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Ruth Ana “Villa” <I>Manigos</I> Villafranca

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Ruth Ana “Villa” Manigos Villafranca

Birth
Aloguinsan, Cebu Province, Central Visayas, Philippines
Death
19 Oct 2020 (aged 66)
Burial
Cremated. Specifically: Her ashes will be spread over the Rosebud Indian Reservation and also, with her husband's ashes, turned into a diamond ring Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Obituary for Dr. Ruth Ana Manigos Villafranca

Sometimes, there are people in life that you gravitate towards because they're full of light. My mother was one of those people. Always smiling. Always laughing. And always being the center of the room wherever she went. My mom touched lives in more ways than just one, she was a person that motivated you, a person that comforted you, and most importantly, a person that cared for you.

Born on February 27, 1954, in Aloguinsan, Barili, Cebu, Philippines, my mom attended high school, college, and medical school in the Philippines before coming over to the United States in 1983.

She worked as a physician and clinical director for the Rosebud Sioux Tribe and Rosebud IHS Hospital in Rosebud, South Dakota for 10 years before undergoing residency training at the University of North Dakota for Family Medicine. After completing her residency training, my mom left the reservation shortly after I was born and became a family physician here at the Blair Clinic; where she would remain a prominent figure around the hospital for the next 16 years. Whether it was her famous high-heeled shoes clicking down the floor or her quirky mannerisms that always made people laugh, my mother always left a little sparkle wherever she went.

After retiring from the Blair Clinic in 2013, my mother returned to her first home with the Rosebud Sioux Tribe and took over the position of the clinical director before settling into her final role as ER Supervisor for the Rosebud IHS Hospital.

She was passionate. She was loved. And she always made sure everyone was taken care of. Just like in the Blair Clinic and Hospital, she couldn't walk down the hallways without someone stopping her and going "Villa!" and giving her a huge hug. She touched hearts where she went and those hearts in return always touched hers.

My mom was diagnosed with late-stage pancreatic cancer in March of 2020 after we had gotten back from our most recent trip to the Philippines for her class reunions. She fought cancer with everything she had, undergoing treatment until the very end. She was a fighter and everyone knew it, she was not going to go down without a fight and that's exactly what she did. However, with all good things that must come to an end, she lost her battle with cancer on October 19, 2020.

Her legacy will never be forgotten. The hearts she touched, the babies she delivered, and the funny things she said will forever be etched in our minds and in our hearts. Celebrate her life in the way she would want it to be celebrated, with joy and laughter around every corner.
She was and still is, the light of my father's and my lives.

We love you very much mom and it's never goodbye, it's see you soon.

Dr. Ruth Villafranca is survived by her husband, Dr. Jesse Villafranca, her daughter, Dr. Jassalya (Jash) Villafranca, and her younger sister, Ophelia Manigos Morales.

She was cremated and her ashes will be spread overlooking the Rosebud Indian Reservation.
A memorial service will be held in her honor with an announcement in a few weeks' time.

The Rosebud Sioux Tribe will honor her memory and dedicated service with a "Dr. Villafranca Day" being held every year on November 14.

Rest in Power Mom, We Love You.

Campbell-Aman Funeral Home in service to the family.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
from obituary courtesy of Campbell-Aman Funeral Home, Blair, Nebraska; tributes from FaceBook
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The world lost a wonderful doctor and a loving and caring human being--Pat Williby, FB

Occasionally you'd see her in between patients in her stockings and at the nh she put on sneakers. I'd have a sandwich. Water juice all the charts at the main nurses station and she d put on her sneakers, eat, review the charts and off we go to see patients. As my own dr she knew her stuff and wasn't afraid to treat me. I hated to see her leave Blair. A true love for her gift , her time back home for mission work , her devotion to her family and her dogs. She will be missed--Shelly Williby Andreasen, FB

I really loved and admired her. She cared for my mother and me, and helped us understand difficult diagnoses. I will miss her, and love the idea of the Rosebud Sioux honoring her. May her memory be a blessing to all who knew her.--Connie Buller, FB

This is so sad. She was great. And how she wore those heels all the time, I will never know. Rest in peace Dr V.--Michelle K Mckinnis-Campbell, FB

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Printed in the August 24, 2021 Pilot-Tribune, Blair, Nebraska

Tuesday, August 24, 2021 12:35 pm
There will be a Celebration of Life for Dr. Ruth Villafranca Aug. 27, 2021, at 5 p.m., Black Elk- Neihardt Park in Blair.

