Hidden Sacrifices: Narratives of Select Filipina Overseas Workers in Southeast Asia1
Axle Christien J. Tugano
Discipline: Education
Abstract:
In my essay “Chasing Waves: Reflection on Southeast Asian Fisherfolk (2021a),”
I already featured the less documented experience of the socially marginalized.
My essay focused on the personal narratives of Bruneian fishermen of Kampor
Ayer, Brunei Darussalam (2016); the fishermen of Mui Ne, Vietnam (2017);
and the Intha of Myanmar (2018), with whom I had the fortunate chance to
converse with. However, my personal travel experience in the three countries
only gave voice to “non-Filipino workers.” That is why in this current essay, I
will highlight the unique experience of the Filipinos themselves – in the form of
migrant workers in Southeast Asia. I have interacted with and interviewed many
Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) in Europe, Asia, Australia, and the Pacific; even
in other countries where Filipino tourists were unfamiliar or visited, surprisingly
happen to have OFWs. With that, it is unsurprising why Filipinos are articulated
as globe-trotting people (Perdon 2014) and quasi-wandering people (San Juan
2009) because of their prevalence in the discourse of the global diaspora. In
this essay, I will feature the stories of personal experiences of select Filipina
workers in Southeast Asia, specifically in Malaysia (2014), Singapore (2014), and
Cambodia (2017), extracted from my travel narratives from 2014-2018.
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