Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Next Door

Advance Happy New Year dear reader!:)

How did the holidays go for you? I bet you had a lot of booze, food and holiday cheers. I had a fair share of that as well. In fact, I had a really good time with my family that a friendly neighbor who came calling out my name wasn't heard. When I finally did, I opened the door to see what she wanted and she didn't want anything - she was there to give out. Held in her hands was a dish made from her own kitchen. I gladly took it, thanking her with respect. Rushing inside the house, I began to rummage through my our dining hall for something to give to her in return. I managed to give her a serving of my Dad's best dish which she received with joy.

I started to ponder on what just happened and realized that it wasn't just an act of an ordinary neighbor. In truth, it was how the Filipinos went about. We give what we have to our neighbors or to our friends as a sign of hospitality. We offer our services even if we are busy. I realized that we aren't that bad as a people at all. Like what they say, it's better to give than to receive. Knock on your neighbors' doorstep, they'd be happy to have you in. :)

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Climb every mountain

Hello readers!:)

It's been awhile. I've been quite searching for a good thing to ponder on and I've been caught up with the holiday rush. Haven't you? Really, the years about to end and have we done enough? By we I mean you, me, and the whole community. The Philippines has gone topsy-turvy in the past twelve months. From the bloody elections to the change of image on our Philippine peso bills. Without any doubt, I know the Philippines has still a high mountain to climb.

"Climb Every Mountain" is a hit song from the musical "Sound of Music". Listening to it in an overture reminded me of the situation of our country. Indeed, we have a big big mountain to climb. The summit is way too high for us to see and we're complaining on the steep rocks on the trek. It's time for us Filipinos to take up a whole lot of courage to face another tread as we climb up the mountain. Can we make it? Of course we can.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Jewel of the Visayas

In the islands of the Central Visayas hides a very precious jewel that some may not know of. This is Dumaguete city - home of the prestigious Silliman University and of gentle people. My first encounter with Dumaguete city was during a church camp down at Sibulan, Negross Oriental. We passed by the City on the way to Manjuyod, another town in Negros. My first reaction was unbelievable, such a small city could contain almost everything a huge city could offer. I often term it as a mini-city, where your coffee shop is just a couple of blocks away from where you live. Amazing right? Silliman University is also one of my favorite spots in the city aside from the Boulevard. It houses the ever famous Luce Auditorium which is considered to be an elite auditorium leveling with the standards of the Culture Center of the Philippines and a lot more. The longest epic Hinilawod was staged in the Luce Auditorium a couple of months ago. Watch out as Dumaguete city restages it again!




www.hinilawod.com

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Play to Act

They say that theater involves acting injected with music and a lot of other effects such as lights, props, personality and a whole lot more. As an advocate of the arts, I have actually seen a couple of musical plays on stage. Some of them are boring as they go (or they just never amuse me) and some may be appealing. I personally think acting on stage is like any normal child's play, except that it's serious this time. Why do I say play? Simply because the whole masterpiece loses its sole purpose if the actors on stage do not have fun nor enjoy what they are doing. I actually know a certain number of people who do act on stage just for the sake of the monetary benefits and honestly, they do not live up to the standards of theater. Its mainly different when the actors put their heart into it just like any ordinary child playing with his/her favorite game. I remember as a kid I loved to play beautician. Whenever I take out my dolls, I brush their hairs carefully and dress them as if they were real. One musical play that I know of is Hinilawod. I have seen this stage play on stage twice and mind you, everyone (including their crew) had their passion of it. Well I guess they really understood what it meant to be on stage and talking to the audience or imparting their piece. That's what theater is ought to be. So the next time you think of acting, think of playing except that it's serious. :)



Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Mga Alamat

Legends have always been a part of a county's history. Regardless of what the power of mouth could do, they have always been there since the beginning of everything. Legends are supposed to explain the beginning or the origin of everything. In our own Philippine setting, we have what we call the "alamat". They also aim to explain the origin of a place, a land/water formation or a natural occurance. There have been a lot of alamats from different places and regions. The best ones are those untold and unwritten. Check out your local place, you might grasp an alamat that you have never known of.




www.hinilawod.com

Monday, November 8, 2010

Past Time

Who ever said Filipinos had no say on literature? I'd like to correct whoever person with a wrong perception on that. Our ancestors wrote timeless chants, prayers and poems. Some even went to the extent of writing epics and plays for local entertainment. Fast forward to modern times, Filipino writers have almost lost their edge on the way they do their passion. Some are stuck with romance novels sold at ten pesos a piece. Needless to say, this business is in boom - especially to the local mass. Why? First, it is binded with our local language. If not using the dialect of the region, the national language is used which is very much comfortable for most of the people. Second, the plot is based on a typical Filipino setting. We know how we love to swoon over love stories that are promising and even so, close to what we have. People can "relate" to whatever the novel talks about. Lastly, it is cheap and accessible to almost everyone. Having a book for ten pesos a piece isn't a bad price at all at these times. Cheap entertainment may not be that enticing but its almost found in every bookstore. Romantic novels may speak of our deteriorating standards on literature, we can always look back to where everything started.




www.hinilawod.com

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Rizal Cries

Before I give the article, let me give you an overview. The Philippines a Century Hencewas written by Jose Rizal in an edition of La Solidaridad during 1889. I came across this because we had to do a review for this in my history class. I thought it would be nice to share this with you for you to see how we were before. It also shows the tone of our hero when he wrote this. This is the first out of three parts so here goes:

THE PHILIPPINES, A CENTURY HENCE
Following our usual custom of facing squarely the most difficult and delicate questions relating to the Philippines, without weighing the consequences that our frankness may bring us, we shall in the present article treat of her future.
In order to read the future destiny of a people, it is necessary to open the book of its past. The past of the Philippines may be reduced in general terms to what follows.
Scarcely had they been incorporated to the Spanish Crown than they had to sustain with their blood and the efforts of their sons, the wars and ambitions, the conquests of Spain. In these struggle, in that terrible crisis when a people changes its forms of government, laws, usages, customs, religion and beliefs, the Philippines was depopulated, impoverished and retarded, caught in their metamorphosis, without confidence in their past, without faith in their present and without any fond hope for the years to come. The former rules who had merely endeavored to secure the fear and submission of their subjects habituated by them to servitude, fell like leaves from a dead tree, and the people, who neither had love for him nor knew what liberty was, easily changed masters hoping to perhaps to gain something from the change.
A new era thus began for the Filipinos. They gradually lost their old traditions and memories, they forgot their writings, their songs, their poetry, their laws in order to learn by rote other doctrines, which they did not understand, other standards of morality, other tastes, different from those inspired in their race by their climate and by their own way of thinking. Then they were humbled, degraded before their own eyes, ashamed of what had been distinctively their own, in order to admire, to extol whatever was foreign and incomprehensible; their spirit was disheartened and they acquiesced.
Thus, years and centuries passed. Religious pomp, rites that appeal to the eye, songs, lights, images arrayed in gold, worship in a strange language, legends, miracles, and sermons hypnotized the spirit already naturally inclined to superstitions, though they did not succeed in destroying it completely, in spite of the whole system later developed and followed with implacable tenacity.
When the moral humiliation of the inhabitants had reached this stage, when they had become humiliated and disgusted with themselves, an effort was made to give a last blow for subduing so many wills, so many dormant minds to nothingness, so that the person may become a kind of worker, a brute, a beast of burden, and to develop a race without a mind and without heart. Then the end sought was revealed. It was taken for granted. The race was insulted. The people were denied every good trait, every human characteristic. There were even writers and priests who pushed the movement further by trying not to deny to the natives of the country the capacity for virtue, but also to impute to them the tendency to vice.
Then this that they thought would be death became its sure salvation. Some dying persons are restored to health by a powerful drug.
Their patient endurance reached a climax in the insults heaped on them and the lethargic spirit woke to life. This sensitiveness, the chief trait of the native, was wounded and while he head the forbearance to suffer and die under a foreign flag, the head none when they whom he served repaid his sacrifice's with insults and ridicule. Then he began to study himself - slowly, until he realized his misfortune. Those who had not expected this result, like all despotic masters, regarded as a mistake every complaint, every protest and punished it with death, endeavoring thus to stifle every cry of anguish with blood and they made mistake after mistake.
The spirit of the people was not cowed by this, and even though it had been awakened in only a few hearts, its flame nevertheless was surely and fiercely propagated, thanks to abuses and the stupid machinations of certain classes to stifle noble and generous sentiments. Thus when a flame catches a garment, fear and confusion propagate it more and more and each movement, each blow is a blast from the bellows which fan it into life.
Undoubtedly, during all this time there were not lacking generous and noble spirits among the dormant race that tired to struggle for the rights of justice and humanity, or petty and cowardly souls among the dominated that helped in the debasement of their own country; but both were exceptions and we are speaking in general terms.
This has been their past. We know their present. Now, what will their future be? Will the Philippine Islands continue to be a Spanish colony? If so, what kind of colony? Will they become a province of Spain, with or without autonomy? And to reach this stage, what kind of sacrifices will have to be made? Will they separate from the Mother Country to live independently, to fall into the hands of other nations, or to ally themselves with other neighboring powers?
It is impossible to reply to these questions, for all of them can be answered by a "yes" and a "no," depending upon the time chosen. When there is no fixed condition in nature, how much less there ought to be in the life of peoples - being endowed with mobility and movement. So it is that in order to reply to these questions, it is necessary to presume an unlimited period of time, and in agreement therewith try to forecast future events.

JOSE RIZAL

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Men before and after

Men of today are stereotyped by the different media content that we see on TV. Some are called strong when they have huge biceps and a stern face. Others are nerdy when there is the presence of thick eyeglasses. Other men are just the way they are but don't often take the credit. Dating back to the ancient Filipino society, men weren't like that. They possessed a strong valor within themselves. The lines of the past as seen in the present, has now disappeared.

Last Sunday, I made an analysis paper for a friend of mine who's taking up Mathematics. Composition proved to be hard for her since it wasn't in her line of field. Coming across different sources for the paper, I stumbled upon one Literary piece from the Ilocos region that proved to be worthy of analysis. It was an epic known throughout the globe - Biag ni Lam-ag. It is an epic poem hailed from the Ilocos region. The poem is believed to be composite work of various poets who passed their batons to the ones next in line. It was first transcribed around 1640 by a blind Ilocano named Pedro Bucaneg. The main character in the epic is a man named Lam-ang. He was an extraordinary being possessing supernatural abilities even when he was born. As soon as we popped out, he had the capability of talking and choosing his own godparents. Young as he was of nine months, he traversed the mountains to search for his own Father. Upon finding out of his father's condition, he bravely fought for revenge emerging as victorious.

A little known epic which holds a record of being of the longest in the world is Hinilawod. It comes from the Hinilaynon nation which is better known now as Panay. This long epic is chanted when performed and contains 8,340 verses. Filipino historian F. Landa Jocano gave his efforts in translating and transcribing the epic into the language that we know of today. In the epic, a man known for his bravery was Labaw Donggon. When he asked for a hand in marriage, the father of the woman asked for the death of Manalintad as a part of his dowry. His adventures speak of heroism and victory that may take time to reiterate.

Men from the past stood up for what they thought was right. Their critical minds paved the way for their victory, thus earning them the respect they deserve in the society. Although these men came from mere epics, our ancestors gave life to characters in order to depict who they were before. Today men have been leaning towards cowardly behavior which is an indicator of a weak heart. There is nothing wrong with making the wrong turns and decisions, because in the end God will lead the way.

Check out these sites for more:

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Who is F.L.J?

I vividly recall this name when I was still in my elementary years. If I am not mistaken, the name was resounding from the issue of the tabon man and the first Filipino. Who is F. Landa Jocano then? In my attempt to gather my needed information, I was provided with a heap that I would not fit all of them in here.







Felipe Landa Jocano is an eminent historian, anthropologist, scholar and professor emeritus of the University of the Philippines. He is also the executive director the PUNLAD Research House where most of this works are published. Jocano is famous for his writings about the Filipino in ancient times, the ethnic divisions and the history of various ethnic groups which are oftentimes used as textbooks in a college setting.









One of great works include Hinilawod: Adventures of Humadapnon. This book tells of the story of the three demigod brothers - Labaw Donggon, Humadapnon and Dumadalapdap of Ancient Panay. He also recounts a concise version of the story in his book Philippine Mythology. It took him a lot of effort in writing down the epic. He climbed the hinterlands of Panay while collecting the needed information to put the pieces together.


Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Hinilawod

If other countries have their own musical play to be proud of, we have our very own. To start off, it isn't just any story made into a big production. It's an epic to be exact - one of the longest epics in the world.

Hinilawod came from ancient Panay or the Hiligaynon Nation. This is a literary piece which has 8,340 verses. As a part of culture, this piece is chanted when performed. Don't get too alarmed by the number. Hinilawod is basically a pure Filipino piece that showcases a true Filipino before we were stripped by the people of the foreign land. All our core values and our way of life during ancient times are clearly shown here.

The natives kept this as a part of their identity. Writing the whole piece became tedious for the interested. Because of it's original context in Hiligaynon, researchers had to go translate the whole thing into our present medium. One researcher who found a heart for Hinilawod and Panay was Dr. F. Landa Jocano.

Who is she and her contribution to this world-class epic?

....

Monday, July 19, 2010

An Ethnocentric Blur

Ethnocentric - centered on a specific ethnic group, usually one's own
Blur - A hazy or indistinct representation

Ethnocentric Blur - A hazy representation of our own ethnic group.

Why hazy?
Because we still don't know who we are. It's my role and our goal to make that blur vivid. So enjoy every bit of my peel as I tell you more of our race, starting with the epic "Hinilawod".