A main dish and drinks will be provided. You are welcome to bring a side dish or desserts.
Obituary for Dr. Ruth Ana Manigos Villafranca

Sometimes, there are people in life that you gravitate towards because they're full of light. My mother was one of those people. Always smiling. Always laughing. And always being the center of the room wherever she went. My mom touched lives in more ways than just one, she was a person that motivated you, a person that comforted you, and most importantly, a person that cared for you.

Born on February 27, 1954, in Aloguinsan, Barili, Cebu, Philippines, my mom attended high school, college, and medical school in the Philippines before coming over to the United States in 1983.

She worked as a physician and clinical director for the Rosebud Sioux Tribe and Rosebud IHS Hospital in Rosebud, South Dakota for 10 years before undergoing residency training at the University of North Dakota for Family Medicine. After completing her residency training, my mom left the reservation shortly after I was born and became a family physician here at the Blair Clinic; where she would remain a prominent figure around the hospital for the next 16 years. Whether it was her famous high-heeled shoes clicking down the floor or her quirky mannerisms that always made people laugh, my mother always left a little sparkle wherever she went.

After retiring from the Blair Clinic in 2013, my mother returned to her first home with the Rosebud Sioux Tribe and took over the position of the clinical director before settling into her final role as ER Supervisor for the Rosebud IHS Hospital.

She was passionate. She was loved. And she always made sure everyone was taken care of. Just like in the Blair Clinic and Hospital, she couldn't walk down the hallways without someone stopping her and going "Villa!" and giving her a huge hug. She touched hearts where she went and those hearts in return always touched hers.

My mom was diagnosed with late-stage pancreatic cancer in March of 2020 after we had gotten back from our most recent trip to the Philippines for her class reunions. She fought cancer with everything she had, undergoing treatment until the very end. She was a fighter and everyone knew it, she was not going to go down without a fight and that's exactly what she did. However, with all good things that must come to an end, she lost her battle with cancer on October 19, 2020.

Her legacy will never be forgotten. The hearts she touched, the babies she delivered, and the funny things she said will forever be etched in our minds and in our hearts. Celebrate her life in the way she would want it to be celebrated, with joy and laughter around every corner.
She was and still is, the light of my father's and my lives.

We love you very much mom and it's never goodbye, it's see you soon.

Dr. Ruth Villafranca is survived by her husband, Dr. Jesse Villafranca, her daughter, Dr. Jassalya (Jash) Villafranca, and her younger sister, Ophelia Manigos Morales.

She was cremated and her ashes will be spread overlooking the Rosebud Indian Reservation.
A memorial service will be held in her honor with an announcement in a few weeks' time.

The Rosebud Sioux Tribe will honor her memory and dedicated service with a "Dr. Villafranca Day" being held every year on November 14.

Rest in Power Mom, We Love You.

Campbell-Aman Funeral Home in service to the family.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
from obituary courtesy of Campbell-Aman Funeral Home, Blair, Nebraska; tributes from FaceBook
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The world lost a wonderful doctor and a loving and caring human being--Pat Williby, FB

Occasionally you'd see her in between patients in her stockings and at the nh she put on sneakers. I'd have a sandwich. Water juice all the charts at the main nurses station and she d put on her sneakers, eat, review the charts and off we go to see patients. As my own dr she knew her stuff and wasn't afraid to treat me. I hated to see her leave Blair. A true love for her gift , her time back home for mission work , her devotion to her family and her dogs. She will be missed--Shelly Williby Andreasen, FB

I really loved and admired her. She cared for my mother and me, and helped us understand difficult diagnoses. I will miss her, and love the idea of the Rosebud Sioux honoring her. May her memory be a blessing to all who knew her.--Connie Buller, FB

This is so sad. She was great. And how she wore those heels all the time, I will never know. Rest in peace Dr V.--Michelle K Mckinnis-Campbell, FB

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Printed in the August 24, 2021 Pilot-Tribune, Blair, Nebraska

Tuesday, August 24, 2021 12:35 pm
There will be a Celebration of Life for Dr. Ruth Villafranca Aug. 27, 2021, at 5 p.m., Black Elk- Neihardt Park in Blair.

A main dish and drinks will be provided. You are welcome to bring a side dish or desserts.


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