Towards a sense of place and history
>> Saturday, December 29, 2012
BENCHWARMER
Ramon S.
Dacawi
When asked by visitors, some Baguio residents
can’t tell how the city’s short, inclined main street got its name.
That’s why sixth and fifth graders of Rizal
and San Vicente elementary schools earlier sought the answer through the
“Baguio Kids Urban Heritage Walk” as the city was priming up for its
103rd charter anniversary on the theme “Fostering a Sense of History,
Community and Continuity”.
An offshoot of the Eco-walk environmental
awareness program, the walk through the urban landscape was informally launched
by the city in 2006, precisely to address the need for Baguio’s
children to learn about local heritage and history – including why Session Road
is so named like it’s where the city council holds its Monday
sessions.
Benguet Corp., once the world’s biggest
producer of gold and a backbone to the city’s economy during its formative
years, sponsored one particular walk last July. Former mayor Edna Tabanda of La
Trinidad, Benguet, now private sector representative of the Regional
Development Council, tapped the firm to support the walk and an art workshop
for the kids at the Busol Watershed as sidebars to the celebration of
Cordillera Month.
Back in class, Alecks Luis St. Jacobe of the
Rizal Elementary School said he learned Session Road’s name is linked to the
eight rock figures that replaced a cement version of a pine tree on the rotunda
at the upper end of the inclined strip.
“We’ve gone to see the 8 key rocks of
Baguio,” Alecks noted “ And there we saw that that’s why it’s called Session
Road because it was where the 8 commissioners walked.”
The eight rock figures, installed by Igorot
stone sculptor Gilbert Gano, represent the eight members of the Philippine
Commission who used to hold their summer sessions in Baguio during the early
1900s.
In the summer of 1904, members of the
Philippine Commission, the forerunner of the Philippine Commission, passed
through the future main street on their way to their session at what is now the
Baden Powell Hall fronting the bus terminal along Gov. Pack Road. the
commissioners,
That’s how the main street got its
name.
“The(ir) names were very hard to pronounce,”
complained Febei Lauryz Jacobe. “We walked and saw a (marker) infront (of the
Baden Powell Hall).”
Installed in 1940 by the Philippine
Historical Institute, the marker was moved from its original placement by the
management of the hotel that took over the Baden Powell Hall, named after the
founder of the Boy Scouts and formerly used as headquarters of the local Boy
Scout Council.
The inscription read:
“This is the site of the building where the
Philippine Commission held its first session in Baguio from April 22 to June,
1904, inclusive, officially initiating use of Baguio as the Philippines’ Summer
Capital. The Commission was composed of Governor General Luke B. Wright,
President, and Commissioners Henry C. Ide, Dean C. Worcester, T. H. Pardo de
Tavera, Benito Legarda, Jose R. de L:uzurriaga, James F. Smith and Cameron
Forbes.”
“In this session, 74 acts and 272 resolutions
were approved.”
Led by volunteers, the kids moved down the
main street, turned right at where Alhamar-Chainus, one of the city’s first
movie houses, opened in the early 1930s, and named in honor of
“(A volunteer)opened a gate (and) we saw a
long wall showing all the Filipino soldiers’ names,” Febei wrote.”I counted 854
(names on the wall of the Veterans Park featuring the members of the famed
66th Infantry that, together with the American forces, liberated Baguio on
April 27, 1945).”
The kids ended at the Burnham Park with a
quiz bee on facts about Baguio they learned along their route. They went home
with an umbrella each, courtesy of Benguet Corp.
The following Sunday, the kids from Rizal and
San Vicente elementary schools repaired to the Busol watershed for a basic art
workshop, again sponsored by Benguet Corp. and handled by multi-media Baguio
artist Art Tibaldo and his daughter Tim-Tam.
“Mr. Tibaldo told us that when we are
sketching a human face, always remember that the eyes are symmetrical to the
face,” recalled Febei.
In an earlier excursion into the watershed,
the kids started out at the Baguio Fire Station where Insp. John Ullibac got
them and their teachers into sliding down the fireman’s pole.
“At first I was so afraid but when it was my
turn, I had to (slide down the pole) because some were waiting for their turn,”
admitted Marie Adeline Cancio.
Arriving at the watershed aboard a big
medical truck, the kids visited the pine poles planted 20 years ago by pupils
of Rizal when the Eco-walk environmental program was launched.
“It was my first time to try my ability (at)
rappelling,” said sixth-grader Realyn Rabago. “I was amazed because it was my
first time to see a big pine cone. And there was a contest for the longest pine
needle and the biggest pine cone, although San Vicente Elementary School won.”
“The people there,” Ashtin Banglot
wrote, referring to the volunteers, “were kind and generous. They taught us
many things and let us plant a pine tree.”
As part of the city’s 103rd founding
anniversary, mayor Mauricio Domogan led in the forging of a memorandum of
agreement to make the “Urban Walk” an institutional partnership program of the
city, the city schools, the police and fire stations and other volunteers.
In so doing, they will ensure that other kids
will learn how Session Road got its name, in keeping with the Baguio Day theme:
“Fostering a Sense of History, Community and Continuity”. (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments)
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