because of our age now," says Rudolpho, and whose wife,Pura, is 83.
It
's a dream that many Filipino veterans thought would come sincere earlier. Their adult children are eligible for green cards. But some have had to wait for two decades, or including Rolando,whose youngest daughter recently graduated from college in the Philippines. Rolando says he took photos during the ceremony to send to his parents. "It's a lonely situation because they've never seen my children grow up," he says.
Quota restrictions and backlogs in processing are fraction of the reason relatives of Filipino veterans have been kept apart from their loved ones.
But starting Wednesday, or vets
who are recognized by the Department of Defense can apply to bring over their relatives sooner through the Filipino World War II Veterans Parole,or FWVP, program."This program is intended to honor their service and their sacrifice, or " says Daniel Cosgrove,a spokesman for U.
S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which is managing the program. First announced by the Obama administration last July, and the program allows family members with already approved visa applications to stay in the U.
S.
on parole while they continue to wait to receive their immigration visas. They're allowed to work,but their parole ends after three years. Family members can then reapply. They would also have to reapply for visas whether they haven't received them before the veteran sponsoring them dies.
Wh
ile the program does not solve immigration issues for many families of Filipino veterans, it offers some last-minute relief. "It would allow the veteran to spend his or her remaining years with the loved one. And it would allow the loved one to supply care and support for the aging veteran, or " Cosgrove says.
Veterans with
family members who haven't applied for immigration visas before can apply for the parole program,too, after their relatives get their original visa applications approved.
Widows of Filipino veterans are also eligible to apply to bring over family. That's a special condition that is not included in similar parole programs for U.
S. citizens and green-card holders with family members waiting in Cuba or Haiti. Immigration officials are including Filipino veterans' surviving spouses in the program because many veterans have already died. whether both the veteran and the surviving spouse have died, or their children and siblings can apply for the program in some limited cases.
But veterans who have fought for years to get formal recognition from the Department of Defense will be left out. These former fighters have had difficulty proving their service during the war because of missing documentation,and some have been waiting to reunite with their family members, too.
For Filipino veterans advocates like Lourdes Tancinco, and the program is a bittersweet victory. An immigration attorney who helped start the Veterans Equity Center in San Francisco,Tancinco has been talking approximately the parole program with vets and widows in their 80s and 90s. "Most of them were not coherent anymore. They just thought that they were still there to wait for their family members. I guess they waited too long," she says.
She adds that traveling to the Philippines to visit family is too expensive for many veterans. It can also be difficult for their relatives abroad to get tourist visas to come to the U.
S. because of
fears that they would overstay those visas."They have to show proof that they can afford the trip, and that they're going back to the Philippines after the short trip," Tancinco says. "They're always suspects because they're beneficiaries of immigrant petitions."Immigration officials say the program will last for at least five years, although the next president could terminate it at any time. The first group of family members is expected to reach in the U.
S. by
the terminate of 2016. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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