Honoring a Community Activist, Chronicler and Creative Filmmaker

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 20, 2024
Contact: Jon Melegrito
Tel. 202-361-0296
Sonny Izon’s widow, Kathryn, receives the Congressional Gold Medal from FilVetREP Chairman Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba (Ret). Looking on, from left, are granddaughter Juliet Izon, FilVetREP Board Member Lida Peterson and daughter Laura Izon. (photo by Bing Branigin)
Washington, D.C.

Sonny Izon and wife Kathryn were waiting to board their flight in Milan, Italy on October 25 last year after celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary. They also attended a special screening of “An Open Door: Holocaust Haven in the Philippines,” Izon’s award-winning documentary about the acceptance by the Philippines of more than a thousand Jewish refugees who were fleeing Nazi persecution in Europe before the outbreak of World War II.
The 76-year-old filmmaker, however, didn’t make it back to their home in Takoma Park, MD. He passed away on that day.
A founding member of the Filipino Veterans Recognition and Education Project (FilVetREP), Izon was remembered lovingly by family members, friends and colleagues who gathered for a memorial mass on September 14 at the University of Maryland Chapel in College Park – the same chapel where the couple exchanged vows 51 years ago.

To honor Izon’s achievements as “our premier quintessential documentary filmmaker who contributed immeasurably to our group’s success in securing passage of the Congressional Gold Medal in 2016,” FilVetREP Chairman Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba (Ret) presented the award to the Izon family during the Personal Reflections segment following the Mass. Izon’s wife Kathyrn, daughter Laura and granddaughter Juliet, accepted the medal, commemorative coins and other mementos. “This is all in remembrance of a truly honorable man,” Taguba said. The gathering of friends responded with a standing ovation.

A dozen other friends and colleagues shared recollections and reminiscences. Izon’s daughter, Laura, recalled her father’s playfulness and sense of humor. “We are so lucky to have laughed with him,” she said. A reception followed after the mass at the Mulligan’s Grill & Pub, where Izon’s fellow musicians played his favorite songs. Izon was the band’s bassist.

‘Up front and center’
In his remarks, Taguba noted how Izon was “up front and center in producing a series of documentary films to enable our group to show members of Congress why they should approve the Congressional Gold Medal for the soldiers whose interminable service and sacrifice saved our country.” Taguba added that “Sonny had a deep personal association with the compelling and powerful story of the Filipino Veterans experience since his father was also involved in fighting the Japanese invaders.”
In developing FilVetREP’s educational program, www.dutytocountry.org, Taguba described Izon’s professional work in the oral history segments of the online program that featured 30 interview sessions with living veterans and family members. Kathryn also provided voice narrations in some of the videos.
“Sonny was everywhere in his remarkable and personal contributions to elevate and present the incredible contributions of Filipino and American soldiers who were denied their promised entitlements and compensations when Congress passed the Rescission Acts of 1946,” Taguba said.

“Without Sonny’s personal involvement, creative film producing experience, and persistent efforts, FilVetREP would not have accomplished its mission of securing national recognition of our veterans.”

Among Izon’s other notable contributions as “a pillar of community activism,” was his documentary “Untold Triumph,” a story of Filipino soldiers in California and Hawaii who enlisted and made their way to the Philippines in 1944-45. He also lent his documentary skills in chronicling 100 years of the Filipino American story. Singgalot, the 2006 Smithsonian Centennial Commemoration exhibit, celebrated Filipino Americans’ struggles, challenges and achievements.

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The Filipino Veterans Recognition and Education Project (FilVetREP), is a nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) tax-exempt, community-based, all-volunteer national initiative whose mission is to obtain national recognition of Filipino and American WW11 soldiers across the United States and the Philippines for their wartime service to the U.S. and the Philippines from July 26, 1941 to December 31, 1946. For more information about Filipino WWII veterans and how to get involved, visit our website at www.filvetrep.org or find us on Facebook or Twitter.