Untold History of Russia links to the Visayas Island of the Philippines. Photo credit: independent.co.uk
Tubabao,  Guiuan (pronounced  as "Ghi-wan" or "Gee- One") devastation opened the untold part  of Russian history that links the Philippines' Visayas Island for the 1949's  Mao's communist forces approaching Shanghai China which was once the home of  the white Russian refugees who flee aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution.
It was not only for Israel's untold story who survived from  the Nasi Germany holocaust by fleeing to the very welcoming Philippines for  refuge but also the untold stories of more than the number of the Israel  refugees in the Philippines with a six times fold or 6,300 white Russian refugees  to the Philippine sin 1949 given a safe place to the Visayas Island in the  Philippines.
When the International Refugee Organization, established to  tackle the displacement crisis caused by the war; like how the country welcomed  the Jewish refugees,  the Philippines is  the first country to open for white Russian refugees then slowly, various other  nations stepped forward to accept the refugees on a permanent basis and the  White Russians were scattered, especially to the US, Australia, and South  America.
How many more untold stories being kept by the more than  7,000 islands in the Philippines, let's wait for more highlighting events to  come.
Are you searching for a fast and affordable Shared, VPS  and Dedicated webhosting service? Visit SOMOSOTECH at [ www.somosotech.com ] 
A  forgotten episode in Russian history leaves links with the Philippines
Guiuan was central to a remarkable part of the Cold War
One evening a couple of weeks ago, beneath a cavernous sky,  I stood on the edge of a 7,000ft airstrip in the Philippines peering into the  darkness. The airfield at Guiuan, built by American forces during the Second  World War as part of General Douglas MacArthur's operation to drive the  Japanese from the Philippines, was now being used by US troops to land  emergency supplies for the town devastated by Typhoon Haiyan and to evacuate  the injured and sick.
The Americans overseeing the supply drops were tickled by  the idea of history retracing itself more than six decades on. But it was  something that an aid official had said a couple of days earlier that had me  entranced; a few years after the war's conclusion, the official said, the  airstrip had been used for a dramatic evacuation of White Russian refugees,  fleeing the Communist forces of Mao Zedong.
It all seemed too fanciful. And yet, it transpires, the  official was correct: the town of Guiuan, where officials say 100 per cent of  buildings were either damaged or destroyed, was central to a remarkable tale of  the Cold War that has now been forgotten.
In 1949, with Mao's forces approaching Shanghai, an appeal  was made by the International Refugee Organisation, established to tackle the  displacement crisis caused by the war. It wanted new homes for thousands of  White Russians, those people who had emigrated from Russia in the aftermath of  the Bolshevik Revolution and whose lives were now in danger from the  Communists.
Only one country responded positively. And so it was that  more than 5,000 White Russians, under the care of John Maximovitch, the  Orthodox Archbishop of Shanghai who would later be canonised, were taken to the  island of Tubabao, located off the coast of Guiuan.
"There are many variances as to how many took refuge here  but the most accurate approximation runs to some 6,300," Ricardo Suarez Soler,  the Manila-based author of The Saga of the White Russian Refugees in the  Philippines, told me.
An advance party of White Russian boy scouts was apparently  flown to Guiuan to prepare an area on Tubabao for the tent city the thousands  of refugees would call home, hacking away at the sugar cane with machetes. Most  came in ageing, listing boats, reportedly crewed by Chinese former prisoners,  on a journey that took between one to two weeks. When they got there, the  refugees were given food and supplies deemed surplus to the needs of the  Americans.
One of those who made the journey was Nikita Gileff. Now a  retired school principal in Australia, Mr Gileff was seven when he and his  mother landed at Tubabao.
"It is part of history that appears to have been lost,"  said Mr Gileff,  speaking from Sydney. "We  came ashore in the same landing craft that had been left behind by the  Americans."
Gradually, various nations stepped forward to accept the  refugees on a permanent basis and the White Russians were scattered, especially  to the US, Australia, and South America.
But the bond between Guiuan and its former residents has  remained strong. Four years ago, the then mayor of the town issued an  invitation to White Russians to visit and a number took up her offer.
Alexander Vassilief, whose family also escaped from China,  said his late grandmother, Yefrasinya Vajinsky, along with two aunts and three  uncles, spent time on Tubabao. "Most did not complain," said Mr Vassilief, a  retired engineer who also lives in Sydney and has written his own chronicle of  the events.
Indeed, last month, as the extent of the damage wrought  upon Guiuan by the storm became clear, Russian communities around the world  sent messages of support and held fund-raising events.
Are you searching for a fast and affordable Shared, VPS  and Dedicated webhosting service? Visit SOMOSOTECH at [ www.somosotech.com ] 
Nikolai Massenkoff was 10 when he and his mother were  evacuated to Tubabao. Today he lives in California where he is a celebrated  performer of traditional Russian songs. Having been unable to take up the  invitation from Guiuan's mayor in 2009, he instead travelled there in 2011 and  performed a thank-you concert. He is now planning a series of fund-raising  events and a documentary containing footage of his 2011 concert is to be shown  at a Philippines fiesta later this month in San Francisco. 
"The people of the Philippines were warm and kind and  gentle. They were the only place that could offer the refugees a place at short  notice," recalled the 74-year-old. "The whole Russian community has been deeply  saddened by the tragic events."
During their time on Tubabao, the refugees built several  chapels. None remains today. However in September, six weeks before Typhoon  Haiyan, a small group of Orthodox pilgrims visited Tubabao where a shelter had  been constructed to hold the first such service there for more than 60 years.  The Orthodox priest who performed the liturgy, Father Seraphim Bell, an  American citizen, said local people had been friendly and welcoming. "Members  of the local community expressed hopes Russians would return for pilgrimages to  Tubabao and the chapel there," he said. 
With  story published in The  Independent 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 


