After a decade-long fight, a Filipino woman finally brings her son to Newfoundland - Action News
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After a decade-long fight, a Filipino woman finally brings her son to Newfoundland

The upcoming 10th anniversary of MyleneBadiola's arrival in Newfoundland and Labrador coincides with her birthday in June and for the first time in a decade she will get to celebrate with her son.

Mylene Badiolas battle continues to get her 2 other children to Canada

Mylene Badiola and her two Canadian-born children, Maya and Mikaal Druken, wait for Jade at the airport on Feb. 3. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

The upcoming 10th anniversary of MyleneBadiola's arrival in Newfoundland and Labrador coincides with her birthday in June and for the first time in a decade she will get to celebrate with her son.

In February, for the first time since 2012, the Filipino woman could finally wrap her arms around her son Jade, which she did in a tear-filled hugat the St. John's airport.

"I felt like I was going to faint. I am picturing him like he was five years old," she said.

Like many people in the Philippines, Badiola left for work in Canada to send money home and provide a better life for her family.

The only problem? She had to leave her three children behind Kate,Jelo and Jade, who were 11, nine and five years old, respectively, when she left.

Badiola will continue to work to bring her other two children, Jelo and Kate, to Canada. (Submitted by Mylene Badiola)

"It's painful. It's sad," Badiola said, fighting back tears.

"You don't like the feeling of leaving your children for work."

But as she left to help provide her family with a better life, Badiola made a promise to her children: "I am going to work to bring you here."

She started working as a counter attendant at a Tim Hortonsin downtown St. John's, moved up to shift supervisor and is now a manager trainee.A portion of her paychequewent home to her former husband, who was caring for her three children, her mother and her sister.

Mylene and Jade Badiola share tears of joy at St. John's International Airport. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC )

No money for legal help

Between shifts, she started looking at the paperwork-filled process to sponsor her children to come to Canada.

It took her two years before she even began the process, because she mistakenly thought she didn't have enough money saved. And when she applied in 2014 her application was declined, she said, her ex-husband in the Philippines wouldn't submit documents for their youngest son.

Badiola started working as a counter attendant at a Tim Hortonsin downtown St. John's, moved up to shift supervisor and is now a manager trainee. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

"In the requirements, the children that are on my application need to have all their medical requirements," she said. "He didn't get Jade's paperwork."

Badiola restarted thelong process, which took as long as 18 months even before the pandemic hit but she forgot to sign a specificdocument,killing the process before it started.

On her third try, she sent a cheque instead of paying online.

Application denied.

"Your immigration is very, very strict on all of the requirements. So it's been hard."

But she had a long list of people offering to help her out, including the owners of the Tim Hortonswhere she works, who paid for the application, and alawyer friend whohelped with the paperwork, pro bono.

I am not giving up on my kids.- Mylene Badiola

While her job and the immigration paperwork took up much of her time, Badiola found something she hadn't been looking for: love.

She marrieda Newfoundland man and has had two more children: Mikaal, 7, and Maya, 4. But two other children she had in Canada died ofTrisomy 18,a rare but serious condition in which children are born with three copies of chromosome No. 18 instead of two. Most children born with it die soon after birth.

Badiolahas grown accustomed to the challenges life has thrown her over the past 10 years, she said,but she's still in mourningover the loss of Nikolas and Malia.

But with three children a world away in the Philippines, adetermined Badiola resolvedto change that.

On Feb. 3, it did. After 10 years of phone calls and FaceTme, Jade now 15 years old arrived at St. John's International Airport.

With his younger brother, sister and stepdad holdingsigns and Canadian flags at the airport, Badiola with her boss and other friends and supporters standing behind her couldn't help but cry.

"I felt like my heart stopped beating," she said.

Mylene and Jade Badiola share their first hug in 10 years. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

More than two months later, Jade has enrolled in school and gone ice skating for the first time and is making friends at St. John Bosco in Shea Heights.

Her 15-year-old son is now an older brother kuya, as they'd say in the Philippines to Badiola's newest son and daughter.

But he's still a teenager no matter where he was born orwhere he calls home now.

"He won't zip up his hoodie, he won't wear gloves, he won't wear a hat," laughed Badiola. "I always tell him, 'You're going to get sick. You're not Canadian.'"

While the family adjusts to the newest member at their Shea Heights home, Badiolaremains laser-focused on the unfinished business: getting Kate and Jelo to Newfoundland and Labrador.

"I am not giving up, I am not giving up on my kids," she said. "One here, two more to go."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador