
Vancouver leans on Filipino ‘bayanihan' spirit in wake of car attack
'It's amazing. It's really a show of how important the Filipino community is just very broadly,' says Chelsea Brager.
Brager works with a Filipino youth organization called Anakbayan BC that helped organise a candlelight vigil on Sunday evening to remember victims of Saturday's car-ramming attack that killed 11 people and injured dozens at a Filipino heritage festival in the Canadian city.
Earlier in the day, the nearby Anglican memorial church of St Mary the Virgin was overflowing with members of the Filipino community and others who wished to pay their respects.
Saturday had been intended as a night of celebration for the community – of resilience and of collective resistance. Lapu Lapu Day commemorates the victory in 1521 by Indigenous Filipinos, led by Lapu Lapu, against Spanish colonisers on the island of Mactan.
Members of the Black Eyed Peas had just finished their headlining set in Vancouver's Sunset neighbourhood, home to the city's Filipino community, when a driver tore through the crowd.
'Last night, there was a horrible tragedy that occurred at a happy event, and we're still reeling from it,' said RJ Aquino, the chair of Filipino BC, the organisation behind Saturday's event, at a press conference. It's 'not lost on us and the people in our team that the spirit of the festival was about resistance, resilience', as well as courage and strength, 'and we're going to have to call that up in ourselves', Aquino added.
Brager first knew something was wrong when they, on their way home, noticed others running away from the event. 'We didn't quite know what was happening until we saw the news when we got home,' said Brager.
'I just saw my phone kind of blow up with tons of messages,' said Maki Cairns, with Gabriela BC, a Filipino women's movement which also helped organise the Sunday evening vigil.
Some were messaging to see if Cairns could contact loved ones they'd had trouble reaching, while others were asking if she was OK. 'I remember getting people from the US messaging me as well to make sure I was OK,' Cairns said.
Cairns' own first call was to her mother, who she was relieved to hear had not been at the event.
In Vancouver, Filipinos have deep roots and a strong sense of community, something Aquino invoked on Sunday.
'Looking at the history of our people, we've encountered many tragedies, and we're going to be OK. It's OK to not feel OK right now. It's OK to be sad, be angry, be confused. But as we work through those feelings, we will have each other to do that,' he said.
'We'll need to make sure to be there for each other to do that. There's no better time to really live up to the bayanihan spirit and say that we are here to lift each other up.'
'Bayanihan' refers to a community spirit in Filipino culture, and the need to lean into bayanihan was echoed by several others on Sunday.
Brager said it applied both to the origins of Lapu Lapu Day – the collective resistance that led to the victory against the Spanish – and to the response to Saturday night's tragedy.
Back at the church of St Mary the Virgin, attendees heard a sermon by Father Expedito Farinas, who related the biblical story of the Apostle Thomas, whom he described as being in so much despair after the crucifixion that his faith in Jesus's resurrection was shaken. They sang hymns, took communion and shared lunch in a parish hall. Inside and outside the church, community members were seen hugging and comforting one another – sharing tears and at times laughter.
Jaela Villegas, from Migrante BC, a Filipino organization fighting for migrant worker rights in British Columbia, said the attendance at the sermon was 'overwhelming in a really good way'.
'I didn't just see my Filipino community. It was also other communities or nationalities, or even other religions. They came to support us, and so that's very comforting,' Villegas said.
'A Palestinian earlier came up to me and said, 'Your loss is our loss'. I think that's so heartwarming.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
9 hours ago
- Reuters
Canada airdrops aid into Gaza, says Israel violating international law
Aug 4 (Reuters) - Canada said on Monday it delivered humanitarian assistance through airdrops to Gaza, which has been under a devastating Israeli military assault for almost 22 months, with Ottawa again accusing Israel of violating international law. "The (Canadian Armed Forces) employed a CC-130J Hercules aircraft to conduct an airdrop of critical humanitarian aid in support of Global Affairs Canada into the Gaza Strip. The air drop consisted of 21,600 pounds of aid," the Canadian government said in a statement. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that it was Canadian Armed Forces' first humanitarian airdrop over Gaza using their own aircraft. The Israeli military said 120 food aid packages for Gaza's residents were airdropped by six countries, including Canada. The other five were Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Germany and Belgium. Canada said last week it plans to recognize the State of Palestine at a meeting of the United Nations in September, ratcheting up pressure on Israel as starvation spreads in Gaza. Canada also said on Monday that Israeli restrictions have posed challenges for humanitarian agencies. "This obstruction of aid is a violation of international humanitarian law and must end immediately," Canada's government said. The Israeli embassy in Ottawa had no immediate comment. Israel denies accusations of violating international law and blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza. Israel cut off food supplies to Gaza in March and then lifted that blockade in May - but with restrictions that it said were needed to prevent aid from being diverted to militant groups. President Donald Trump also claimed Hamas militants were stealing food coming into Gaza and selling it. However, Reuters reported late last month that an internal U.S. government analysis found no evidence of systematic theft by Hamas of U.S.-funded humanitarian supplies. Israel says it is taking steps for more aid to reach Gaza's population, including pausing fighting for part of the day in some areas, allowing airdrops and announcing protected routes for aid convoys. The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered in October 2023 when Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, Israeli tallies show. Gaza's health ministry says Israel's subsequent military assault has killed over 60,000 Palestinians. It has also caused a hunger crisis, internally displaced Gaza's entire population and prompted accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and of war crimes at the International Criminal Court. Israel denies the accusations.


