Fil-Am legal defense group honors ‘Trailblazers’ awardees

Faldef Board Member and NAACP LDF Controller Lito Pernia, with NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund Director Counsel Sherrilyn Ifill and Faldef President JT Mallonga, during the first Trailblazers Defend, Serve and Educate awards night held on Oct. 26 in Newark, New Jersey. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

NEWARK, New Jersery—The Filipino American Legal Defense Fund (Faldef) honored several legal and community advocates during the first “Trailblazers” awards gala on Oct. 26 in Newark, New Jersey.

Faldef, whose motto is “Defend, Serve and Educate,” is modeled after the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), United States’ largest civil rights organization.

Balancing litigation, advocacy and educational outreach, Faldef offers free legal clinic and immigration assistance on issues including labor, human trafficking, death penalty cases and violence against women.

Past president and director counsel of NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund Sherrilyn Ifill addressed the Filipino-American community, citing the important role of its grassroots members in diagnosing the health of American democracy. She also gave tribute to the black leaders who founded the NAACP on the basis of the mission to defend people of color.

Faldef officers and Philippine Consul General of New York Mario de Leon Jr. presented the following organizations and individual honorees:

— NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and Sanford Rubenstein Esq, for Defense;

— Texas Regional Public Defenders Office for Capital Crimes and Johanna Hester, for Service;

— New Jersey State Nurses Association and Seaton Hall University President Gabriel Esteban, for Education; and

— Dr. Rebecca Rivera, for the President’s Circle Award.

Families of Filipinos who were subjected to immigration deportation spoke about their personal plight, how the broken immigration policies led to their years of persecution in the country, while awaiting immigration reform.

Many of these families entered legally through student or work visas. One couple, Mel and Babes Gulfin, were detained for almost seven months with their son, Miguel Gulfin, who is now a recipient of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) benefit approved by President Barack Obama last year.

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