Try GOLD - Free
Vigil draws on Filipino 'bayanihan' spirit after car attack
The Guardian Weekly
|May 02, 2025
The vigil drew a crowd so large that police in Vancouver had to move the crime scene barriers back so that people would not spill out on to the busy traffic along 41st Avenue. “It’s amazing. It’s really a show of how important the Filipino community is just very broadly,” said Chelsea Brager.
Brager works with a Filipino youth organisation called Anakbayan BC that helped organise a candlelight vigil last Sunday evening to remember victims of the previous day’s car-ramming attack that killed 11 people and injured dozens at a festival in the Sunset neighbourhood, home to the city’s Filipino community.
Earlier in the day, the nearby Anglican memorial church of St Mary the Virgin was overflowing with members of the Filipino community and others who wished to pay their respects.
Last Saturday had been intended as a night of celebration for the community - of resilience and of collective resistance. It was the second time the festival had been held in the city. Lapu Lapu Day commemorates the victory in 1521 by Indigenous Filipinos, led by Lapu Lapu, against Spanish colonisers on the island of Mactan. It drew nearly 100,000 people, many of whom were families with young children.
This story is from the May 02, 2025 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
Grain and able: how to store cooked rice safely and what to make with it
I always cook too much rice and throw it away as I don't know what to do with it.
2 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
How the EU'S largest news publisher fell in love with the US
In Mathias Döpfner’s 2023 book Dealings with Dictators, the chief executive of the German media company Axel Springer SE proposed a fix for western democracy: states that respect the rule of law should stick together and prioritise trading with each other.
3 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
London is nothing like the lawless dystopia depicted by online propagandists
London is much reviled by people who don’t live there.
2 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
How did a festival get it so wrong over Kanye West?
Industry experts say booking the controversial US rapper was a calculated risk that will have major implications for other music events
4 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Peace talks stall
Too many negotiators and too little time to reach an agreement
3 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Emperor penguins under threat of extinction
The mass drowning of emperor penguin chicks as sea ice is melted by the climate crisis has led the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to declare the species officially in danger of extinction.
2 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
The king's speech Forget protocol-here's what Charles should really say in the US
In the public high point of his state visit, Charles III will mount the rostrum in the House of Representatives on 28 April to address a joint session of Congress.
3 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Why a dating agency is matching couples with same names
At the very least, the three men and three women calming their nerves at a venue in Tokyo know they have one thing in common.
3 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Netanyahu may pay at polls for pursuing wrong strategy for decades
It is a record of abject failure.
4 mins
April 17, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
The cosmic, teeming frequencies of space
As Artemis II returns from the dark side of the moon, Nasa's transformations of electromagnetic energy into sound remind us that everything is vibrating
3 mins
April 17, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
