
Filipino 'caring culture' hit hard by Canada truck-ramming that killed 11
A man drove through a crowded pedestrian zone during a Filipino cultural festival on Saturday.
Officials have arrested a suspect they said had a significant history of mental health issues, and said there was no evidence of terrorism in the attack that occurred just before Monday's election to choose a prime minister.
The victims ranged in age from 5 to 65, officials said.
Five-year-old Katie Le was killed with her parents, Richard Le, 47, and Linh Hoang, 30, according to a Go Fund Me page that raised US$250,000 for the family.
Also among the dead was Kira Salim, a teacher and counsellor at a middle school and secondary school, education officials announced.
Nearly one million of Canada's 40 million people identify as being of Filipino ethnic origin, and more than 172,000 Filipino Canadians are in British Columbia, according to the 2021 census.
Their influence extends across Canada as caregivers.
Many Filipinos have carved out their place in Canada by raising other people's children.
"We're just such a caring culture.
"We always say we're willing to give," said Christina, 58, a Filipino who attended a candlelight vigil for the victims.
David Eby, the premier of British Columbia, acknowledged their role and pledged to support them "just like they support us."
"It's their turn to get care from us," Eby said.
The truck-ramming came during a celebration honouring Datu Lapu-Lapu, the Filipino chieftain who defeated Spanish forces led by Ferdinand Magellan in the Battle of Mactan in 1521 and became a national hero.
Filipino Canadians see the government of British Columbia's 2023 official recognition of April 27 as Lapu-Lapu Day as acknowledgement of the cultural contributions of their community.
"We've been here a really long time," said Jonathan Tee, 30, a second-generation Filipino born in Canada.
"We don't need to earn a place here. We are here."
Some 75,000 people from the Philippines became permanent residents of Canada through the Live-in Caregiver Programme between 1992 and 2014.
Women fleeing poverty in the Philippines and living in the homes of their Canadian bosses needed to maintain employment to gain permanent residency, leaving them vulnerable to extreme working conditions and abuse.
"It was deeply exploitative because of the closed permit tied to a particular employer," said Geraldine Pratt, a professor at the University of British Columbia whose studies on the subject underpinned the stage play Nanay, depicting the lives of live-in caregivers.
Many immigrants from the Philippines are highly educated and overqualified for the jobs available to them, according to a 2023 Canadian census report.
More than 40 per cent of Filipinos held a bachelor's degree or higher but were underrepresented in jobs requiring such a degree, the report said.
About 36 per cent of Filipinos who earned nursing degrees back home instead worked as nurse aides, orderlies or patient service associates in Canada, while 13 per cent worked in sales or service jobs, the census report said.
Maki Cairns, 26, who advocates for the rights of women in the Philippine diaspora as an activist with the group Gabriela BC, said many have chosen to remain silent in the face of abuse so that they can bring their own children to Canada.
"Why do they have to be separated from their families and raise children that are not their own?" Cairns said.
"They hardly ever get to see their children in the Philippines."
Hashtags

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

Barnama
a day ago
- Barnama
- Living Muhibbah: A MADANI Blueprint for Malaysia's Future
Opinions on topical issues from thought leaders, columnists and editors. We call ourselves a land of Muhibbah – love, goodwill, and harmony. But in a world where differences can divide, the real test is whether we can carry the spirit of Muhibbah beyond the open house and into the everyday moments that shape our shared future. Malaysia is home to over 34 million people from diverse ethnic, cultural, and religious backgrounds. Outsiders often marvel at this variety, calling us a salad bowl or a mosaic of cultures. A Canadian visitor once described Malaysia perfectly: 'In Malaysia, you get Asia in one stop.' Yet beyond the colourful tourism posters and festive advertisements lies a deeper question: Are we truly multicultural in how we live, or do we simply perform diversity on special occasions? Most of us who enjoy Malaysian cuisine are familiar with the two food metaphors to describe Malaysia: rojak and yee sang. Both are mixtures bound by a distinctive sauce – peanut for rojak, plum for yee sang. The challenge today is to invent a new 'sauce' that binds us all together in a genuinely multicultural Malaysia. This leads to four guiding questions: 1. Are we a multicultural society in practice, or does one dominant group still define our national character? 2. Is there a shared 'Malaysian identity' that resonates across all communities? 3. Do we understand what it means to coexist in diversity beyond slogans? 