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    Home » We have to write our history as Filipinos
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    We have to write our history as Filipinos

    Dr. Cris LibanBy Dr. Cris LibanJune 24, 20254 Mins Read
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    In a previous article, I wrote about how Filipinos abroad are evolving from workers to leaders. Here, I offer a broader reflection on what it means to shape our history—through identity, systems, and the collective power of the Filipino diaspora.

    A global people with deep roots

    From New York subway platforms to co-working spaces in Singapore, from California hospitals to Dubai classrooms—Filipinos are there. Quietly capable, deeply loyal, grounded in pamilya, faith, and service. We’re known for hard work and adaptability. But beyond those traits lies something more enduring: a people ready not just to contribute, but to lead—and to shape our future in our own voice.

    More than 10 million Filipinos live and work abroad, spread across over 100 countries and territories, according to the Commission on Filipinos Overseas. In 2023, overseas Filipinos sent home $36.1 billion—nearly 9% of the Philippines’ GDP. These remittances support families and fuel communities—but they also represent something deeper: the transfer of trust, talent, and transformative value to the world.

    We are sending more than just remittances. We are sending ideas. Solutions. Strategies. What we call diskarte—that Filipino blend of creativity, resourcefulness, and resilience. These are not stories of struggle. These are stories of contribution, leadership, and systems-level impact.

    Knowing where we came from helps us build what’s next

    Before 1521, long before colonization, our ancestors governed coastal barangays, traded across seas, and practiced sustainable lifeways. They built terraces that captured water and knowledge systems that preserved balance. These weren’t primitive societies—they were adaptive, ecological, and interdependent.

    We recall this not to dwell on the past but to build with awareness. Today’s Filipino engineers, educators, community organizers, and entrepreneurs benefit from this heritage. In an age of global systems disruption—from climate to inequality—knowing that our people once lived in harmony with their surroundings gives us both context and strategy.

    Across the diaspora, young Filipinos are rediscovering this grounding—not to resist modernity, but to lead it more wisely.

    More than resilient—we build and regenerate

    We’ve long been described as resilient. But we must now be seen as regenerative. We don’t just bounce back—we build forward.

    From sari-sari stores digitized through mobile payments to climate-resilient community hubs in Visayas, Filipinos are designing with intent. We are caregivers, systems engineers, farmers, coders—and increasingly, social innovators. Many of us didn’t have access to seed rounds or incubators—we had diskarte, peer mentorship, and grit. And we still launched.

    At PhilDev, we see this every day. Diaspora professionals link arms with local leaders, returning not just to give, but to co-build. Through our work in STEM education, entrepreneurship, and inclusive innovation, we’re creating the space for Filipinos—especially the next generation—to become architects of long-term, systems-level progress.

    The diaspora is a bridge for systems change

    The Filipino diaspora is not just a network of people. It is a living infrastructure of possibility.

    Overseas Filipinos contribute far beyond remittances. They mobilize knowledge, mentor young professionals, fund climate-resilient schools, and support innovation hubs—from Northern Luzon to Southern Mindanao. They act as cultural diplomats, economic drivers, and civic connectors. And they do this while respecting the laws, values, and institutions of their host countries—contributing legally, working skillfully, and becoming trusted community members.

    This is bayanihan at global scale: decentralized, values-driven, and quietly transformational.

    Telling our story, structuring our future

    If we don’t write our own story, we risk having it reduced—or forgotten. And if we don’t structure our future, someone else will.

    The Filipino story has often been framed through sacrifice. But we are more than what we endure—we are what we design, sustain, and grow. From classrooms to software development, from clean energy to call centers, Filipinos don’t just show up. We improve systems.

    To the OFW mentoring a junior teammate after work… to the teacher blending local materials with digital learning tools… to the parent funding solar microgrids in their hometown—you are part of our evolving story.

    Let’s tell it clearly. Let’s build it wisely. Let’s show the world that Filipino leadership is not just compassionate—it’s strategic. Not just global—but deeply rooted.

    Because the best of the Filipino is not behind us. It’s what we build next.

    And this time, the story—and the system—will carry our name.

    *****

    Dr. Cris B. Liban is a social entrepreneur, an environmental and systems thinker, and Chair of the Philippine Development Foundation (PhilDev)-USA. He works across sectors to strengthen diaspora engagement, sustainability, and inclusive innovation.

    bayanihan diaspora impact Filipino diaspora Filipino identity Filipino resilience inclusive development OFW leadership phildev Philippine innovation systems change
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    Dr. Cris Liban

    Dr. Cris B. Liban is a Filipino based in Los Angeles, California. He serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Philippine Development Foundation, where he helps open doors for young Filipinos through education, innovation, and entrepreneurship. He works as the Chief Sustainability Officer for the public transit agency that serves Los Angeles County — one of the world’s biggest economies. Over the years, he has led volunteer efforts around the world focused on clean energy, climate resilience, and protecting the environment. At the heart of it all is his belief that wherever Filipinos are, we have the power to lift each other — and our country — forward.

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