Filipinos in the New York City metropolitan region

Filipinos in the New York City metropolitan region

Filipino name
Tagalog Mga Pilipino sa Kalakhang New York
Languages
English, Tagalog, Spanish, Philippine languages
Religion
Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism, Irreligion, Others
Related ethnic groups
Filipino American

Filipinos in the New York City metropolitan region constitute one of the fastest growing ethnicities in the New York City metropolitan area of the United States, attracted to the area's massive population and its attendant economic opportunities and cultural offerings. By 2014 Census estimates, the New York City-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-CT-PA Combined Statistical Area was home to 262,375 Filipino Americans,[1] 221,612 (84.5%) of them uniracial Filipinos.[2]

History

Early demographics

Filipinos are relatively recent arrivals to New York City, with no significant presence before the 1920s.[3] In 1927, one of the first Filipino civic organizations in New York City, the Filipino Women's Club, was founded.[4] In 1960, there were only 2,744 Filipino Americans in New York City.[5] In 1970, there were 14,279 Filipinos in New York State, 52.4% of whom were college graduates.[6] Filipinos in the New York City metropolitan area also did not enjoy the early advantage of their counterparts on the West Coast of the United States in terms of perceived geographic proximity to the Philippines by marine and air routes. Also in the 1990s, Philippine Airlines, which had provided service to Newark Liberty International Airport, discontinued this service due to financial difficulties. However, the determined Filipino American communities of the New York City metropolitan region ultimately overcame these obstacles in conjunction with the sheer number of opportunities provided by the region for Filipinos to work and thrive as a highly achieving, ambitious, and rapidly growing presence, first within the New York City region's Asian American milieu and eventually amidst its mainstream population. Filipino Americans started working in the traditional nursing and healthcare fields in the region's numerous hospitals and clinics,[7] before branching out to other professional fields.[8]

In the East Village and the Lower East Side, Manhattan, there was significant Filipino migration in the late 1980s due to mass recruitment of Filipino medical professionals to area hospitals, notably New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, St. Vincent's Hospital, and Beth Israel Medical Center. Migration was spurred by the hospitals' offer of subsidized housing to employees, in the midst of ongoing rent strikes in the neighborhood. The burgeoning Little Manila centered on 1st Avenue and 14th Street, around which there were, at the peak, a number of grocery/video rental stores and Filipino restaurants within a few blocks of one another. Filipino American community relations were strengthened by local Roman Catholic churches in the East Village and Gramercy Park areas. As rents increased, and properties were taken over by New York University, the number of Filipinos and Filipino businesses in the East Village's Little Manila waned. Elvie's Turo-Turo, the longest standing Filipino business in the area, closed in late 2009 after almost 20 years of operation. New Filipino businesses continue to sprout up.[9]

Modern demographics

All except the pink/lavender-illustrated counties compose the New York–Northern New Jersey–Long Island NY–NJ–PA Metropolitan Statistical Area, the most populous in the US:
     New York–Jersey City–White Plains, NY–NJ Metropolitan Division
     Dutchess County–Putnam County, NY Metropolitan Division
     Nassau County–Suffolk County, NY Metropolitan Division
     Newark, NJ–PA Metropolitan Division
     Remainder of the New York-Newark, NY–NJ–CT–PA Combined Statistical Area

In the 1970s and '80s, Filipinos in the New Jersey and New York metropolitan region had a higher socioeconomic status than Filipinos elsewhere, as more than half of Filipino immigrants to the metropolitan area were healthcare professionals or other highly trained professionals, in contrast to established working-class Filipino American populations elsewhere.[10] In 1990, there were 43,229 Filipinos in New York City, with the number increasing to around 50,000 in 2000.[3] The borough of Queens is home to the largest concentration of Filipinos within New York City,[3] with about 38,000 Filipinos per the 2010 Census.[11] In 2011, New York City was home to an estimated 82,313 Filipinos, representing a 7.7% increase from the estimated 77,191 in 2008, with 56%, or about 46,000, living in Queens.[12] The Filipino median household income in New York City was $81,929 in 2013, and 68% held a bachelor's degree or higher.[12]

