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    Serving his adopted country runs in the family for this native Filipino

    Serving his adopted country runs in the family for this native Filipino

    Photo By Michele Donaldson | Maj. Sande Penuliar wife his wife and sons at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio.... read more read more

    WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, OHIO, UNITED STATES

    05.31.2023

    Story by Michele Donaldson 

    Air Force Materiel Command

    Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio – For one Airman, following in his father’s footsteps meant not just joining the military, but also joining him in an adventure in a new and foreign land.

    Maj. Sande Penuliar was born in the Republic of the Philippines and is the youngest of five children. When his older brother joined the U.S. Navy and settled in San Diego, he encouraged his family to join him. His father and siblings all immigrated one at a time. Finally, when Penuliar was 13, he and his mother joined the rest of the clan.

    “I wasn’t a child who was born in the U.S. being raised by immigrant parents, or an adult experiencing the states for the first time,” said Penuliar. “I often felt like I was between two cultures.”

    English is part of the school curriculum in the Philippines, but the English he learned prior to immigrating, where all the syllables are clearly enunciated, was not the same language his classmates at school spoke.

    “I was a kid, so cartoons were my saving grace,” said Penuliar. “It took a while, but Hanna Barbera taught me how to speak ‘American’ as if I was born here.”

    As he got older, he considered joining the Navy like his brother, but his father who served in and retired from the Philippine Air Force convinced him otherwise. He decided to follow his father’s advice and serve his adopted country as an Air Force enlistee.

    “My dad had a great career and made a very good living for our family,” he said. “I was always so proud of the work he did for our country.”

    After serving for four years, Penuliar separated from the Air Force to go back to school. While working on his degree, he also began dabbling on social media and looking up old friends in his homeland.

    “My mom had a photo of me holding the hand of a little neighbor girl at her 4th birthday party. It had been 18 years since I had seen her, and I began to wonder where she was,” said Penuliar. “After a long-distance courtship and many visits, we became engaged.”

    Shortly after, he was commissioned back into the Air Force, and he brought his new wife to his first base as an officer.

    “I embraced my culture finally and realized how much it rooted me,” he said. “This is where I come from and where my wife is from too – this is me – it’s a part of me.”

    Penuliar (he says it’s peculiar with an n) works as a special assistant to the Air Force Materiel Command Commander, Gen. Duke Z. Richardson. Among many duties, he and the rest of the Commander’s Action Group or CAG, chase taskers, facilitate meeting requests, and plan trips down to the most meticulous detail so that “the boss” always knows what and who to expect.

    “We don’t usually get to go on the trips,” he said. “We research and hand off a hefty fact book to the executive officer so he is in the know.”
    Penuliar is also a member of the Language-Enabled Airman Program. He is not a linguist but does immersions in the Philippines and participates in online classes to sharpen skills in his native Tagalog. He and his wife speak Tagalog at home and encourage their two sons as well to continue their legacy.

    Penuliar admitted that he misses the warm weather and the slower lifestyle in the Philippines where, “Your neighbor is your family,” but he doesn’t have to miss the food.

    “I eat at home, and my wife is a great cook.”

    Penuliar says his kids are in a more comfortable place than he was at their age. They are used to life in the multicultural environment of the Air Force.

    “Our culture is a part of who I am and where I feel comfortable. We don't have to look very long to find other Filipinos wherever we go,” he said. “The community is strong, and we have a family wherever we go.”
    As they get ready for their next PCS move in a few weeks, they already know there will be “family” there too.

    The 19-year Air Force veteran is returning to Langley AFB as the commander of the Supply Chain Operations Squadron, part of the Air Force Sustainment Center.

    “Being chosen to serve as a commander is an honor for any officer, but it’s an especially big deal for me to represent the Asian American Pacific Islander community in this capacity,” said Penuliar. “My real and adopted families are incredibly excited and proud.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.31.2023
    Date Posted: 06.15.2023 12:46
    Story ID: 447278
    Location: WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, OHIO, US

    Web Views: 39
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN