Begin Your Journey to The Philippines
Located between the Philippine Sea and the South China Sea, the Philippines
are close enough to their Asian and Malaysian neighbors that they have been
regularly visited for thousands of years. Of the 7,100 Philippine islands,
the three largest, Luzon, Mindanao and Palawan, are home to the majority of
Filipinos. In fact, only 2,000 of the islands are inhabited and 2,500 remain
unnamed. Most of the islands are actually quite small, with only 1,000 measuring
more than 1 square kilometer (0.4 miles).
The Philippine archipelago's proximity to the Asian mainland, coupled with
the isolated island geography, has resulted in 60 ethnological groups and
the 80 different dialects within the country. Even so, over 80 percent of
the population is Roman Catholic, a legacy of 300 years of Spanish occupation.
The smallest religious minority, Muslim Malay, makes up five percent of the
population. In addition to regular interaction with its Asian neighbors, Filipino
culture has been influenced by trade with the Middle East, beginning as early
as the 11th century, and the foreign rule of Spain, Japan and the United States.
The Philippines eventually gained independence in 1946.
Spanish colonization of the Philippines began in 1565 when Miguel Lopez de
Legaspi established a base in Manila. There was considerable political unrest
as Filipinos resisted Spanish rule that continued until the Spanish-American
war in 1898. After the Spanish were defeated, the islands were purchased by
the United States from the Spanish for US$20 million and a ten-year transition
process began toward full sovereignty. In 1942, Japan invaded the Philippines,
thereby suspending this process, and ruled until the U.S. re-invaded in 1944.
The Philippines finally gained full independence in 1946.
The transition to an autonomous country was not without challenges, and political
unrest has continued. In 1986, the People's Power Revolution began when Filipinos
as a nation revolted against the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos, who had
ruled the country since 1965. Today, Gloria Arroyo holds the position of President
after the former President was ousted on charges of corruption. In the present-day
Philippines, much of the population struggles against chronic hunger and poverty
on a daily basis. The 2000 Family Income and Expenditures Survey in the Philippines
found that between 1997 and 2000 the poverty level actually rose to 33.7 percent.
More than 20 percent of the population (or over 15 million people) are considered
undernourished, and close to a third of Filipino children under five are moderately
or severely underweight. These statistics are thought to be much worse in
rural areas of the Philippines.