Showing posts with label #MultiCulturalHelpingHouseSociety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #MultiCulturalHelpingHouseSociety. Show all posts

Thursday, August 2, 2018

My friends in Vancouver are still feuding

“If we open a quarrel between past and present, we shall find that we have lost the future.”
-- Winston Churchill

By Alex P. Vidal

NEW YORK CITY
-- I only learned over the weekend that Tomas “Tatay Tom” Avendano, Sr., 89, was reelected as president of the Vancouver-based Multicultural Helping House Society (MHHS) in an election held on July 28, 2018 described by our media colleagues in Surrey and Vancouver as “tumultuous and chaotic”. 
HAPPIER MOMENT. (L-R) Vice President Amado Mercado Jr., President and CEO Tomas "Tatay Tom" Avendano Sr., Alex P. Vidal
MHHS is the umbrella organization of all Filipino-Canadian associations in British Columbia.
I also learned that some of the characters I personally know who used to support Tatay Tom were among those who tried but failed to dethrone him.
Tatay Tom has been president and CEO of MHHS uninterrupted for 22 years.
He has described MHHS as his “twin” saying he would only relinquish the leadership in that office if he is dead.
Many of his friends and former MHHS buddies have turned their backs on him and openly lashed at his brand of leadership for a myriad of reasons.
Their disenchantment growing, some of them had plotted to oust him but through a legitimate proceeding, and their only chance was during the election on July 28.
There were a total of 322 voters.
There was no accurate report how many showed up and how many were able to cast their votes, but Tatay Tom reportedly got a “landslide” victory.
Tatay Tom’s tormentors reportedly protested the “fraud” that attended the election to no avail.

-o0o-

When I left Vancouver sometime in November 2012, I noticed that Tatay Tom’s imposing leadership in the MHHS was suffering from unwarranted cracks and starting to crumble.
So many personalities with different motives and valid advocacy were eyeing his throne; and they wanted him to yield the coveted positions and pave the way for other fresh faces to also lead and govern the beefy MHHS, a recipient of municipal, city and federal government funds that run to millions of Canadian dollars.
Tatay Tom, a Pasay City councilor for 12 years before he migrated to Canada in 1982, was unfazed. He refused to blink.
One of the first and biggest casualties in the MHHS power play when I was there was Vice President Amado Mercado Jr., an engineer from Minalin, Pampanga, who was fired by the MHHS board in a turbulent meeting I exclusively covered for the Philippine News Service (PNS), Global Balita, and my blogs:
1.https://alexpvidal.wordpress.com/2012/02/28/exclusive-amado-mercado-is-clean/
2.https://alexpvidal.wordpress.com/2012/02/22/crisis-in-mhhs-ousted-vice-president-i-will-consult-my-lawyer/
3.https://alexpvidal.wordpress.com/2012/03/10/mhhs-vice-president-what-shout/
Tears, word war, name-calling, charges of betrayal, shaming and emotional confrontation marred Mercado’s ouster who fought tongs and hammer trying to redeem his “sullied” reputation.
Mercado blamed Tatay Tom, his long-time buddy, who convinced him to attend the last board meeting he was present “only to be fed to the lions.”

-o0o-



I learned also that some of those who prepared the “surprise” near-midnight farewell or dispededa party for this writer in a Surrey pizza house in November 2012 were among those who had collaborated but failed to topple Tatay Tom in the recent election.
They may have legitimate reasons to oppose the grand old man of the Filipino-Canadian community in the British Columbia whom they accused of nepotism and suspected of trying to control and transform the MHHS into his fiefdom, among other issues.
Or they envy his power and authority as MHHS big boss?
MHHS assists newly arrived Filipino caregivers and displaced OFWs who can avail of board and lodging in the center for several days.

-o0o-

Filipino-Canadian friends had valid reasons to introduce me to Tatay Tom in one of my frequent trips there in 2008: Tatay Tom wanted to maintain a regular column in the Philippine Asian News Today published by our friend, Reynaldo “Rey” Fortaleza, who recommended me to “ghost write” for Tatay Tom for a modest sideline.
Without these friends, I wouldn’t be able to break bread and, for a while, earn the trust and confidence of the legendary community leader, who, at 89, is still in a fighting form and prepared to tackle all comers.
I learned that Tatay Tom “resented” the expose I made about the apparent lack of transparency in the construction of the MHHS annex building.
The City of Vancouver and the Federal Government of Canada reportedly chipped in $500,000 apiece for the entire MHHS building.
“Where’s the blue print of the project?” I inquired in an exclusive interview. “Where are the job orders?”
If Tatay Tom was slighted, I had no idea because I hadn’t talked to him until I left for Los Angeles.
I had no regrets with the expose I made.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

'Ayaw kong magka watak watak tayo'

By Alex P. Vidal

VANCOUVER, British Columbia
-- For Tomas "Tatay Tom" Avendano, president and CEO of the Multicultural Helping House Society (MHHS) here, designating specific places for ethnic groups in Canada "is tantamount to creating an atmosphere of division."
AVENDANO and the AUTHOR

This was Avendano's reaction to a proposal to create a "Pinoy Town" located on a stretch of Fraser Street between Kingsway and 33rd Avenue.
"Ayaw kong magka watak watak tayo (I don't want our group to scatter). As Filipino-Canadians, we have already assimilated with other ethnic communities and we are all Canadians," Avendano told this writer.
Avendano's stand was reechoed by Nemesio "Nemy" Cepeda, longest serving former president of the Filipino Zodiac Circle of British Columbia.
"We have already started so many projects and most of them have not been completed yet," Cepeda, 68, sobbed. "We should focus on one project first so that we can maximize our resources before undertaking another project."


LEADERS


Cepeda lamented that past and present Fil-Can community leaders "have failed to erect the Filipino Community Center which should have been given priority to serve as bastion of the Filipino-Canadians' solidarity and identity."
"We always have the temerity to start something and not finishing it," bemoaned Cepeda. "It seems that some of our leaders have mental dishonesty and ulterior motives the reason why we can't complete one major project except the MHHS."
MMHS was built "to help newcomers succeed in Canada...moving Canada forward, one immigrant at a time."
Cepeda suggested that in order to finish one project, members of the Filipino-Canadian community "must do it ala Bayanihan style and set aside personal interests."


ATTENTION



"Let's work together, focus our attention on one project so that our resources will not be divided and wasted," he suggested.
The proposed "Pinoy Town" rekindled the debate after 24 Hours, one of Canada's biggest daily tabloids with circulation in Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Montreal, and Vancouver, devoted a spreadsheet feature story about the project on January 4.
"Petitions for a city-designated Pinoy Town--located on a stretch of Fraser Street between Kingsway and 33rd Avenue--have been going out since October. The movement comes after city council passed a motion last fall designating Kingsway area between Fraser and Nanaimo Streets as 'Little Saigon' neighbourhood," 24 Hours reported.
"But Little Saigon supporters made the misstep of not consulting with the entire community before submitting a 3,000-signature petition to city council, said RJ Aquino, a COPE candidate in the last municipal elections who declared in favour of Pinoy Town. That omission angered many locals.


CONSULTATION



"City-funded public consultation on the Vietnamese neighbourhood is scheduled for the start of 2012. Councilor Kerry Jang, who put forward the Little Saigon motion, said he supports efforts to celebrate Vancouver’s diversity, but adds it’s important for organizers to talk to both businesses and residents before approaching the city."
The report also quoted 83-year-old Avendano as saying, "I think while we are here, we shouldn’t live as separate Filipino or Vietnamese (communities). This is Canada; therefore we should strive to be integrated and assimilate to Canadian culture.”
Avendano said "giving neighbourhoods official ethnic designations could hamper integration of new immigrants and wouldn’t necessarily boost cultural recognition or improve business."