Monday, 6 October 2025

New Consul General: Filipinos in Toronto Are 'Very Welcoming'

Volume 7, Issue No. 18
OPINION/COMMENTARY
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /

. . . . . A community service of The Filipino Web Channel (TheFilipinoWebChannel@gmail. com) and the Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.comfor the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . . . 

Our latest as of Monday, October 6, 2025 

~ Consul General Kristine Leilani R. Salle, the ambassador recently appointed to head the Philippine Consulate in Toronto, finds the Filipino community here "very welcoming" and the big turnout at her Meet & Greet "heartwarming." During an hour-long dialogue, folks dish out problems, mostly personal, which she attributes to inadequacy of information. The event was one infrequent chance for selfies and photo ops for all, and a blessing for some with questionable motives in being photographed with her. 

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AMBASSADOR KRISTINE LEILANI R. SALLE
New Congen Debuts at 'Meet & Greet' 
with Toronto's Filipino Community



By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ 
Editor, The Filipino Web Channel



A confident woman wears a smile and has this air of comfortability and pleasantness about her.” ― Agu Jaachynma N.E.



TORONTO - The questions came pouring in, the kind that can be described as sublime and ridiculous, from among the dozens of Filipinos out to get a sense of what's in store for them now that a seasoned diplomat is taking the reins of the Philippine Consulate.

Fresh from her ambassadorship in the United Nations, Consul General Kristine Leilani R. Salle is, in a manner of speaking, the new sheriff in town whose constituency in the provinces of Ontario and Manitoba consists of nearly half the estimated one million Filipinos in Canada.

The evening of Thursday, Oct. 2, was her public debut in the Filipino community notable for its socials, picnics, lavish parties, cash cows such as beauty pageants, street festivals, fashion shows, concerts, entertainment spectacles and the like. 

Related videos:

That same community is where one finds a proliferation of alleged not-for-profit orgs and foundations, fake heroes, scammers, liars, thieves, so-called role models, social media trolls, leaders in pictures only, praise (not press) media, and "editors" who suppress news unflattering to their friends.

With 25 years of experience as a diplomat under her belt, it's reasonable to assume that Congen Salle must have encountered some of them some place else. If not, she's in for a surprise. 

Selfies with them, like the ones we witnessed at her Meet & Greet (M&G), are potential credentials validating themselves as being close to persons of authority, or chummy with top officials, which then translates to access to solicit personal or business favours.

In the Filipino community, proximity to important people, or the illusion of it, is like a license to peddle one's self-importance. In fact, some folks jostle for berths or choice seats closest to the very important person, especially during photo sessions memorializing the moment.

At the M&G, at least one good-for-nothing publicity hound known for his relentless pursuit of the limelight sought to ingratiate himself by asking Congen Salle her favourite food. Hearing that, I was almost tempted to ask: what's your favourite colour, ma'm? just to spite him.

It's a come-on, clearly an attempt to gain acceptance, especially when he explained he and his purported organizations (which one?) would be prepared to serve her food preference when the time comes to host her.

But the diplomat in her surfaced as she deftly handled the solicitous offer, and answered with a toothsome smile. The exchange evoked a little laughter and raised some eyebrows particularly because most people there knew his usual gimmicks.

This person has a rich history of inserting himself when he sees an opportunity to be physically close to public officials being interviewed or photographed - for no reason at all - than to be seen shoulder to shoulder with them. He's also a crook.

At the beginning of the question-and-answer session, a camera-carrying person who looked old enough to be her father asked if she was single (she replied promptly that she's married). The question was quite jolting for some who wondered if he was being mischievous, ignorant, or smitten by her good looks.

He may have momentarily lost his composure. Just minutes before M&G opened for questions, everybody hesitated until the guy grabbed the microphone and queried Congen Salle about her marital status. Though clownish and flirtatious, he somewhat broke the ice.

Whatever his mindset was, or his intention was, really didn't matter. Questions like his, in my opinion as a journalist, are best left in the privacy of a one-on-one interview. The guy, unprepared and disrespectful, put her on the spot. If he were writing a story, would he headline it "Consul General Is Not Single"? It's ridiculous.

