Friday, April 13, 2007

Filipinos and Filipinas: Biscuits with Holes and Domestic Helpers?

My nimble fingers typed in the word “Filipinos” on Google’s search box one day because I was looking for great and appropriate (i.e., non-porn related) images of my countrymen for a presentation deck I was preparing for my boss. Any stupid Filipino idiot would imagine that the ideal picture would be of a caramel-coloured Malay-descended doe-eyed raven-haired person with a toothy grin and flat nose. And, for sure, there are those pictures available on the Net (albeit ugly ones), but then here’s one that almost made me laugh (or gag, I couldn’t decide). A Filipino eating a Filipino… [now, there’s a sentence I never thought I’d be writing in a non-sexual way (no matter how hard I wish I did though).] Literally, a Filipino-looking man is shown holding some sort of food branded “Filipino.” Apparently, it’s a popular snack – or more specifically, a mass-produced biscuit – made and sold in Spain and Portugal. I would suppose it’s also sold in other parts of Europe, too, but obviously it’s not very popular here in the Philippines, since I’ve just about interviewed every Filipino I know who lives here in Manila about this, and not one said they’ve actually seen or tasted “Filipino.”


Of course, I wanted to find out more about this Filipino biscuit – so, I asked the only Española I was not shy to ask stupid questions to about the snack. She laughed at first and then recounted to me that when her own friends in San Sebastian (Basque Country in Spain) found out that she
was coming over to the Philippines, they gave her package after package of Filipinos. After claiming that the biscuits were über delicious (harrumph! I would have been highly insulted if
she said that Filipinos tasted nasty!), she mentioned that the
manufacturers of Filipinos have cashed in on the little piece of dough they used to poke out of the biscuit – they’ve turned them into “Mini Filipinos.” Imagine that… Mini Filipinos – the weirdest oxymoron I’ve ever heard thus far. My follow-up question to her was if Filipinos were developed and made by Filipinos living in Spain. Funny thing is, she doesn’t know.


So, I went on to the Net and searched for the official Filipinos’ website but there was no mention of who the owners of the Filipinos brand are. Very curious (i.e., suspect) indeed. In a food blog by someone named Steve, though, it said that Filipinos are sold by a company called United Biscuits, a UK company. I checked out the company’s official website, but Filipinos is not listed as one of its brands. Curioser and curioser… Then I found this article entitled “Kraft Foods Extends Leadership in Biscuits Through United Biscuits Acquisition in Iberia; Reclaims Rights to Nabisco Trademarks in Major Markets.” Aha! So, Kraft is the ultimate cu
lprit behind this controversial biscuit. A data point that needs digesting (no pun intended) and analysis, indeed.

With the weird result I received after searching for “Filipinos,” I then googled for the definition of the word “Filipina” that same day. Why? One, because I can; and, two, because I’d heard that in some quarters of the world, “Filipina” is synonymous to “maid.” Lo and behold – there it is… in 1998, news articles about Manila being hurt by the Greeks defining the “filipina” as a “domestic helper” were being distributed in the international market. Ayayay! Another controversy on our hands.

Don’t get me wrong, though. I certainly don’t think there’s anything derogatory or wrong about a woman working as a maid (cue in an image of Jennifer Lopez in that movie with Ralph Fiennes, “Maid in Manhattan”) If one is good at being a maid, that’s definitely something to be proud of, noh! A Filipina-Italian actress, named Alessandra de Rossi, was even able to penetrate a small portion of the international film market by starring in a 2005 horror movie directed by Singaporean Kelvin Tong, entitled… uhm… “The Maid”

(insert ‘roll of eyes’ gesture here). However, there are other nations that export their human resources to work in jobs as domestic helpers and such. Indonesia, for example, is a major competitor of the Philippines in this particular area of HR export and trade.

Being a Filipina, I find myself cringing at the thought of being defined as a “domestic helper.” There are Filipina CEOs, Managers, Presidents, Housewives, Employees, Teachers, Assitants, MBA Students, Actresses, Philanthropists, IT Experts, Engineers, Architects, Designers, Athletes, Entrepreneurs, Chairmen of the Board, etc. Didn’t the Greeks know this???

