Mulling in Dubai
DUBAI MALL, reputedly the largest shopping center in all of the United
Arab Emirates.
At the mall’s Food Court, Leigh serves tom yum goong at the Pad Thai
stall. Vivian does spicy buffalo wings at Texas Chicken. Irma dishes out
Tandoori chicken in the eponymous resto.
Then, there is Amanda serving shawarma at Kebab Grill and Joanne
preparing bento boxes at Soy.
International eats flavoured by the smiling services of all-Filipino
crews. All Kapampangans too.
Anna hawks shirts and bags at a kiosk in the middle of the mall’s
spacious walkways where Virgie sells perfumes in another stall. Liza answers
all your inquiries about galaxies – of the phone kind, that is – at Samsung.
Maan does her sales pitch with Canon at Grand Stores Digital.
Aye, they are all cabalens.
Deira City Centre, next best to Dubai Mall, per the mall rat Ashley
Manabat’s reckoning, takes the same pattern.
Fe (wo)mans Fujiyama; Dindo, Al Farooj; Cherry, Baskin Robins; Dennis,
Fat Burgers; Lino, Potbelly.
At Al Falak Electronics, Leila teaches you the best value for your
money in Nikon cameras. Gina and Gloria lend ladies their fashion sense at
Debenhams. And Karen helped me find bargains for my grandkids at H&M.
It is not only in the restaurants and malls that the Kapampangans make their
great presence felt but in the hospitals, construction and industrial firms and
even at the international airport too, says Angelo G. Timbol of Angeles City who
has worked here for over 30 years.
Timbol, managing director of the oilfield, marine and industrial supply
firm JETTY, approximates some 50,000 cabalens of the
whole UAE’s estimated 300,000 Filipino workers.
Central and Northern Luzon provinces account for a larger number –
compared to other regions – of those we casually met and randomly sampled at
the malls there.
Of the Filipino cashiers, checkers and baggers at Carrefour, the large
French hypermarket chains, mostly, if not Kapampangans, are from Zambales,
Bataan, Pangasinan and the Ilocos provinces.
There are no Filipino taxi drivers in Dubai though. If our Pakistani
cabbie were to be believed.
“Filipinos are too educated to be mere taxi drivers,” he said. “This is
a job for those with little or no schooling.”
In the social hierarchy of overseas workers in Dubai, Filipinos do
indeed occupy the higher tiers. They not only look smarter but moreso, happier.
“The mastery of English, talent, skills, industry and how we can easily
adapt to a different culture are our cutting edge in the Dubai job market,” Engineer
Timbol said.
And the Kapampangan excels in those values above his kababayans. A bit of regional chauvinism there.
A commonality now: This inquiry from Kapampangans, Zambalenos,
Ilocanos, Pangasinenses, even those from
Quezon City and the Camanava area upon learning we are mediamen from around the
Clark area: When shall we start flying home through Clark?
A large number of those we met told us they have long heard of plans
for Dubai-Clark flights.
Yes, there have been plans, we concurred. We did not have the heart to
tell them, these have stayed as plans. Maybe even forgotten plans now.
Just to make sure, I searched the web and here is what I got from Business World Online dated Monday, June 9, 2008:
…The DMIA is being groomed as
the next international gateway of the Philippines, and Mr. Luciano said there
would be "more airlines to fly from the Middle East to the
Philippines" to serve Filipino workers abroad.
On Friday, a chartered plane
from Trans-global Airline arrived in the Philippines from the United Arab
Emirates (UAE) via the DMIA. It was the first airline to fly to the Philippines
from the Middle East via Clark.
The same airline is scheduled
to fly to Fujairah in the UAE on Mondays and Wednesdays starting today. It uses
a 160-seater MD83 aircraft.
Fujairah is one of the seven emirates that constitute the UAE; Dubai and
Abu Dhabi the better known among them.
Maybe the good president-CEO of Clark International Airport Corp.,
Chichos Luciano can tell us whatever happened to that planned route.
Oblige us – and our OFWs in Dubai – with a response, Sir.
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