By Air Force Senior Airman Daniel Liddicoet, 446th Airlift
Wing DoD News Features, Defense Media Activity
JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash., November 18, 2015 — Growing
up in rural Tarlac province in the Philippines, Air Force Reserve Senior Airman
Anne Venice Jalos, a finance manager with the 446th Airlift Wing here, never
envisioned that at age 19 she would be serving the U.S. military as a
naturalized citizen.
"Being raised in the Philippines was very traditional; we
depended on our parents a lot. Women weren't encouraged to succeed; it
sometimes felt like I was being drug down," Jalos said.
After her mother moved the family to the United States,
Jalos felt emboldened with a new sense of hope for her future.
"Here, I knew I could be truly free," she said.
Soon after graduating high school and still relatively new
to the English language, Jalos made the boldest decision of her life --
enlisting into the Air Force.
"At first, I had no idea what to expect. I didn't know
that gaining my citizenship was even an option, but I knew that I wanted to
serve," she said.
Luckily for Jalos, her recruiter, Air Force Tech. Sgt. Erin
Bush, 446th Airlift Wing Development and Training Flight program manager, was
well-versed on the military guidance on naturalization.
"This program offers all legal resident aliens the
opportunity to earn naturalization as U.S. citizens through basic military
training. Once I really understood the potential of this program, I knew I had
to educate myself on it so I could offer this opportunity," Bush said.
Achieving U.S. Citizenship
Armed with a new resolve, four weeks of citizenship testing
and the successful completion of basic training soon culminated in what would
be one of the most meaningful moments in Jalos' life.
"When I was presented with my airman's coin at
graduation and I knew I was officially a citizen, I was overwhelmed,"
Jalos said.
"Saying 'I am an American airman' finally had so much
meaning to me because I knew that I really was an American," she said.
Full of patriotism and purpose, Jalos exhibits the kinds of
qualities that many airmen hope to possess.
"Being in the military has changed my life,” Jalos
said. “I know I can become who I want to be."
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