I presume there are going to be endless debates about these two topics. Regarding “Filipinos,” some say, “Boycott Kraft! Boycott United Biscuits!” while others exclaim, “Filipinos taste good. What’s the problem? I’d only be insulted if they taste like shit.” Anent to “Filipinas,” some say, “I refuse to be defined as a maid!” while others go, “Well, honey, the truth does hurt.” The bottom line for me, though, is this: I haven’t eaten any Filipinos yet (literally and figuratively), and I haven’t met any Greeks either. But this fun and funny blog entry sure took a looooong time to write – something I haven’t been able to do for quite some time. Therefore, I’ll hold back judgement of the “Filipinos” and “Filipinas” controversies for another lazy day.

What do you think, though?

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Wow, Kim! Thanks for sharing this post! I had never even known that there was a snack food called Filipino! LOL! I think "Mini Filipinos" sounds so funny :) The things people will come up with, eh?

The idea of filipinas associated with being domestic helpers just irritates me. On one hand, I know that many filipinas are hard workers and are hired for overseas work as nannies and helpers, but I hate that when people who don't know about filipinos and filipinas talk about them, all they associate them with is manual labour. I've come across a lot of people who have thought that all filipinas were either nannies, nurses or strippers (and even prostitutes). That just enraged me. I have posted something on the subject (it's in my archives from sometime last year, I think).

Anyway...I'd better sign off before I take up too much space writing! ;) Take care and catch ya later!
C

kim said...

I had originally thought that the "Filipinos" snack was named and sold by a Filipino in Europe! Merde... when I saw that guy with the Filipinos picture, I also thought it was just a gag, until my Spanish intern confirmed it, and even showed me a huge package of Filipinos (ahehehe, really, no pun intended) she brought from Spain when she first arrived. I didn't get to taste any of it though - she said she had finished them all off, since it reminds her of home. ¡Que raro! if you ask me.

Re. the definition of Filipinas - I actually have a pseudo-funny encounter with a Caucasian in Singapore once when I was touring the city. I had told him I was from the Philippines, and he politely enquired after my work and preferred pass-times. He looked quite surprised when I told him that I was going through my MBA, that I worked at a European organisation, and that I can afford a trip to Singapore and spend in US Dollars!!! It was his first time to meet a Filipina who was not working as a domestic helper in Singapore, and who can speak better English than he could. Tsk tsk tsk. I couldn't blame the man, though. I mean, he didn't even know his country, America, colonised the Philippines 50 years ago. Poor uninformed man...

Unknown said...

When I was teaching in Japan, I encountered a few middle-aged Japanese business men who assumed I was a Filipina dancer/stripper/prostitute! They offered me lots and lots of money. I was so insulted. I mean, I was wearing a business suit, had my company/school name tag on (clearly stating that I was an instructor!) AND I was carrying a bunch of textbooks!

One guy even tried to drag me into a dark corner of the train station. I yelled for help and was hitting him, but he grabbed me really forcefully. All of the people who witnessed this just turned a blind eye and pretended to ignore that this was even happening. I ended up getting away, but was traumatized. Other than a few incidents like that, my life in Japan was wonderful :) I really enjoyed teaching there.

I guess that's the problem when people make broad generalizations. It happened to me when I was back in Toronto too. I took a taxi home one night and the taxi driver (I don't know where he was from, but he was wearing a turban and had a thick accent) was making the rudest comments when he asked where I was from. I kept telling him I was Canadian and he kept saying, "No, where are you from?". I was so pissed and said, "I'M FROM CANADA. I WAS BORN HERE." Then he rephrased his question and asked where my parents were from. Then when he found out my mom was from the Philippines, he made all sorts of rude comments. He asked about my boyfriend and if I had one. I said yes. When he asked what nationality he was and I said he was Canadian, of French-Canadian parents, the taxi driver flipped out. He said stuff like, "I thought so! Filipino women go with anyone and everyone!" insinuating that filipina women were 'easy'. By this point, I was livid and told him to just drop me off (even if I was still far from home). The guy was a jerk. It frustrates me that there are some pretty rude, stupid, arrogant people out there.

Kimmie... you can contact me outside the blogworld here--> cg underscore lee121875 at hotmail dot com .

kim said...

OMG, Chrissy! Are you serious?? In Japan??? Jeeeeeezzz... Re. that guy in the turban and the heavy accent, though, there are a billion and one of them out there. Had a few "bad" experiences with people similar to them, too. Although, I've had some pretty good experiences with others, too. You never can tell who and what an asshole looks like, that's fer sure.

Send you an e-mail soon. Keep on dropping by!

Micay Ramos said...

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