4. Under Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim's MADANI vision, how can ordinary Malaysians help build a civilised, skilled, and inclusive nation? One way of understanding Malaysia's multicultural life is to use the three levels of cultural engagement. At the Intracultural Level it is understanding one's own cultural roots, values, and traditions. At the Intercultural Level it is engaging authentically with other Malaysian cultures and at the Cross-cultural Level it is interacting effectively with people from other countries in a globalised world. While many of us in urban Malaysia navigate these three levels of interface daily – ordering nasi lemak for breakfast, attending a Deepavali open house, and later collaborating with foreign colleagues online the situation in non-urban areas may not be so. Still the goal is to move toward unconscious competence in all three areas. Qualities needed to embody multiculturalism In embodying multiculturalism meaningfully, seven qualities are essential: 1. Self-Cultural Awareness – Knowing your own values, symbols, and rituals. 2. Multilingual Skills – Communicating in more than one language. 3. Cultural Literacy Beyond Books – Understanding lived experiences, not just textbook facts. 4. Historical & Cultural Knowledge – Appreciating the histories of all major communities. 5. Perspective-Taking in Conflict – Seeing disputes through multiple lenses. 6. Acknowledgement of Contributions – Recognising all communities' roles in nation-building. 7. Cross-Cultural Sensitivity – Respecting and integrating other values into our thinking. These qualities are not abstract ideals – they are practical skills that can be learned and practised daily by all Malaysians of different ethnicities. Since 1963, the word Muhibbah – derived from the Arabic habibba, meaning love and goodwill – has captured Malaysia's aspiration for harmony. It means respecting different ways of life, sharing joys and sorrows and standing together in times of crisis and celebration. We see Muhibbah in our shared festivities – Hari Raya, Chinese New Year, Deepavali, Gawai, and Christmas. But in the 21st century, unity must go beyond festive gestures. It requires substantive practices that bring people together not just on public holidays, but every day. One commendable effort is to build on Prime Minister Anwar's MADANI vision based on the six values of: 1. Sustainability (Kestabilan) – Preserving culture, ecology, and our shared future. 2. Compassion (Kesejahteraan) – Practising empathy across communities. 3. Respect (Kemanusiaan) – Rejecting stereotypes and embracing equality. 4. Innovation (Keberdayaan) – Welcoming diverse ideas and approaches. 5. Prosperity (Kemakmuran) – Ensuring fairness and inclusion in economic growth. 6. Trust (Kehormatan) – Building honest, respectful relationships. Together, these values act as a moral compass for balancing tradition and progress, unity and diversity. To help translate the spirit of Muhibbah and MADANI in our daily lives, six strategies are highlighted: 1. Inclusive Mindsets – See diversity as a strength. Greet people in their mother tongues, listen without prejudice, and include minority voices in decisions. 2. Respectful Coexistence – Live side-by-side with understanding. Attend cultural events, respect sacred spaces, and teach children about different customs and taboos. 3. Shared Prosperity – Ensure benefits reach all communities. Support diverse businesses, mentor across ethnic boundaries, and create inclusive community projects. 4. Sustainable Interdependence – Recognise that our destinies are linked. Reduce waste at cultural events, advocate equitable access to resources, and build rural-urban as well as East–West Malaysia partnerships. 5. Collective Innovation – Use diversity to solve problems. Blend traditional wisdom with modern tools, encourage multicultural teamwork, and celebrate cultural fusions in arts, food, and design. 6. Deep-rooted Trust – Build relationships that last. Keep promises, speak well of others, and create safe spaces for open dialogue. Understanding people In today's borderless digital world, our children grow up watching Korean Tok-toks, attending international schools, and absorbing global values at every turn. While these influences broaden their horizons, they also risk diluting the roots that anchor their identity. Balancing global exposure with a strong local grounding is essential. By internalising the MADANI values as Malaysians, they gain not only the moral compass to stay true to their heritage but also the cultural fluency to thrive in a future where understanding people is as valuable as mastering technology. Malaysia's strength lies not in avoiding differences but in embracing them consciously and respectfully. We need to move from slogan to substance, from tolerance to inclusion, and from coexistence to collaboration. This shift starts with each of us asking the following questions of am I building bridges, or staying in my silo, do I truly understand what matters to my fellow Malaysians and what am I doing every day to strengthen multiculturalism? If we want a new Malaysian identity, we must stop treating 'Unity in Diversity' as a tagline and start living it as a value. Let us reclaim the spirit of Muhibbah, reinvent it through MADANI, and transform difference into our greatest strength. As actress Michelle Yeoh reminds us: 'Diversity is strength.' And, as Ramli Ibrahim, a Malay master of Indian dance, demonstrates – culture has no borders when the spirit is open. As Malaysians, we each carry multiple cultures within us. The task is to develop the skills to connect with those who are different from us. Multiculturalism is not a slogan – it is a skill. And, like any skill, it grows when we practise it – every single day. -- BERNAMA Asma Abdullah, PhD, (asmaatculturematters@ is an interculturalist.


