28 April 2006
Bangon, mga kababayan!

Everyone remember that post on Pamie.com wherein she and her companions reacted violently to the food in Jollibee? Brace yourselves--here's yet another piece of news that will rock every Filipino's socks.


Filipino table etiquette punished at local school
Lunch monitor tells student his eating habits are 'disgusting'
by Andy Blatchford

A Roxboro woman has filed a formal complaint with a local school board after her son was disciplined by a lunch program monitor at Ecole Lalande for eating in what she says is a customary Filipino manner.

Luc Cagadoc's table behaviour is traditionally Filipino; he fills his spoon by pushing the food on his plate with a fork, his mother, Maria Theresa Gallardo, says.

But after being punished by his school's lunch program monitor more than 10 times this year for his mealtime conduct--including his technique--the seven-year-old told Gallardo said last week that he was too embarrassed to eat his dinner.

"Mommy, I don't want to eat anymore," Gallardo says Luc told her at the kitchen table April 11. "My teacher is telling me that eating with a spoon and fork is yucky and disgusting."

When he eats with both a spoon and fork, instead of only one utensil, the Grade 2 student said the lunch monitor moves him to a table to sit by himself.

Upset over Luc's story, Gallardo confronted the lunchtime caregiver the next day and on April 13, she telephoned the school's principal, Normand Bergeron. His reaction brought her to tears, she says. "His response was shocking to me," Gallardo, who moved to Montreal from the Philippines in 1999, told The Chronicle. "He said, 'Madame, you are in Canada. Here in Canada you should eat the way Canadians eat.'

"I find it very prejudiced and it's racist. He's supposed to be acting like a professional. This is supposed to be a free country with free expressions of culture and religion. This is how we eat; we eat with a fork and spoon."

The principal of the 387-student Roxboro school said he explained his position on using two utensils to Gallardo during their telephone conversation. "I said, 'Here, this is not the manner in which we eat.'

"I don't necessarily want students to eat with one hand or with only one instrument, I want them to eat intelligently at the table," he said. "I want them to eat correctly with respect for others who are eating with them. That's all I ask. Personally, I don't have any problems with it, but it is not the way you see people eat every day. I have never seen somebody eat with a spoon and a fork at the same time."
Read more.


I suppose he's going to chastise chopsticks-using people as well for not eating using proper utensils.

Hehe. The principal and the lunch monitor should thank the heavens that little Luc wasn't eating in another traditional Filipino way: with his hands, and one leg lifted on one's seat (thanks to my friend Rebecca for that last important detail). I imagine they would've keeled over right then and there. Don't you just love 'em, preaching "correct" dining manners while supporting intolerance?


2 Comments:

Anonymous sealdi said...

pano ba sila kumakain? fork lang?

29/4/06 01:16

 
Blogger markmomukhamo said...

yeah heard about this. labo.
it's not as if the kid was flinging his food at his lunchmates. bizarre.

2/5/06 01:39

 

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