If he had done his due diligence, he would have found that Congen Salle does not advertise her family nor her personal information. That's what I learned from googling her for background. And that, I believe, is for reasons of security. 


The real, meaningful question came from Kathleen Mae Ranjo, a registered nurse and vice president of the Integrated Filipino Canadian Nurses Association (IFCNA). (
Related video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvD2y3tanLY)

She prefaced her query with a declaration: "Filipinos are the largest exporter of nurses. Basically, we take care of the world. But who will take care of us?"

Rhetorical or not, the question struck me. Her statement underlines the problems health care workers are facing in Canada.

Other questions were mostly personal which Congen Salle attributed to a lack of information and a misunderstanding of the procedures involved in documentation.

"Actually, many of them, it's just that they don't know the process . . . that's why we're very active and increasing our consular outreach mission for us to reach more Filipinos. Obviously many of them lack information," she explained. (Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved).

Wednesday, 1 October 2025

Garcia Couple Jailed for 'Leftist Activities,' Not for Being Critics

Volume 7, Issue No. 17
OPINION/COMMENTARY
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /

. . . . . A community service of The Filipino Web Channel (TheFilipinoWebChannel@gmail. com) and the Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.comfor the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . . . 

Our latest as of Wednesday, October 1, 2025 

~ A local writer has affirmed in an article that the co-editors of the left-leaning The Philippine Reporter, namely Hermie Garcia and Mila A. Garcia, were imprisoned for "leftist activities" and not for "criticizing" the (Ferdinand E.) Marcos dictatorship as what the National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada (NEPMCC) claims, after which it recognized them with "certificates of awards." A complaint by former staff writer Michelle Chermaine Ramos against the Garcia couple for their lies and deceptive practices remains unacted. 

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WRITER RODEL J. RAMOS SAYS:
Hermie and Mila A. Garcia Landed
in Prison for Their 'Leftist Activities' 



By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ 
Editor, The Filipino Web Channel


"Beware the demon of pomposity." - Katharine Graham


TORONTO - Tabloid writer Rodel J. Ramos begins his narrative with a swipe at the unidentified journalist in this wise: "A writer made fun of the Philippine Press Club Ontario (PPC-O) calling it Philippine 'Praise' Club Ontario. He believes it is only a social club. We do not blame him. He was new in Toronto then . . . "

The mild rebuke was obviously directed at me, understandably so since nobody else had referred to that association in such a mocking manner. Though he did not identify me by name, his portrayal of "a writer" making fun of PPCO obviously fits me. Frankly, I don't take offense.

But it's not what Rodel wrote about PPCO that has aroused my interest while reading his lengthy piece titled "How the Media Influenced the Toronto Community - Chapter 1" in the September 2025 issue of Atin Ito newspaper. (https://online.fliphtml5.com/ufflc/mbvl/#p=32).

On page 33, top of the fourth column, he stated: " . . . Hermie (Garcia) was imprisoned for 6 years by (Ferdinand E.) Marcos and Mila Garcia for 10 years for their leftist activities against the Marcos Government."

The operative phrase "leftist activities" stands out. For one, it negates published claims that the Garcia couple were imprisoned for their writings supposedly critical of the martial law regime in the 1970's in the Philippines.

For another, it belies the lies amplified by the National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada (NEPMCC) which honoured them with "certificates of awards" during its "Freedom of the Press Celebrations" in May 2023 at Toronto City Hall.


That's the whole point of this essay - to call attention to a misunderstanding by NEPMCC officials of the real role Hermie Garcia and Mila Garcia played in Philippine politics that led to their imprisonment.

I must thank Rodel for affirming what several journalists had written about the couple - that they're not what the NEPMCC had been led to believe. Honest, ethical individuals would have corrected the egregious lies about them.

According to Thomas Saras, NEPMCC president"Hermie Garcia spent 12 years in jail under Marcos for criticizing the Marcos dictatorship and his wife Mila also for a number of years for criticizing the dictatorship of Marcos." 

That's awfully wrong. Regardless of the number of years in prison (Rodel says six for Hermie and 10 for Mila; writer Jennilee Austria claims six-and-a-half years for Hermie; Saras declares 12 for Hermie; and Hermie maintains "a month and a half"), the fact is indisputable that their incarceration was for subversion.

Hermie Garcia himself admitted that he and Mila Garcia were "arrested and charged by the Marcos military with rebellion" in 1974. They fled to Canada after their release and started the left-leaning and now defunct (?) The Philippine Reporter (TPR) tabloid.

I have taken issue with Saras' characterization for the reason that journalism or being a critic of Marcos had nothing to do with their imprisonment. The NEPMCC practically made heroes of the Garcias in the eyes of the hundreds of members of Canada's ethnic press.


Months before the NEPMCC recognition in May 2023, artist and journalist Michelle Chermaine Ramos (no relation to Rodel Ramos) was already indignant at what was happening with her salary as a reporter for the federal government-funded Local Journalism Initiative (LJI), which NEPMCC is implementing through its members, among them TPR.

LJI is one of two (the other is the Canada Periodical Fund) budget commitments launched by Canadian Heritage in 2022 to support local journalism in underserved communities with an investment of $40 million over three years starting 2022-23. 

For the same period, an additional $10 million was allocated for LJI alone. TPR became beneficiaries of both the Canada Periodical Fund (CPF) to the tune of $32,038 in 2021, and the LJI for an undisclosed amount.



Before it even began in 2023, the Garcias and their TPR had already received the grant money in one lump sum from Canadian Heritage to compensate participants in LJI, in this case Ms. Ramos and another writer based in Edmonton, Alberta.

But lo and behold, their salaries never reached them on time! Hermie Garcia and Mila Garcia came up with false pretenses, such as a grant guy withholding payment pending submission of certain requirements, and that money, if ever it came, came in trickles. It's all fiction.

Why the Garcias lied to their staff writers, to Canadian Heritage, and to NEPMCC was never explained. The fraud had succeeded for months until Ms. Ramos, already fed up for working and not paid, sought answers from NEPMCC managing director Maria Saras Voutsinas.

That's when she learned she and the Edmonton writer were being lied to and deceived by the Garcias. Ms. Ramos filed a complaint with Canadian Heritage and NEPMCC detailing how she was gypped.

Their acts, Ms. Voutsinas told Ms. Ramos, were "technically criminal". And yet, the NEPMCC of which she is part, bestowed "certificates of awards" to the couple and therefore paid no attention to the Garcias' fraudulent conduct.

Hopefully, Rodel Ramos' assertion, the latest in years, about Hermie and Mila Garcia would open the eyes of NEPMCC and reconsider what it did for them. False heroes abound in the community and NEPMCC should not lend itself to propagating them. (Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved).

Monday, 22 September 2025

50 Years Past, Mon Torralba's Music Continues to Charm

Volume 7, Issue No. 16
OPINION/COMMENTARY
/ News That Fears None, Views That Favor Nobody /

. . . . . A community service of The Filipino Web Channel (TheFilipinoWebChannel@gmail. com) and the Philippine Village Voice (PhilVoiceNews@gmail.comfor the information and understanding of Filipinos and the diverse communities in North America . . . . 

Our latest as of Monday, September 22, 2025 

There's no slowing down for this heartthrob of generations. His landmark music remains entrenched in our hearts, withstanding the test of time, freezing instant affection for someone we fell for from a distance - our unrequited "Pers Lab." That that song endures is testament to the universal message its composer, Ramon "Mon" Torralba, propagates through the last five decades.

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RAMON 'MON' TORRALBA
There's No Stopping This Musician
Who Takes Us to a Joyous Swoon 


By ROMEO P. MARQUEZ 
Editor, The Filipino Web Channel


"A great song should lift your heart, warm the soul and make you feel good." - Colbie Caillat


TORONTO - Remember. Reminisce. Relive. Rejoice.

Those euphoric and sometimes dark moments in our youth are sure to come up again in one setting when the low-key heartthrob of generations past reclaims his star in the global firmament.

Luck smiles on us for having in our midst a composer, lyricist, musician, and musical director who goes by endearing nicknames Mon, Ramoncito, and "Pers Lab" - the latter both a charm and recognition of universal love his composition champions.

