The Dirt of the Americans
January 10, 2008  -- Got something to say?
Print This Post
By Amar C. Bakshi
OLONGAPO - Six-year-old Shiela Maria Daet used to watch her mother strip naked and gyrate on Red Roosters stage. African-American servicemen hooted in the dark and threw cash in the air.
It was disgusting, she says. But even back then, in 1986, Shiela knew her father, Samuel Gill Barber, had once been one of those American servicemen at the bar. She knew Sam had hired her mother for a night in 1979, fell in love with her, impregnated her, and then left for America a month before Shiela was born.
So for the next two decades Shiela looked for her father Sam. She found him in 2006, broken, serving time in a Georgia jail.
Olongapo is a seedy town a three-hour drive northwest of the capital, Manila. For much of the century before 1992, it serviced a vast American military base here that was closed in 1992 amid anti-American protests. Red Rooster Bar on Jungle Street catered to African American soldiers. Nearby Magsaysay Drive was home to numerous sex-bars where the white U.S. marines lounged.
As children, Shiela and her six siblings all slept together on the floor outside their mothers bedroom. Up to four Americans per night would tiptoe over the dozing kids to take turns sleeping with their mother.
Shiela faced severe racism growing up. Classmates and some teachers called her Beluga, Negra and the dirt of the Americans. The prostitute kids with white American fathers were often considered beautiful: They were popular; they won beauty contests. But the children of black Americans were doubly cursed.
Shiela was never close to her mother, whom she says was smart?[and] could have done better?but always thought her destiny was to find an American to bring her to paradise [in the U.S.]. Shielas grandmother tried to bolster her self-esteem by telling her a bit about Sam: how he was kind, rarely talked, sipped beer, towered at 6 foot 7 inches, and loved basketball. As mementos, Shiela was given Sams marine basketball jersey along with some faded pictures of him.
Unlike many of her peers who turned to drugs and prostitution to avoid the shame or frustration of being castaways, Shiela focused her energies on her studies, and on finding her American dad.
Between ages eight to twelve, Shiela approached scores of tall black American men asking them if they were Samuel Barber. When she hit her teens and received a grant to study computer science from Preda, an organization that helps Amerasian youth with prostitute mothers and absent American fathers, she developed more high-tech ways of seeking her father.
She used the Internet to find hundreds of U.S. addresses under that name. Despite the high cost, she sent out five letters per week, eighty in total, hoping for a reply. Nothing came. Then she wrote to Oprah Winfrey asking for her help. She is black, and helps black people, Shiela explained.
Shiela identifies herself as a Filipina-African-American and asked me about the racial struggle in the U.S. Is it as bad as here? Oprah didnt reply.
Then Shiela found Jennifer Williams, an Amerasian living in Georgia who founded AmerasianFamilyFinder.com. Searching through old marine databases, Shiela scanned the living, the dead, and finally considered those in jail. Thats when one more Samuel Barber appeared. He was serving five years time in a Georgia jail for cocaine abuse.
Expecting nothing, Shiela wrote to the warden of the jail. Three weeks later, she got this letter back:
Im your long lost father. I feel so ashamed…How can you forgive me?
Letter from Samuel Barber, September 24, 2006:
My Dearest Sheila Maria, I received your letter Sept 20 and I was overjoyed and very very happy to hear from you. I am so sorry I didnt get in contact with you. Yes, Im your long lost father. I feel so ashamed…
Whos to blame?” I ask. Who should you forgive?
In 2007 Sam got out of jail. Hes on probation now, making money from painting fences for white people. The two hope to meet. But Shiela only earns US$200 per month working for Preda, and takes care of her grandmother and siblings with that. Her father can barely afford his electricity.
But Shiela is hopeful they will meet. While many of her peers repeat her mothers mistakes, she hopes her studies, and a newborn relationship with her lost father can help ground her in her roots, and free her from her past.
Comments
Got something to say?
Recent Post
- The Hawaiian Dream
- Truth squad
- Gaa asks US Senate to boost MCC funds
- 3 ‘local’ Filams among TOFA 2008 awardees
- Gunmen free Filipino captives in Nigeria: official
- Global financial crisis will hit army of overseas Filipino workers
- Philippine leader proposes special ASEAN summit in China
- Studies show U.S. Hispanics remain insular
- Asia’s migrant workers fear losing jobs in global crisis
- Minda suffering donation fatigue
- ICE raids on gangs truly makes U.S. safer
- Border agents watch behavior
- Global markets plummet in growing stock sell-off
- Global Investor Panic Hits European, Asian Markets
- Asia’s Markets Follow Wall Street With Panic Selling
- Filam arrested in Iloilo fraud
- John, Bush or Osama bin Laden?
- Filam caregiver killed by 91-year-old patient
- Animals receive a holy blessing
- Filams: Talk immigration, not lipsticks, pigs

