
Mikayla Mushtare (Miss Little Philippines New York)
Mikayla Mushtare spent the year visiting firehouses, stocking food pantries, and sitting with soldiers who had nowhere to go for Christmas. She is six years old, a military kid from New York, and the most honest argument Little Miss Philippines New York has ever made for what it is trying to do.
She was at a firehouse on September 11 with a small gift bag and no press attached to the visit. No one had assigned the date to her. No one needed to. Mikayla Mushtare is a military child — born in New York, raised across postings stateside and abroad — and in a military family, September 11 is not a date you explain to your children. You take them somewhere and show them.
She showed up. The firefighters were not expecting her.
She was five years old at the time. She is six now. Before she ever competed for Little Miss Philippines New York, she had already volunteered with the Armed Services YMCA, helping prepare toiletry kits for military families navigating PCS moves — the upheaval of a Permanent Change of Station that military households know well. She won her title through competition, earning the crown at the end of a process that tested what she stood for. In the months that followed her coronation, she ran food drives at her school, donated groceries to the Armed Services YMCA during a federal government shutdown and participated in a holiday program for soldiers who could not get home for Christmas.
“I want to change the world,” she says.
Her parents describe a child who arrived at service on her own terms. “We’ve always taught Mikayla that helping others isn’t something you do because it’s required — it’s something you do because it’s the right thing to do,” they said. “The most meaningful acts of kindness often happen when no one is watching and there’s nothing to gain in return. If she grows up with a heart for service and compassion, that will always mean more to us than any crown or title.”
Merle Snow, executive director of Miss Philippines New York, has a specific memory that shaped everything the organization became.
“I saw how winners were celebrated briefly, and then often left to figure things out on their own once the spotlight faded,” she said. “That gap never sat right with me.”
She built Miss Philippines New York to close it — and this year, she is expanding it. Snow has announced the introduction of Miss Celestinial, a new international title open to contestants of all nationalities. The addition reflects the pageant’s commitment to diversity, inclusion, and global representation. The first Miss Celestinial winner will be crowned on June 6, alongside the other titleholders during the same ceremony.
“Winning isn’t the end — it’s the beginning,” Snow said. “A crown should open doors.”
Titleholders across all four categories — Little Miss, Miss Teen, Miss, and Mrs. Philippines New York — are required to complete twelve community service initiatives during their reign. They receive ongoing mentorship, advocacy guidance, and direct organizational support as they turn whatever cause matters to them into actual work. Cash awards run from $1,000 in scholarship funding for the younger brackets to $2,000 plus a modeling contract for the Miss and Mrs. categories.
Building an institution around that principle has meant constant tradeoffs. “It’s one thing to expand and reach more people,” she said, “but another to ensure that mentorship, community engagement, and personal development remain at the heart of everything we do. Maintaining this balance — while managing logistics, fundraising, and programming — has been a constant learning experience.”
The twelve required service initiatives demand real time and real commitment from any titleholder. Mikayla completed all twelve and continued past them without prompting.
School food drives for families in her community. Groceries donated to the ASYMCA during the 2025 government shutdown — the Armed Services YMCA, which covers the gaps federal dysfunction leaves for military families. September 11 firehouse visit. Salute to the Season, the holiday program for service members stationed away from home during Christmas and the New Year. She did all of it quietly, on ordinary days, in the year her title gave her both a platform and an obligation.
Snow was asked how she helps titleholders find advocacy that feels genuine. “We start with their personal experiences and guide them to explore causes they genuinely care about,” she said. “Advocacy should come from what they are truly passionate about, not something chosen just to meet requirements.”
Mikayla did not need that guidance. Her father’s military service runs through every initiative she chose. She knew why the ASYMCA needed food during the shutdown because her family lives inside that support system. She understood why Salute to the Season mattered because she has sat with a holiday calendar that has gaps in it. She went to the firehouse on September 11 because in her family, that is what you do on that day.
“I know real impact has happened when the work continues even without an audience,” Snow said. “When communities are helped, conversations continue beyond the title, and the change she started keeps growing.”
There is a Tagalog word — malasakit — for the felt concern for others that Filipinos reach for when they try to describe what holds the diaspora together. It works as a reflex: you see someone who needs something and you move toward them. Mikayla Mushtare did not learn it from the pageant.
Filipinos have been in New York since long before the 1965 immigration wave reshaped the city’s demographics. Maritime workers, domestic laborers, musicians who held gigs in midtown jazz rooms when that scene still meant something. The community today carries sediment from all of those arrivals, distributed across boroughs, suburbs, and generations, held by malasakit and by the pull of a homeland that many second- and third-generation Fil-Ams have never lived in but cannot stop orienting toward.
Miss Philippines New York operates inside that. Its Coronation Night each June pulls the metropolitan Filipino American community into the same room — families from New Jersey, sponsors, educators, elected officials, working professionals who show up because what happens on that stage reflects something they care about outside it. The runners-up from 2025 — Chanel Harmony Norris and Tristeen Abish Bernard in Little Miss, Andrea Agovino in Pre-Teen — left with something regardless of placement. The competition is one night. The organization’s program runs longer than that.
Snow has one long-term ambition she returns to. “Years from now, I hope people will say that Miss Philippines New York stands for building women of substance — leaders who make a lasting impact. I want it to be remembered as a program that invests in women, helps them grow with confidence and self-awareness, and encourages lifelong commitment to giving back.”
June 6, Andrew B. Hale Auditorium. Saturday night the auditorium fills with families who drove in, sponsors who wrote checks, and young women who spent months on the preparation that happens before anyone switches on a light — the community service hours, the rehearsals, the interviews.
New titleholders will be crowned. The first Miss Celestinial will be named. Scholarships will be presented. The room will be loud.
Snow said she measures a successful year by one standard. “At the end of the year, I feel a titleholder has truly done well when she has grown with confidence, self-awareness, and a strong commitment to service. Seeing her develop, inspire others, and leave a positive mark is what makes the year truly successful.”
Mikayla Mushtare will be in that auditorium. Six years old, wearing the crown from a year that included toiletry kits for moving military families, a food drive, a firehouse, a federal shutdown, and a program for soldiers who could not get home.
She said she wants to keep competing, keep building whatever platform she can, and use it to show other girls that they have more capacity to change things than most people have told them.
She has already shown that. The work came first.
Miss Philippines New York 2026 Coronation Night | Saturday, June 6, 2026 | Andrew B. Hale Auditorium.
Media Contact
Company Name: Fil-Am Press Club of New York
Contact Person: Troi Santos
Email: Send Email
City: New York
Country: United States
Website: facebook.com/troi.santos.1