Telegraph
a day ago
- Telegraph
Archbishop of Wales: I hid my sexuality for decades
The new Archbishop of Wales has spoken of keeping her sexuality secret for decades as she struggled to be accepted in the Anglican communion. The Most Rev Cherry Vann is the UK's first female and first openly LGBTQ+ archbishop after being appointed to lead the Church in Wales last week. And the 66-year-old has admitted that without the strong belief that God had called her to the priesthood, she 'would not have survived' her journey through the ranks of the Church. Ms Vann, originally from Leicester, told The Guardian: 'It happens that I've lived in a time that's meant that I'm a trailblazer, but I'm not a campaigner. 'I'm not somebody to be out there all the time, but I do seek to be true to what I think God's asking of me.' The archbishop has worked in the Church in Wales since 2020, when she became Bishop of Monmouth. At the time, she publicly disclosed her civil partnership with Wendy Diamond, her partner of 30 years. Before that, she served in the Church of England as Archdeacon of Rochdale between 2008 and 2020. Ms Vann explained that working in the Church in Wales since 2020 has been very different because clergy are permitted to be in same-sex civil partnerships. In the Church of England, same-sex relationships are technically allowed, but gay clergy are expected to remain celibate. The archbishop added: 'Other people in England were braver than I was and made their sexuality clear. 'A lot of them suffered the consequences of that, certainly when going forward for ordination.' She also said that being a woman in the Church had been difficult enough, explaining: 'You can hide your sexuality, up to a point, but you can't hide being a woman. 'There was a lot of nastiness; the men were angry, they felt they had been betrayed.' Ms Vann will be enthroned at Newport Cathedral later this year. She replaces Andy John, who announced in June he would be stepping down as archbishop with immediate effect after a scandal of binge drinking, financial irregularities, bullying and sexual misconduct came to light at Bangor Cathedral. Mr John was not personally accused of wrongdoing, but calls for his resignation gathered pace after summaries of two reports were published and six 'serious incident reports' were sent to the Charity Commission earlier this year.


Daily Mirror
2 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Amy Bradley's cryptic letter to girlfriend 'predicting disappearance' before she vanished
A month before she disappeared from a Caribbean cruise ship, Amy Bradley penned a heartfelt letter to her girlfriend, asking her to "save" her, as seen in the Netflix documentary Before her vanishing on a family holiday, Amy Lynn Bradley made a tearful confession to her girlfriend: she had kissed another woman. The news devastated her lover Mollie McClure, prompting her to cut off communication to process the betrayal. Desperate to reconnect, Amy, from Virginia, penned a heartfelt letter and sent it to Mollie in a "message in a bottle." The handwritten note, now shared in episode three of Netflix 's Amy Bradley Is Missing, would gain haunting significance just weeks later when the 23-year-old vanished without a trace during a Caribbean cruise with her family. It comes after a dad died in scalding hot bath as family slam hotel management for 'ignoring warnings'. "Mollie, I hurt you deeper than you can ever forget," Amy wrote. "I'm not asking you to forget… I just wanted to ask you if you could find it in your heart to forgive me. "I feel like there is an ocean between us, like I'm on a desert island waiting for you to rescue me… Save me, please. Stranded, Amy." Exactly one month after writing those words, on March 24, 1998, Amy disappeared from a Royal Caribbean cruise ship while docked in Curaçao. She was last seen by her father, asleep on the cabin balcony between 5:15 and 5:30am. By 6am, she was gone, leaving behind everything but her lighter and cigarettes. Since then, theories have ranged from accidental drowning or suicide to kidnapping and human trafficking. While some point to the letter as a possible clue to suicide, McClure disagrees. "It could suggest suicide," Mollie says in the series. "But I don't connect with it in that way." 'It is a love letter. The metaphor — 'stranded,' 'ocean between us' — is convenient to misread, but I don't interpret it that way.' Amy's disappearance has sparked a decades-long investigation and her family has occasionally received tips that have seemed promising. In August 1998, Canadian tourist David Carmichael claimed he saw Amy on a Curaçao beach flanked by two individuals. He said the woman pointed to her tattoos, which matched Amy's. Authorities searched the area, but found nothing. Then in January 1999, a U.S. Navy petty officer reported that a woman at a brothel in Curaçao told him, 'My name is Amy Bradley,' and begged for help. She reportedly panicked when he mentioned a nearby naval ship, responding, 'No, you don't understand.' The officer didn't take action, her father, Ron Bradley, told NBC News — in in part because the officer wasn't allowed to be in the brothel and because he didn't know anyone by that name was missing until he saw a magazine cover with Amy's face and name on it. In 2005, the Bradley family received anonymous online photos of a woman named "Jas," who closely resembled Amy. A forensic analysis reportedly suggested a match, but investigators were unable to trace the source of the images, and the FBI found no actionable evidence. Despite public interest and numerous leads, Amy remains missing. The FBI has classified her case as a suspected abduction, but no suspects have been charged, and her fate remains unknown. Now, thanks to the latest Netflix documentary her story is drawing fresh interest, and with it, renewed hope that the mystery might one day be solved.