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Ugnayan ng Kabataang Pilipino sa Canada/Filipino-Canadian Youth Alliance
 for more photos of the event click here
'Cultural Storm' Thundered Vancouver's Western Front with Festive
Militancy and Political Re-affirmation
May 25, 2005
VANCOUVER, B.C. – The Filipino-Canadian Youth Alliance/Uganayan ng
Kabataang Pilipino sa Canada’s (FCYA/UKPC) annual Roots Rhymes and Resistance (RRR) cultural night thundered East-Van’s Western Front Artist-Run Centre this past weekend with festive militancy and political re-affirmation.
Under the theme, Ipagpatuloy: Living the Storm, FCYA/UKPC, with a
packed room of 150 guests, celebrated the Filipino people’s tradition of
resistance through spoken word, hip hop, music, song and dance. Images of
Filipino youth and student activism past and present, in the Philippines and in
Canada flickered throughout the evening. The night also highlighted
FCYA/UKPC’s tenth anniversary year, a landmark achievement considering
it has operated for the last decade without core funding.
“This was certainly our best show yet, drawing the biggest audience,”
shares Carlo Sayo, the evening’s co-emcee and a founding member of FCYA/UKPC. “What started out as a little coffee-shop show has become a cultural
staple in our community and a standout event within the Asian Heritage Month
Society’s program,” said Sayo.
RRR featured up and coming Filipino youth artists such as violinist/vocalist
Lara Maestro, hip hop wonders Audikalz and OPC, recording artists such
as R&B singer Warren Flandez and violinist virtuoso, Kytami. The
evening’sline-up included individual performances from members of FCYA/UKPC as well as a finale performance by FCYA/UKPC Alumni members.
“The Alumni finale was definitely one of the highlights of the
evening,” explains co-emcee, Niki Silva. “Since this is FCYA’s tenth anniversary
year, it was important to demonstrate our organization’s history, to
have the elements of the past, present and future,” said Silva.
May Farrales, an FCYA/UKPC Alumni member, introduced their number as a
tribute to the martyred Filipino youth and student activists in the Philippines and to the present and next generation of budding activists.
“As alumni members of FCYA,/UKPC we learned through our work as former
youth and student activists that the struggle of youth and students is not
separated from the overall struggle of the community. We have moved on
to other organizations such as the Philippine Women Centre, the Filipino
Nurses Support Group, SIKLAB and the BC Committee for Human Rights in the
Philippines which is an example of the social commitment we have
developed and internalized through out time with FCYA/UKPC,” said Farrales.
“Our theme this year looks back at the First Quarter Storm of 1970 in
the Philippines,” explains Sayo. “35 years ago, Filipino youth and
students took to the streets to protest against US Foreign Policy in the Philippines,to denounce the Vietnam War and to further work towards realizing
genuine independence in the Philippines. As youth today, it we have to
continue the spirit of the ‘storm’, wherever we are located,” said Sayo.
RRR was organized in 1999 as part of FCYA/UKPC’s Philippine-American
War Campaign. It gathered the dynamic cultural talent Filipino youth and
students across the Lower Mainland whose work focused on the collective
experience and underdevelopment of the Filipino community.
Since 1995, FCYA/UKPC has been educating, organizing and mobilizing
Filipino youth around the issues of systemic racism, access to education, gender
oppression, economic underdevelopment and decolonization.
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For Photos of RRR, click here
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