In 2008, the New York metropolitan area was home to 215,000 Filipinos.[13] By the 2010 Census, within the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA MSA, there were 217,349 Filipino Americans,[14] with an additional 15,631 in the greater New York-Newark-Bridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA CSA.[14] As of 2011, over 150,000 Filipino-born immigrants resided in the New York City metropolitan region.[15]

In 2013, 4,098 Filipinos legally immigrated to the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA core based statistical area;[16] in 2012, this number was 4,879;[17] 4,177 in 2011;[18] 4,047 in 2010,[19] 4,400 in 2009,[20] and 5,985 in 2005.[21] These numerical values do not include the remainder of the New York-Newark-Bridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA Combined Statistical Area. Philippine Airlines has resumed service to the New York City region since March 2015, with direct, one-seat service to Manila, this time utilizing JFK International Airport as its gateway.[22]

List of Little Manilas

Little Manilas have emerged in the New York City metropolitan area, located in Woodside, Queens;[23][24] Jersey City, New Jersey;[25] and Bergenfield, New Jersey;[26] in addition to smaller Filipino American subenclaves developing throughout the metropolitan region.

Woodside, Queens

Krystal's Cafe and Johnny Air Cargo shops on Roosevelt Avenue, Woodside, Queens, New York City.
The Phil-Am grocery store in Woodside.

Woodside, Queens is known for its concentration of Filipinos.[23] Of Woodside's 85,000 residents, about 13,000 are of Filipino background, comprising 15% of Woodside's population.[27]

Filipino restaurants dominate the area, as well as several freight delivery and remittance centers scattered throughout the neighborhood.[23] Other Filipino-owned businesses including professional services (medical, dental, optical), driving schools, beauty salons, immigration services, and Filipino video rental places are present in the community.[23]

Along the IRT Flushing Line (7 train), known colloquially as the Orient Express,[28] the 69th Street station serves as the gateway to Queens' largest Little Manila. This area attracts many local Filipinos and non-Filipinos alike and from neighboring places on Long Island. The coverage of Little Manila is along Roosevelt Avenue, between 58th and 74th Streets.[23] Elsewhere in Queens, Filipinos are also concentrated in Jackson Heights and Elmhurst.[29] There are also smaller Filipino communities in Jamaica, Queens and parts of Brooklyn. The Benigno Aquino Triangle is located on Hillside Avenue in Hollis, Queens to commemorate the slain Filipino political leader and to recognize the large Filipino American population in the area.[30]

In February 2008, the Bayanihan Filipino Community Center opened its doors in Woodside, a project spearheaded by the Philippine Forum.[31] The Philippine Forum also hosts the annual Bayanihan Cultural Festival at the Hart Playground in September in commemoration of Filipino American History Month.[32]

Manhattan

The Philippine Consulate of New York has a multipurpose role aside from its governmental duties and functions, it also caters to many events of the Filipino American community and even has a school called Paaralan sa Konsulado (School at the Consulate), which teaches newer-generation Filipino Americans about their culture and language.[33] The consulate is known as the Philippine Center. The Philippine Center's large edifice is situated on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan and is open to the public on business days and closed on Philippine and American holidays. The building itself is considered as the largest foreign consulate on the strip of the avenue.[34] The Archdiocese of New York designated a chapel named after the first Filipino Saint Lorenzo Ruiz de Manila for the Filipino Apostolate. Officially designated as the "Church of Filipinos," the Chapel of San Lorenzo Ruiz in Lower Manhattan is only the third in the world and the first in the United States dedicated as such.[35]

Eastern Long Island

Long Island, with its vibrant and burgeoning Asian American populations including Chinese Americans, Indian Americans, Korean Americans, and Vietnamese Americans, now adds the relatively recent growth of Filipino Americans as well, following the overall eastward expansion from Queens into Nassau and Suffolk counties.[36][37]

Northern and Central New Jersey

Philippine Grocery in Jersey City.

Northern and Central New Jersey are home to significant overseas Filipino populations, numbering at more than 100,000 statewide, according to the 2010 U.S. Census. While Filipinos can be found across the state, the commercial districts catering to the Filipino community are found mostly in the state's urban areas. State and local governments in the Garden State have significant numbers of employees of Filipino background, and they play a vital role in the state's affairs, issues, commerce, and health care. Filipino enclaves exist in Jersey City, Bergenfield, Paterson, Passaic, Union City, Elizabeth, and most recently, Edison.[38] The Meadowlands Exposition Center in Secaucus hosts the annual Philippine Fiesta, a cultural festival that draws Filipinos and non-Filipinos alike from across the New York metropolitan area. The event takes place on the weekend of the second week of August.[38]

Bergen County, Hudson County, Middlesex County,[39] and Passaic County have developed in Northern and Central New Jersey as popular destinations for Filipino Americans. Within Bergen County, Bergenfield, along with Paramus, Hackensack,[40] New Milford, Dumont,[41] Fair Lawn, and Teaneck,[42] have become growing hubs for Filipino Americans. Taken as a whole, these municipalities are home to a significant proportion of Bergen County's Philippine population.[43][44][45][46] A census-estimated 20,859 Filipino Americans resided in Bergen County as of 2013,[47] embodying an increase from the 19,155 counted in 2010.[48] The Philippine-American Community of Bergen County (PACBC) organization is based in Paramus,[49] while other Filipino organizations are based in Fair Lawn[41][50][51] and Bergenfield.[52] Bergen County's vibrant and culturally active Filipino community repatriated significant financial assistance to victims of Typhoon Haiyan, which ravaged the Philippines in November 2013.[41] In Hudson County, Jersey City is home to the largest Filipino population in New Jersey, with over 16,000 Filipinos in 2010.[25][53] Holy Name Medical Center in Teaneck, Bergen County, launched its Filipino Medical Program in December 2015.[54]

Jersey City

Seven per cent (7%) of Jersey City's population is Filipino.[55] The Five Corners district has a thriving Filipino community, which is the largest Asian-American subgroup in the city. Newark Avenue's strip of Filipino culture and commerce is significantly large and growing. A variety of Filipino restaurants, shippers and freighters, doctors' officers, bakeries, stores, and even an office of The Filipino Channel made Newark Avenue their home. The largest Filipino owned grocery store on the east coast Phil-Am Food has been there since 1973. An array of Filipino-owned businesses can also be found in Jersey City's West Side section, where many of its residents are of Filipino descent. In 2006, a Red Ribbon pastry shop opened its first branch on the East Coast in the Garden State.[56] Manila Avenue in Downtown Jersey City was named for the Philippine city because of the many Filipinos who built their homes on this street during the 1970s. A memorial, dedicated to the Filipino American veterans of the Vietnam War, was built in a small square on Manila Avenue. A park and statue dedicated to Jose P. Rizal, the national hero of the Philippines, exists in downtown Jersey City.[57] Jersey City is the host of the annual Philippine-American Friendship Day Parade, an event that occurs yearly in June, on its last Sunday. The City Hall of Jersey City raises the Philippine flag in correlation to this event and as a tribute to the contributions of the Filipino community. The Santakrusan Procession along Manila Avenue has taken place since 1977.[58]

In 2011, Rolando Lavarro, Jr., became the first Filipino American to win an elective position in Jersey City as city council member, and in 2013, Lavarro became the first Filipino American council president of Jersey City. Several Filipinos have been appointed to various Jersey City municipal posts and commissions.[59]

