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PSG celebrate local research with its award of six community-engaged grants to local organizations

The (PSG) at 91亚色 is celebrating local research with its award of six community-engaged grants to local organizations.

鈥淥ne of the core principles of the PSG is supporting community-engaged and community-grounded work. We are delighted to support exciting and innovating research creation projects from community organizations with a track record of working with the Filipinx community in Canada and beyond,鈥 said Politics Professor

The community-engaged research grants are one of the PSG鈥檚 2023 activities, which are supported through funding from the Philippine Consulate General in Toronto.

(CPO) is a non-profit, community-based and youth-centred organization established in 1985 in order to preserve Filipino cultural heritage by providing music, dance and performing arts instructions to children in Canada and share it with the community. The aim of CPO鈥檚 funded project, Enhancing our Representation of the Philippines, is to extend our knowledge of the stories that represent the Indigenous tribes of Mindanao. CPO will use the grant funds to invite and collaborate with Victoria-based dance artists, Jean Graciela Pe帽ola and Geoffrey Pe帽ola as well as host a dance workshop focusing on dances of the island鈥檚 Indigenous tribes.

鈥淎s an organization dedicated to preserving the Filipino heritage, we want to continue strengthening our understanding of our heritage and the significance of folk dance to our cultural identities, so that we can wholly represent the Filipino community within Canada and the Philippines,鈥 said CPO in their application.

Each grantee is supported by a PSG faculty member. Dance Professor will work with CPO in support of the organization鈥檚 success.

This grant is a huge boost not only for CPO but also for the Philippine folk dance community in the Greater Toronto Area, said Alcedo. 鈥淭he dances they will teach from this southern region of the Philippines will deepen the embodied understanding and practice of Philippine folk dance by CPO members and those who will participate in the planned workshops.鈥

The 鈥檚 (FC-WJNet) project responds to the need of youth, the Filipino Canadian community and others wishing to learn about Philippine history and culture. The group is developing accessible, shareable and user-friendly educational tools: resource materials in poster format and a website with a modified version of the posters with resources and references focusing on the Filipino people鈥檚 continuing struggle for independence. This project expands on the organization鈥檚 development of a poster鈥擳he Filipino People鈥檚 Continuing Struggle for Independence鈥攖hat covered the period from the Spanish colonization of the Philippines to the declaration of 鈥渋ndependence鈥 in 1946.  

FC-WJNet is committed to advancing Filipino-Canadian literature and journalism. Its members include writers, journalists, playwrights, screenwriters, book authors and others who aim to serve the community and larger society by writing about the important issues of the day that affect a significant sector and their long-term interests.

habi po, a collective of Toronto-based Filipino/a/x artists focusing on building community through traditional textile art practices to preserve Philippine cultural heritage and revive ancestral connections, received funding to co-create historical, material, and embodied knowledges about sustainable Philippine textile/weaving traditions with GTA-based Filipino/a/x youth.

The group and its youth participants will consider the challenges that Filipino/a/x-Canadian youth experience when called to support sustainable, ethical and authentic Philippine textile practices and local businesses, and how can collaborative zine research-creation bridge the gap between the knowledges of Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines and diasporic Filipino/a/x youth in Canada on the preservation of sustainable textile traditions.

鈥淲e strongly believe in the urgency of sharing these knowledges in a zine as a political strategy of resistance against 1) the devaluation of weaving as a commodity and its disappearance as a 鈥渄ying鈥 tradition and art practice, 2) the erasure of culture, community and livelihood for Indigenous and working class Filipino/a/x artists, artisans, and garment workers, and 3) the whitewashing and cultural appropriation of sustainable textile practices,鈥 said habi po members in their successful application.

is using its grant funds to identify gaps in its programming/service delivery to queer and trans Filipino/a/x via an assessment of queer and trans Filipino/a/x youth鈥檚 needs through an environmental scan of their service areas. This grant allow the organization to continue to be a supportive space for Filipino/a/x youth to connect with their community and culture, form meaningful relationships, gain mentorship and develop a sense of belonging, said Tungohan.

Kapisanan is a queer-led grassroots organization that has provided arts programming to Filipino/a/x youth in Toronto and the GTA for the past 20 years.

Seafarers鈥 Stories: Understanding the Realities of Filipino Seafarers is the funded project that /Scarborough is undertaking this year. They are developing consolidated, free and accessible information materials about the current situation and challenges that Filipino seafarers face. The research team will engage in a series of one-on-one conversations and collective discussions to document the experiences of seafarers that dock in Hamilton weekly before vessels move on to their final destinations. Ultimately, they hope to use this information to help build a campaign and/or recommendations for policy changes that could improve the work and living conditions of seafarers.

Founded in 2018, Migrante Ontario is a grassroots organization of Filipino migrants and their families with the goal of advancing the rights and welfare of Filipinos in Ontario within the framework of people鈥檚 struggle for national liberation and genuine freedom in the Philippines.

Professor (Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change) will be the 91亚色 liaison with Migrante and will support their work. 鈥淲e are delighted to be working with Migrante,鈥 says Kelly, 鈥渨hich is an advocacy organization with global reach in the Filipino diaspora. The plight of Filipino seafarers is an especially important issue as their work is so often 鈥榦ut of sight, out of mind.鈥 The 91亚色 Centre for Asian Research-based Work at Sea project is pursuing some similar questions around migrant labour rights at sea, albeit in the context of global fishing fleets.鈥

(MRCC) has been supporting migrant workers with labour and immigration issues since 2017. Over 60 per cent of their clients are from Filipino communities and in the literature, several barriers to Filipino migrant workers鈥 help-seeking of mental health support are revealed. Through their funded project, MRCC is conducting an environmental scan and literature review of existing resources targeting mental health for migrant workers as well as consulting with local experts. Their findings will be shared through Tagalog and English information pamphlets, social media posts, and a Tagalog information session focused on mental health. The outputs of this research will help the organization to strengthen their core services on education and training, information and referral, and research and advocacy, said Tungohan.

鈥淭hese projects will contribute to our knowledge base on the Filipinx community鈥檚 experiences, and will, more importantly, support the important work that community organizations are doing. I can鈥檛 wait to learn more about the results of these various projects,鈥 Tungohan concludes.

Representatives of the recipient organizations will share their projects and research findings as part of the PSG鈥檚 research celebration symposium at 91亚色 in early December 2023.