Filipina enslaved for 65 years in US wants to go home, find estranged family

Consul General Adelio Angelito Cruz (rearmost) introduces “Nanay Fedelina” (right) to Ambassador to the United States Jose Manuel Romualdez (left).
Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles

MANILA, Philippines —

Fedelina

Lugasan, 82, wants to go home to the Philippines after being freed from a 65-year abusive employment in the United States.

Ambassador to the US Jose Manuel Romualdez recently met with "Nanay

Fedelina" at the Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles.

"I want to go home to Tacloban and find my family," Nanay

Fedelina said, as reported by the Department of Foreign Affairs.

Noting President Rodrigo Duterte's directive to prioritize overseas Filipinos, Romualdez hopes to help Nanay

Fedelina in achieving her dream.

The Pilipino Workers Center, through the help of US law enforcement, rescued Nanay

Fedelina from her Filipino-American employers in 2018.

She was only 16 years old when she

was recruited from Leyte to serve as a domestic helper to a family in Manila, who eventually brought her to Los Angeles.

Romualdez, in a column published by The STAR, said Nanay

Fedelina was subjected to physical and verbal abuse. She did not also receive payment for her service, making her case an example of modern-day slavery.

When she arrived in the US, her employers confiscated her passport, birth certificate and other identification documents.

For 65 years, Nanay

Fedelina became the nanny of the children and then the grandchildren and did all household work with no salary.

"Nanay

Fedelina came from a generation when slave-like employment practices or highly unregulated domestic employment were still commonplace in the Philippines. She also seems to be one of the few to survive this and gain freedom," the DFA said.

The FBI, with the help of the PWC and the Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles, investigated her case. Her employers had

been convicted and ordered to pay restitution, according to Romualdez.

Nanay

Fedelina, however, asked the judge not to jail her 79-year-old employer.

After being rescued from her employers, she has been living in a nursing facility in Long Beach, where she has a private room and her needs provided for free.

Following the meeting with Nanay

Fedelina

on September 15, Romualdez stressed the government's commitment to uphold the welfare and protect the rights of overseas Filipinos.

"We must do our best to safeguard their welfare," Romualdez said.

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