Juana Tejada: Filipina Caregiver With A Lasting Legacy
To simply work in
a foreign land is hard-- a fact that needs no further explanation. However
another bitter truth is that unavoidable circumstances can even make it worse
just like what happened with Juana Tejada. She is a Filipino caregiver who
toiled in a faraway land in the hope of giving her family a better future. A
twist of fate threatened to take away all that she has worked for but she
gained the admiration and respect of many when she remained strong and
determined until the end. This is her story:
Canada is one of the favorite
destinations of Filipino caregivers because their Live-in Caregiver program
offers not only an opportunity to work but also to be a permanent resident. In
2003 Juana Tejada, a small and soft spoken woman from Abra joined the ranks of
foreign caregivers who tried their luck in this country.
She worked hard and completed the 24-month residency to be
eligible for the permanent residency status privilege. Part of her goals is to
bring her family in the Philippinesto Canada.
Her dreams would have been fulfilled easily if she had not failed in the second
medical examination. In 2006 Tejada was diagnosed with a colon cancer causing
her application for residency to be rejected for the reason that she was viewed
as a healthcare burden.
The
previous rules of the Live-in Caregiver Program require all applicants to
undergo a second medical examination. This policy makes the application process
more expensive and complicated, more so because the second medical examination
is deemed unnecessary. A medical examination is a prerequisite even before they
came to work in Canada.
When she
reapplied for the second time, she was again denied. The two-time rejection did
not cause Tejada to lose hope. Instead of accepting her fate, she questioned
the verdict of the Citizenship and Immigration Canada, and then appealed on
humanitarian grounds.
Eventually her case won and she was given a permanent
status but she did more than that. Her painful fight to stay in Canada despite
having a fatal disease opened the eyes of the government on the difficulties
that foreign caregivers are experiencing before they are given a permanent
residency status. It also spurred the need to review the Live-in caregiver
program. Tejada is a founding member of the United Steelworkers' Independent
Workers Association, a group of Philippine live-in caregivers, all struggling
with cancer and immigration.
The new Live-in Caregiver program now does not include the
second medical examination requirement. Some rules that complicate the
application process are also modified. As a salute to the woman who made this
possible, the new law is now called the Juana Tejada Law. Migrante International also called Tejada, a
female OFW par excellence”.
The
chairperson of Migrante International, Garry Martinez said, “We give our highest
salute to Juana Tejada. She is, indeed a female OFW par excellence, who, while
battling the debilitating disease of cancer, relentlessly worked for the rights
and welfare of caregivers in Canada."
Juan
Tejada died on March 8 2009, International Woman’s Day but the legacy that she
left for all Filipino workers abroad will be remembered forever.