Bergenfield

Bergenfield is informally known as the Little Manila of Bergen County, with a significant concentration of Filipino residents and businesses. Between 2000 and 2010, the Filipino-American population of Bergenfield grew from 11.7 percent, or 3,081 residents, to 17.1 percent, or 4,569.[60] In 2014, Filipino-born attorney Arvin Amatorio was elected a borough councilman;[60] while in the late 1990s, Bergenfield had become the first municipality on the East Coast of the United States to elect a Filipino mayor, Robert C. Rivas.[61] Also in Bergen County, Jonathan Wong was elected city councilman in Mahwah in November 2014.[59] The annual Filipino American Festival is held in Bergenfield.[62]

Edison

Edison, in Middlesex County, New Jersey, has emerged as a growing hub for Filipinos since 2000.[38] A significant number of Filipinos in Middlesex County work in the burgeoning healthcare and other life-science disciplines at Central Jersey's numerous medical and pharmaceutical institutions.

Culture

Philippine Independence Day Parade

Young Filipino Americans dressed as Katipuneros at the Philippine Independence Day Parade in Midtown Manhattan.

The annual Philippine Independence Day Parade is traditionally held on the first Sunday of June on Madison Avenue in Manhattan.[3] The parade is said to be one of the largest parades of any kind in the city and the largest Philippine celebration in the United States. This celebration is a combination of a parade and a street fair. Madison Avenue is replete on this day with Filipino culture, colors, and people and is attended by many significant political figures, entertainers, civic groups, etc. Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Senator Charles Schumer are devout attendees of this annual parade.

A smaller annual Philippine Independence Day parade is held in early June in Passaic, New Jersey.[63]

Philippine-American Friendship Day Parade

The annual Philippine-American Friendship Day Parade is held in Jersey City every fourth Sunday of June.[64][65]

Arts, entertainment, and media

In 2013, so many Filipino films screened across New York City as a part of the New York Asian Film Festival that, according to the Philippine Inquirer, "it could very well have been called the New York Filipino Film Festival".[66]

In 2014, Here Lies Love, a bio-musical play about the personal and political dynamics between former Philippine first couple Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos, opened off-Broadway. The majority of the cast members were of Filipino descent,[67] and the play was set in a discotheque.[68]

Food and culinary

The growth in the New York City metropolitan region's Filipino populace has been accompanied by growth in the number of Filipino restaurants,[24] with the accessibility of Filipino-Chinese specialties such as siopao joining traditional Philippine cuisine, including inihaw na liempo and kare kare, snacks such as pandesal, and desserts including ensaïmada, purple ube cakes, halo-halo, and mango cake rolls.[23][24] Turo Turo-style buffet dining has become readily available.[25] Beginning in the mid-2010s, Filipino cuisine began to take on a more prominent place in the New York metro as well as Washington metro areas.[69]

Water purity and availability

Water purity and availability are a lifeline for the economy of the Little Manilas in the New York City metropolitan region. New York City is supplied with drinking water by the protected Catskill Mountains watershed.[70] As a result of the watershed's integrity and undisturbed natural water filtration system, New York is one of only four major cities in the United States the majority of whose drinking water is pure enough not to require purification by water treatment plants.[71] The Croton Watershed north of the city is undergoing construction of a US$3.2 billion water purification plant to augment New York City's water supply by an estimated 290 million gallons daily, representing a greater than 20% addition to the city's current availability of water.[72] The ongoing expansion of New York City Water Tunnel No. 3, an integral part of the New York City water supply system, is the largest capital construction project in the city's history,[73] with segments serving Manhattan and The Bronx completed, and with segments serving Brooklyn and Queens planned for construction in 2020.[74] Much of northern and central New Jersey is provided by reservoirs to provide fresh water, but numerous municipal wells exist which accomplish the same purpose.

Languages

Filipinos in New York and New Jersey, as in the United States as a whole, are highly fluent in English. However, in the largest Little Manilas in the area, including Woodside, Jersey City, and Bergenfield, Tagalog signage is commonplace.

Notable NYC-area Filipinos

Vanessa Lachey (née Minnillo)
Geena Rocero takes the stage in New York City to come out as transgender on International Transgender Day of Visibility, March 2014.

Author

Education

Health

Media

Politics and diplomacy

Religious

Sports

Theater and arts

See also

References

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