A journey from the Philippines

Canada’s first senator of Filipino descent was once a struggling overseas Filipino worker (OFW) who left the Philippines seeking adventure.
“I went to Canada for adventure, I took a chance,” Senator Tobias Enverga Jr. shared with INQUIRER.net in a recent interview, while he was in his homeland leading a Filipino delegation of “winter escapees” from Canada.
“I never realized I will be a Canadian Senator,” he told the 240-strong delegation, mostly composed of Canadians of Filipino descent, that toured Kalibo, Boracay, Roxas City, Iloilo City, and Guimaras last month as part of the first “Winter Escapade” tour.
Enverga was born to a middle-class family in Lucena City. He shared that there were two clans of Envergas in Lucena, one was mostly composed of politicians and the other was mostly educators. “I’m part of the educators,” he said.
During college, he went to the Letran College in Manila where he graduated with a degree in Economics. He worked for less than a year in two banks in the country after he graduated.
He met his wife there in the bank, Enverga recalled. He however said that he felt “tired” about being in the Philippines.
“I got so tired about being here in the Philippines,” Enverga said. “When you are a young man you have so many things going on in your life.”
It was then that he decided to go to Canada to stay with his sisters even though he was not sure whether he would get a job there. He had told himself then that he would just be in Canada for a couple of years.
“My start in Canada was good because my sisters took care of me. But eventually I realized that I have to do some work,” Enverga said.
Enverga applied for work at the Bank of Montreal, one of Canada’s top five largest banks, where he started from the bottom of the corporate ladder.
“The first work I did was actually in the mail room… then I worked my way up,” he said.
“Then I took up computer courses and became a computer operator,” Enverga said. He continued to rise up through the ranks and his last position before he became a senator was project manager for the IT department
He worked for around 30 years in the Bank of Montreal. “I have a loyalty award,” Enverga said with a laugh.
Even though he has already reached top positions, he saw himself as among the millions of OFWs all over the world.
“I consider myself as an OFW. When I was working I send money to my mom through remittances,” he recalled.
“My younger brothers were still young and my father died earlier so I have to send a little money although my other sisters sent more,” he said.
In 2010, the Toronto Catholic District School Board appointed him as a trustee “which made him the first Filipino-Canadian elected to public office in the city and the first member of a visible ethnic minority elected to the Board.”
From there he involved himself in many socio-civic organizations such as Global Filipino Nation, Global Filipinos Canada, Canadian Multi-cultural Council—Asians in Ontario, Philippine Independence Day Council (PIDC), and Philippine Canadian Charitable Foundation (PCCF).
He held top positions, and in some cases was the founder, of many of those organizations.
“As a community leader in Toronto, I have to interact with the government there, it’s important, what is good for my community is good for the government,” Enverga said.
“I have to put them together to ensure that we are well connected and to get all the good stuff from the government, that’s how I got to know the government,” he said.
For his advocacies and work in the many charitable organizations, Enverga was among the awardees of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal, a medal created in 2012 that commemorates the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II ascension to the throne.
The award is given to people who “have made significant contributions to Canada or to a particular province, territory, region or community within Canada, or for an outstanding achievement abroad that has brought great credit to Canada.”
Enverga was appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Stephen Harper in 2012. He is the first Filipino to be appointed to the Canadian Senate.
In Canada, senators serve until the age of 75, which means he has around 20 years left as a senator.
He recalled that he was so shocked after receiving a call from the Prime Minister that he had to ask to be given 24 hours to think over the “life changing decision.”
“The beauty about being appointed is that we can say no to whatever the government says. There’s no partisanship. You know how it works for politics, if you’re in this different political frame of mind you always go against the other one,” Enverga said.
“Ours is not, we are the free thinkers. We are called the second sober thought of Canada,” he said.
As one of the almost 10.5 million Filipinos that are abroad, Enverga said that the present diaspora of Filipinos to all over the world was a good thing because Filipinos have so much to offer.
“We want the Filipinos to populate the world, because Filipinos have so much to offer the world. We have our culture, we have our values, we have our faith,” Enverga said.
“Leaving the Philippines is a good thing, but of course it’s a bad thing too, because it’s more like a brain drain for us,” he said.
Even though majority of the OFWs going abroad are domestic workers, nurses, and caregivers, Enverga said that Filipinos are more than just “white or blue collar workers, nurses, nannies, caregivers or doctors.”
Filipinos are “also leaders of the world,” he said.
Asked what he would tell the millions of OFWs all over the world, Enverga said: “Keep on going, do some more adventures like me and maybe you’ll find the right path eventually.”
At present, over 500,000 Filipinos call Canada home, and this number is increasing rapidly. In fact, in recent years the Philippines has been the greatest source of immigrants to Canada states the The Canada Immigration Newsletter,  a monthly publication edited by Canadian Immigration Attorney David Cohen.
The story of Filipino immigration to Canada is one of dreams, hard work, sacrifice, and success, he states.
In 2012 alone, over 32,000 new Canadian Permanent Residents came to Canada from the Philippines – a whopping 146% increase from 2004. Still more traveled to Canada that year to work (44,000) and study (918), all record highs for the country. As new arrivals settle in Canada, both countries benefit economically as well as culturally.
Immigrants from the Philippines were first recorded in small numbers in the year 1930. By the 50s and 60s, only 800 or so had settled in Canada. Almost all resided in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Since the 1990s, immigration from the Philippines had increased steadily. Many new arrivals came to work as live-in caregivers across Canada. More and more began to settle in major Canadian metropolises, especially Toronto. Today, over 200,000 Filipino immigrants reside in the greater Toronto area, more than in any other city.
Winnipeg, however, has remained a major destination for newcomers from the Philippines, with 1 in 10 Filipino immigrants living in this city. Filipinos are now recognized as Winnipeg’s largest ethnic minority, making up almost 9% of the city’s total population.
The future will see Filipinos in Canada continue to shape the country’s character and heritage in more ways than ever before, stated Cohen.
 
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