Philippine Daily Inquirer

FIL-AM VIES FOR MISS USA TITLE

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Miss North Dakota Raquel Wellentin is one of five immigrant girls competing in the Miss USA pageant. Wellentin and her family left the Philippine­s when she was 2 years old.

Five of the contestant­s vying for the Miss USA title have a message to immigrant girls and women watching the pageant this weekend: Set goals, work hard and don’t stay in the shadows.

The contestant­s know what they are talking about as they were all born in other countries and immigrated to the US at young ages as their families pursued their versions of the American Dream. The women are now all US citizens.

“I want them to see that anything is possible if you work hard,” said Linnette de los Santos, who immigrated with her family from the Dominican Republic when she was 5 years old. “As Miss USA, I would love to be able to be that inspiratio­n for our immigrant community,” she said.

“If I would have stopped following my dreams and working hard toward what I wanted, I wouldn’t be sitting here as Miss Florida USA or in law school ready to become an immigratio­n attorney,” De los Santos said.

The competitio­n airs Sunday from Las Vegas.

De los Santos, Miss North Dakota Raquel Wellentin, Miss Hawaii Julie Kuo, Miss Connecticu­t Olga Litvinenko and Miss New Jersey Chhavi Verg spoke about the opportunit­ies and challenges they’ve faced as immigrants.

Remember Trump?

Their remarks stand in stark contrast to the scandal that enveloped the pageant in 2015, when part owner and now President Donald Trump offended Hispanics when he made anti-immigrant remarks in announcing his bid for the White House.

Trump co-owned The Miss Universe Organizati­on with NBC Universal, but the network and the Spanish-language broadcaste­r Univision quickly cut ties with him, refusing to air the show.

Trump sued both networks, eventually settling and selling off the entire pageant to talent management company WME/IMG.

Isolation

Wellentin and her family left the Philippine­s over safety fears when she was 2 years old. Their first taste of American life was in the small community of Enderlin, North Dakota, where she and her siblings felt isolated.

“Nobody wanted to talk to me at all. I came home one day and I asked my dad ‘Why am I so different? Why isn’t anyone talking to me?’” Wellentin said. “My dad told me, ‘You know, you are not different. You are very unique yourself. You have to be strong and really accept this negativity from other people and have it motivate you.’ I still keep that in my mind.”

Their situation improved when they moved to the larger and more diverse Fargo, North Dakota.

Wellentin, 24, who wants to be a middle school teacher after she completes a student-teaching requiremen­t, said her experience­s have taught her to not take no for an answer.

“I want to tell people that they need to make sure that they should not allow anyone to tell them that they can’t do something because only you can determine your future,” she said.

Like thousands of other immigrants, Litvinenko moved to the US with her family after her mother won the lottery for a green card. She was 3 when they relocated from Ukraine a few years after the Soviet Union collapsed.

The 27-year-old business owner ventured into pageants when she could no longer play basketball after injuring a foot in high school. She won Miss Connecticu­t Teen on her first try but had to compete five times to reach the Miss USA competitio­n. Her persistenc­e, Litvinenko said, showed that every effort counts.

“I want to showcase that no matter who you are, no matter what your background is, your size or what you have done in the past, through hard work and discipline, through perseveran­ce and determinat­ion, you really can achieve what you put your heart toward.”

I came home one day and I asked my dad ‘Why am I so different?’ Raquel Wellentin Filipino-American Miss North Dakota and Miss USA bet

 ?? —AP ?? Miss Florida USA Linnette de los Santos competes during a preliminar­y competitio­n for Miss USA in Las Vegas. De Los Santos was born in Dominican Republic and raised in Miami. Five contestant­s, including one with Filipino parents, were born in other countries and now US citizens.
—AP Miss Florida USA Linnette de los Santos competes during a preliminar­y competitio­n for Miss USA in Las Vegas. De Los Santos was born in Dominican Republic and raised in Miami. Five contestant­s, including one with Filipino parents, were born in other countries and now US citizens.

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