Considered the “Godfather” of the Filipino community, Rodel Rodis is a true Vagina Warrior. He has and continues to devote countless pro bono hours in helping women and girls in domestic violence situations and low-income clients. A talented and dedicated attorney, Rodel has over 28 years of legal experience in immigration, family law, and civil litigation. His injunction against the U.S. government over the unjust and discriminatory firing of non-citizen airport screeners is just one of Rodel’s many instances of fighting for equality. But Rodel is more than an attorney.
He is an author, an educator, a performing artist, a community leader, a role model, and a powerful advocate for fairness, education, equity, and anti-domestic violence. Rodel has been a columnist for a Filipino community newspaper since 1987. He co-founded the National

Federation of Filipino American Associations and founded the Global Filipino Networking Convention. In 2008, he captivated audiences performing in the monologues “The Closet” and “The Perfect Marriage” in the Filipina Women Network’s production of “A Memory, A Monologue, A Rant and A Prayer” in San Francisco.
In 1987, Rodel was appointed by former San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos to the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC), becoming the first Filipino American to be appointed to a major commission in San Francisco. Within a year, Rodel was elected president of the commission in 1988 and re-elected in 1989. As president of the commission, Rodel sponsored a resolution that transferred 15 acres of land from the South Balboa Reservoir to the City College of San Francisco. As the most congested campus in California, the acres became City College’s future site of the new Performing Arts Center, the new Joint Use Facility, and the new Science and Technology Center.
Rodel has 18 years of service as a trustee to the San Francisco City College and two-time president. In 1991, Mayor Agnos appointed Rodel to a vacant post in the City College Board. Rodel ran for general elections the following year and won, becoming the first Filipino American to win elected office in San Francisco. Rodel continued to win re-elections in 1996, 2000, and 2004. During 1998 and 2002, he served as the President of the Board. Under Rodel’s many years of leadership and service, he helped secure over $700 million dollars in grants and city bonds to fund the largest infrastructure construction program in the history of City College. The funds enabled the construction of many new sites for City College, including the new Chinatown/North Beach campus expected to open in 2011. Politicians and community leaders from local, state, and national levels have lauded Rodel for his lifetime of service to education, to the Filipino community, and to the city of San Francisco. In recognition of Rodel’s many achievements, Mayor Gavin Newsom has declared January 27, 2009 as Rodel Rodis Day in San Francisco.
A role model, Rodel has enhanced the image of Filipino and Asian Americans in the U.S. He inspires Filipino Americans to run for office and to come together to better the community. Of his many contributions, Rodel considers his legacy to be his years of involvement with the community, but his proudest achievement is being the father of his three sons Carlo, Daniel, and Eric.
Genevieve Jopanda’s definition comes from her familiarity of different kinds of violence and the capable courage to communicate through the issues. What makes her stand out is her genuine compassion for people she meets and the energy with which she pulls them up and forward. Gen is the events coordinator for the Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce, with previous experience with companies like Zipcar, Hertz, and the San Francisco Chronicle. Her peers know that the excellence she brings to the corporate world is equaled by the brilliance she holds in the community.

Gen began as a volunteer for the Filipina Women’s Network and immediately got involved with the “The Vagina Monologues” and its board. The V-Diaries is her brainchild. Gen came up with the idea of a playbill that was also an attractive resource guide with an appealing cover backed by full content about anti-domestic violence. Since 2005, Gen has been directing the annual stage production of the “The Vagina Monologues.”
Gen is currently the President of the Young Filipino Professionals Association, a member of the San Francisco-Manila Sister City Committee, a member of the Filipino American Political Action Committee, and founding member of Citizen Hope. She works with the annual Filipino American Arts Exposition and Pistahan as its talent coordinator and executive producer for the Sine! Sine! Film Festival.
Clearly a jack of all trades, Gen’s motivation has always been to break the cycle of culturally ingrained myths and to help women communicate and handle internal frustrations. In all that she does, Gen works to connect people to elevate the community at large.
“You are your own cockblocker,” she said. “You have to believe in yourself first before anyone can believe in you.”
An emerging leader of the community, Gen’s youth and vitality have been undeniable assets as she betters the community with her passion and an unapologetic ferocity of standing up for those around her.
Elizabeth “Liz” Aguilar-Tarchi has been an Assistant
District Attorney in San Francisco for over 22 years. Currently assigned
to the general litigation unit, she serves as the unit’s hate crimes
specialist. Previously, Liz served as the domestic violence unit’s
managing attorney for two administrations and head of the narcotics
unit. Before her career at the district attorney’s office, Liz worked at
a civil rights firm and as chief aide to former San Francisco
supervisor Jim Gonzalez. She found her passion in public service where
she put herself in the frontlines of fighting domestic violence.