The community celebrates Ramon Torralba, a long time Toronto resident, who shot to fame for the romantic and engaging songs he wrote for and collaborated with the Hotdog band, notably "Pers Lab" whose lyrics vocalize unspoken affection for someone seen for the first time yet unmet.

Try to imagine feeling like ice cream melting under the sun while your heart peeks out of your chest every time one sees the person of one's yearning passes by? That's how poetic it is. 

Perhaps the strength of that song lies in its ability to relate to the first flaunting of raw emotions - first love or adolescent love, Pers Lab in Torralba's figurative language - which manifests, according to Filipino folklore, in pimples in the face and blamed on unmeasured inspirations.

One other person who gave flesh to the song is Ella del Rosario, the colegiala of yesteryears who graduated magna cum laude from the all-girls Maryknoll College, 
and the original songstress with the alluring voice that menfolk find seductive. She popularized the song in 1974 and became the band's first mega-platinum hit.

She's a multi-awarded Filipina-Spanish-American singer and popular celebrity, known as the "Manila Sound Queen," “Samba Queen” and "Disco Queen." After launching a solo career, she achieved rapid success with mega-platinum solos "O Lumapit Ka" and "Mr. Disco." 

According to Mon, Pers Lab, his first-ever composition, was “pressure-cooked.” He recalls the night he worked on the song. Hotdog band members were quartered in a house in Makati where the group practiced and chilled. 

Coming off his school studies at De La Salle University in Manila, Mon arrived at the house that late afternoon and was told of a scheduled recording at 8 the next morning. The problem was, there was no song to record.

When Mon and Ella teamed up, they were both on the cusp of adulthood 50 years ago. No one except them knew about the song from the time it was composed to the time it was recorded in the mid 1970's, notwithstanding earlier claims to the contrary.

When it came out, nobody knew "Pers "Lab" would be some sort of trigger that would revolutionize the Philippine music industry. In fact, it kicked off a cultural reawakening from old-fashioned harana and kundiman that generations prior to the boomer generation had been used to.

The song would actually spawn a surge in Filipino music, giving birth, first, to Manila Sound, and later, to what we now aptly know as the Original Pilipino Music (OPM). 

In that sense, it's not an exaggeration to consider Torralba and Del Rosario the early pioneers of OPM even as their band, Hotdog, also had a significant role in expanding it with their songs.

This bit of history, and more, will play out in real time at an evening concert on Saturday, November 22 at Toronto Pavilion at 190 Railside Rd., North York, Ontario. Tickets are priced at $55.

Titled "When Legends Reunite . . . Manila Sound Comes Home," it reconnects Torralba with Del Rosario in the first ever get-together of two music icons.

Also featured are the all-star band of Nato Buzon (bass), Vin Velarde (drums), and Daniel Yap (keyboards). Special guest artists include four members of The Vocal Groove Collective (Rodney Ronquillo, Chyrell Ronquillo, Pabs Quiogue and Bevs Saraza), plus Alyssa Grace, Tess Panaligan, Rhett Dela Cruz, and Pitch Perfect Academy.

For those interested in the lyrics of Pers Lab, here they are:

[Verse 1]
Tuwing kita'y nakikita, ako'y natutunaw
Parang ice cream na bilad sa ilalim ng araw
Ano ba naman ang sikreto mo at 'di ka maalis sa isip ko?
Ano bang gayuma ang gamit mo at masyado akong patay sa'yo?

[Bridge]
'Di na makatulog, 'di pa makakain
Taghiyawat sa ilong, pati na sa pisngi
Sa kaiisip sa'yo, taghiyawat dumadami

[Verse 2]
Tuwing kita'y nakikita, ako'y natutunaw
Tuwing daan sa harap mo, puso ko'y dumudungaw

[Outro]
Kailan ba kita makikilala?
Sana'y malapit na
Malapit na

By the way, I once asked Mon Torralba if he has finally met the person that caused his heart to gape and almost jump out of his chest. His answer: soon, hopefully, soon. Well, it's been 50 years Mon! (Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved).