HONOLULU (AP) 鈥 Decades before Filipino American agricultural workers organized a historic strike in California, Pablo Manlapit was organizing Filipino laborers in Hawaii.
Manlapit, who migrated to Honolulu in 1910 to work on sugar plantations, saw the exploitation of other Philippine-born workers 鈥 known as 鈥渟akadas.鈥 A decade later and at great risk to his livelihood and marriage, he became Hawaii’s first Filipino lawyer and pioneered a Filipino labor union demanding equal pay and an eight-hour workday.
He also persuaded Japanese workers, who were paid more, to join. For these organizing efforts, he was implicated in the 1924 Hanapepe Massacre on the island of Kauai where 16 strikers and four police officers were killed.
The tragedy halted any momentum the strikers had.
Manlapit was imprisoned, exiled to California and eventually deported. Despite remaining a stalwart labor rights advocate, he died in 1969 in relative obscurity.
Now, over a century later, Manlapit has become a trailblazer to a group of Filipino lawyers who didn’t grow up learning about him. The Hawaii Filipino Lawyers Association is seeking to overturn his conspiracy conviction, a symbolic effort they hope will elevate Manlapit鈥檚 place in history. They say Manlapit’s contributions and Asian American and Pacific Islander history in Hawaii in general still remain relatively unknown across the U.S. mainland.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a story that needs to be told. A lot of us are second generation, so we don鈥檛 have knowledge of these stories,” said Daniel Padilla, the group鈥檚 president. 鈥淗is story gets overshadowed … in the broader labor movement in California.鈥
Recent revelations of prompted reflection on .
That inspired the Filipino lawyer group to explore clearing Manlapit’s name. The quest to overturn Manlapit鈥檚 conviction, the association has said, is about 鈥渞estoring what was taken from a movement that always belonged to many.鈥
Filipino American history in Hawaii typically overlooked
by historians, said Kevin Nadal, Filipino American National Historical Society president. Within Filipino American communities, those in Hawaii 鈥 an ocean away 鈥 were chronicled less over the decades. Nadal, a psychology professor at City University of New York, didn’t learn extensively about Manlapit until researching a Filipino American Studies encyclopedia in 2020.
鈥淚t may have been documented through just like oral histories,鈥 Nadal said. 鈥淲e love oral histories but, if no one writes them down and then it doesn鈥檛 become published, then it just gets lost.鈥
Manlapit’s movement was likely the first instance of documented mobilizing by Filipino workers.
鈥淚t started with Hawaii,鈥 Nadal said. 鈥淲hat was happening in Hawaii, it would have been really hard for people to know that it was happening in California.鈥
There has been more acknowledgement in recent years. Earlier in May for Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month, the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center partnered with Hawaii U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono on a poster exhibit highlighting sakadas.
Hawaii’s Filipino sakada history inspires later generations
Laborers who left the Philippines for Hawaii’s plantations were key to Filipinos becoming one of the largest ethnic groups in the state today. They made up over half the labor force. Hawaii became home to the nation’s first and only governor of Filipino descent, Ben Cayetano.
Cayetano, 87, said he never felt a need to seek out his Filipino roots growing up poor in Honolulu.
鈥淚 was born and raised here so I was more influenced by the local culture, which is a mixture of the Hawaiian culture and all the other cultures,鈥 said Cayetano, who graduated from college and law school in Los Angeles.
But honoring sakadas and leaders like Manlapit is a way to also honor the sakada who raised Cayetano as a single father, he said.
Growing up biracial in rural upstate New York, Becky Gardner felt like she couldn鈥檛 connect with her mother鈥檚 Filipino ancestry but heard stories about her great-grandfather and grandfather who were laborers on Kauai plantations. Longing to connect to those roots, Gardner moved to Honolulu to attend law school.
While working as a lawyer in the state Office of Language Access, she advocated for 鈥淪akada Day,鈥 commemorating the Dec. 20 arrival of the first contract laborers who left the Philippines to work on Hawaii’s sugar and pineapple plantations.
It was then that Gardner realized she is a sakada descendant.
She typed her great-grandfather’s name, Francisco Alcano, into an online database of Filipino laborers and found records detailing his 1928 arrival in Honolulu aboard a steamship named for President Grover Cleveland.
鈥淚t made me feel like I was part of Hawaii’s history too,鈥 Gardner said.
How to get Manlapit’s conviction overturned
The Hawaii Filipino Lawyers Association is reviewing whether Manlapit鈥檚 1924 conviction was wrongful and if there is any legal way to clear his name posthumously, said Padilla, who earned a law degree from the University of Hawaii.
They鈥檙e also looking into creating a fellowship at University of Hawaii鈥檚 law school to explore the possibility of having a legal researcher examine the case toward efforts to formally vindicate Manlapit.
Kainani Collins Alvarez, who grew up on Oahu knowing about her sakada grandfather, is a former public defender who now owns a family-law firm. She wants to apply her criminal defense background to the association鈥檚 Manlapit cause. Half-white, she feels connected to Hawaii Filipinos through her mom and a childhood partly spent in the Philippines.
鈥淔or me, it’s really important to go back and rectify the truth,鈥 she said. 鈥淗istory is built on the facts that we knew at the time.鈥
Manlapit wasn’t even on Kauai during the 1924 massacre when striking Filipino sugar workers and police clashed violently.
Even though Manlapit was eventually pardoned, the association wants to bring to light evidence showing he was innocent, Alvarez said.
According to a Manlapit biography, he wrote in a 1927 鈥渇arewell statement鈥 that he would push to prove his innocence: 鈥淚 was railroaded to prison because I tried to secure justice and a square deal for my oppressed countrymen who are lured to the plantations to work for a dollar a day.鈥
An overturning would mean more than a pardon in some ways, Nadal said.
鈥淚t would mean more of understanding justice and ensuring that people realize that we can fight for justice and that justice can prevail,鈥 he said.
Manlapit’s story inspired Khara Jabola-Carolus to become a lawyer in Hawaii. Like him, she started out as an organizer and activist. She grew up in California and graduated from Hawaii’s law school.
鈥淭here’s a long history of Filipino organizing,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat’s why I wanted to be a lawyer here.鈥
She wants more people to know of Manlapit’s life like they would famous Filipino pop stars.
鈥淲e need representation and access to seeing ourselves as heroes and movement leaders and not just entertainers,鈥 she said. 鈥淟ike Filipino Americans need to know Pablo Manlapit as much as they know Bruno Mars or Olivia Rodrigo.鈥
___ Tang reported from Phoenix.
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