A
gifted attorney, Liz holds the record in San Francisco for obtaining
the longest sentence, 100 years to life, in a case. Despite her success
in all the various units she’s worked in, Liz found her niche in
fighting domestic violence. Liz brought an emotional end to an infamous
case that lasted nearly a decade, shaking up San Francisco law
enforcement. She successfully prosecuted Tari Ramirez for the murder of
Claire Joyce Tempongko, a 28-year-old Filipina, in front of her two
young children.
“I want to dedicate this award to the children of
domestic violence,” Liz said. “Often times, they are the silent
victims.”
Liz has worked tirelessly for years to influence and
shape law enforcement’s tools against domestic violence in California. A
former board member of the California Partnership to End Domestic
Violence, Liz is considered an expert in the area of domestic violence
prosecution and trial litigation strategies. She has trained attorneys,
paralegals, police officers and law students throughout the country in
domestic violence, stalking and trial litigation strategies. She has
also trained hundreds of police officers at the San Francisco Police
Academy in the investigation and collection of evidence in domestic
violence cases.
Of all her achievements, Liz regards two to be
her most significant contributions. She is proudest of creating the
specialized mandatory police report that is now used by the city police
department for all cases involving domestic violence. Previously, police
officers had been using a generic form. Liz also established a vertical
prosecution court for all misdemeanor domestic violence cases – a
critical component in establishing trust and cooperation – in which
there is only one key initial contact person for all witnesses and
victims.
Liz grew up in the Los Angeles city proper as a So-Cal
girl and one of six children in a large family. After graduating from
UCLA in 1979, she moved north to pursue her law degree at the Hastings
College of Law in San Francisco where she fell in love with the Bay
Area. After obtaining her J.D. in 1982, she decided to make the Bay Area
her home where she now lives with her husband and two teenage kids.
With
counseling experience that spans over 30 years, f

or the longest time,
Paulita Lasola Malay has provided comfort to countless Filipina women in
domestic violence situations with her expertise as a marriage and
family therapist. She is the only Filipina psychotherapist and the only
Asian in the field of domestic violence treatment and prevention in San
Mateo County. Through her work, Paulita strives to enable others to
create better lives and to help them transform their relationships into
happy, healthy ones. Through the years, Paulita has given to the
community over 880 hours of workshops on education, prevention and
intervention of domestic violence and on providing culturally sensitive
services.
In 1998, Paulita began her solo private practice where
she sees individuals, couples and families. Men and women seek her
expertise in cross-cultural and interracial relationships, anger
management and in attaining healthy relationships.
Previously,
from 1997 to 2002, Paulita worked as a Filipino outreach coordinator and
bilingual community educator at the Center for Domestic Violence
Prevention (now called C.O.R.A.) in San Mateo. During those five years,
she focused her efforts on helping victims of violence and in educating
the community about domestic violence and its prevention. Along with
founding the agency’s Filipino Outreach Program, Paulita also
established and facilitated a support group in Daly City for women in
abusive relationships.
Although Paulita is a foremost expert in
domestic violence treatment, she acknowledged she fell into the field by
a touch of serendipity. She didn’t start concentrating in the field
until 1995 when she began facilitating intervention groups for Filipinos
charged with domestic violence misdemeanors. Since 1990, Paulita has
served as a therapist at Pyramid Alternatives, a non-profit organization
in Pacifica. She leads three board-certified batterers’ intervention
and treatment groups. Two of these groups are for Filipino men who are
mandated by the courts to go to counseling after having been arrested
for domestic violence misdemeanors. Paulita has changed and transformed
countless lives working to teach offenders alternatives to violence. One
such past offender, Philip, accompanied Paulita when she received her
Vagina Warrior award on April 25 and stood as a testament to the lives
she’s transformed. Since working with Paulita, he transformed his life
and graduated summa cum laude from the San Francisco State University
with a degree in nursing. (Read his story on page 15 of the 2009 V-Diaries).