- Immigrants Among Us: Why they come to America
- Video: Conversations about becoming and being an immigrant in New Hampshire
- Liliya Mayevsky: Her parents brought her to the U.S. to live in a country free of persecution
- Sebastian Fuentes: ‘The dream of coming to America is definitely a hard one that few people can achieve’
- Glory Wabe: Proudest of her contributions to nursing in New Hampshire
- Geshe Gendun Gyatso-Konchuck: ‘People should see a wider perspective of other countries and other people’
- Ekoue Abroussa: ‘The people who are giving education, they are the best people in New Hampshire’
- Ali Sekou: ‘If you want to change things then be the ambassador of that change’
- Snizhana Riabko: ‘We are very happy that we have been welcomed like this’
- Maria Elena Letona: ‘I’m actually very scared for the United States as a country’
- Caroline Oguda: A lot of immigrants come because they are forced by circumstances
- Kateryna Nazaroya: ‘We are very thankful for everything’
- Sarah Walker: ‘We are good people’

Country of origin: PHILIPPINES
Glory Wabe is from the Island of Mindanao in the Philippines. She was married with children when she came to the United States in 1988. She was trained and working as a nurse so she qualified for a type H-1 Specialty Occupation visa.
The visa was just for her so she had to leave her husband and young children behind in the Philippines. Wabe explained that difficult decision made by her and so many fellow immigrant nurses this way: “Most of us just wanted to get out of the country and earn a living that would be paying us more than what we get there. That’s basically the reason. Plus, I was already married when I came here and I had kids. I really wanted to have the opportunity for my kids to choose where they would like to be when they grow older. Would they like to come here where I’d be preparing everything for them or would they like to just stay in the Philippines? “
She spent 10 years working in New Hampshire hospitals as a nurse before she was able to bring her three children here. In 1996 she became a naturalized citizen.
Since the early 1990s, she has helped recruit trained nursing and medical staff from the Philippines to fill positions in New Hampshire hospitals. In 2023 she retired as a nurse manager from St. Joseph’s Hospital in Nashua and they employed 31 Filipino nurses this year that she recruited.
One of the proudest contributions of her nursing career was the creation of a cultural diversity committee at the hospital.
“It was inviting people from different cultures and origins to show their culture, be proud and present their culture, first to the staff, because, you know, we’re not only dealing with patients coming from different cultures, but we also have staff that come from different cultures. So we have to understand why they do this, why they say these things and all that. Understanding is part of quality care.”