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Canada opposition leader Poilievre wins seat, to take on Carney over tariffs
Canada's federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre takes the podium after winning a by-election in Alberta's Battle River-Crowfoot riding, after he lost his long-held Ottawa constituency in the general election, in Camrose, Alberta, Canada, August 18, 2025. REUTERS/Amber Bracken OTTAWA (Reuters) -The leader of Canada's official opposition Conservatives, Pierre Poilievre, secured a return to Parliament and a chance to grill Prime Minister Mark Carney over U.S. tariffs, staging a comeback after unexpectedly losing his seat in an April election. Unofficial results from Elections Canada on Tuesday showed Poilievre had easily won a special election on Monday in the parliamentary constituency of Battle River-Crowfoot in the western Canadian province of Alberta, a Conservative stronghold. Poilievre, who accuses the Liberal government of botching its handling of U.S. relations, will be able to confront Carney when the House of Commons returns on September 15. Carney, who took over as prime minister in March, secured a strong minority government in April's federal election, while Poilievre lost the Ottawa-area seat he had held for 21 years. Carney won on a promise to stand up to U.S. President Donald Trump but has since moderated his approach even as Washington imposed more tariffs. "Mark Carney has been failing. He's failed, he's backed down, he's made concession after concession vis-a-vis the Americans," Poilievre told a press conference last Thursday. Carney, however, is in no immediate danger politically. Although the Liberals fell three seats short of a majority in April, they should be able to rely on the support of smaller parties to survive confidence votes. A Nanos Research poll earlier this month put the Liberals at 44% popular support compared with 33% for the Conservatives. Carney has pulled the Liberals more to the center and Poilievre will find it harder to draw a sharp contrast, said pollster Nik Nanos, CEO of Nanos Research. "Poilievre needs to articulate what he learned from the last federal election and how his government would be different than a Carney government," he said via email. At the start of the year the Conservatives looked set for a crushing election victory over the Liberals of then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who were far behind in polls after more than nine years in power. But Liberal fortunes soared after Trudeau announced he was stepping down and Trump began threatening Canada with tariffs and annexation. Poilievre secured about 80% of the vote, according to Elections Canada. (Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Edmund Klamann)


Daily Express
2 days ago
- Daily Express
Four men jailed for theft, drug offences
Published on: Tuesday, August 19, 2025 Published on: Tue, Aug 19, 2025 By: Jo Ann Mool Text Size: Charged under Section 379 of the Penal Code, Roslan faces up to seven years in prison, a fine, or both. Kota Kinabalu: A 33-year-old labourer was sentenced to nine months in jail by the Magistrate's Court here for stealing a mobile phone from a foreign worker. Roslan Mansur pleaded guilty before Magistrate Marilyn Kelvin to stealing a gold iPhone 16 Pro from a Filipino man, Juarez Mersan, at 2am on Aug 6 along the Waterfront pedestrian walkway at Jalan Tun Fuad Stephens. Advertisement Charged under Section 379 of the Penal Code, Roslan faces up to seven years in prison, a fine, or both. According to the prosecution, Juarez was walking with a colleague when Roslan bumped into him. Moments later, he noticed Roslan holding a phone identical to his, checked his pocket, and realised his own phone was gone. Though he attempted to chase Roslan, the thief escaped. Roslan was later arrested after a police report was filed. In a separate case, Md Syahfiq Tonny, 23, was jailed for eight months for possessing a stolen electricity meter belonging to Ahidi Jumin. The item was recovered on Aug 9 in front of a house at Kg Lapasan, Telipok. It had been reported missing on Aug 3. He was charged under Section 411 of the Penal Code for retaining stolen property, which carries a jail term of up to five years, a fine, or both. Meanwhile, two other men were jailed for drug offences. Usama Jalani and Azwan Jamian received eight months' jail each after pleading guilty to possessing 0.05gm and 0.07gm of syabu, respectively. They were charged under Section 12(2) of the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952, which provides for a fine of up to RM100,000 or up to five years' jail, or both, on conviction. In addition, Azwan was given a further seven months under Section 15(1) of the same Act for drug consumption. Usama was ordered to be referred to the Immigration Department after completing his sentence. Inspector Yusdi Basri prosecuted all four cases. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia