BENCHWARMER
Ramon Dacawi
(This revisit is for fellow journalist Jun Balbin, Ilocos-based correspondent of the Philippine Daily Inquirer. He warmed this bench when he recalled Ifugao anecdotes I had written about when we met in a recent dinner with media colleagues in the province hosted by eminent human rights lawyer Pablito Sanidad and newly elected Ilocos Sur provincial board member Pablito Sanidad Jr.)
Ramon Dacawi
(This revisit is for fellow journalist Jun Balbin, Ilocos-based correspondent of the Philippine Daily Inquirer. He warmed this bench when he recalled Ifugao anecdotes I had written about when we met in a recent dinner with media colleagues in the province hosted by eminent human rights lawyer Pablito Sanidad and newly elected Ilocos Sur provincial board member Pablito Sanidad Jr.)
Indigenous wisdom and
knowledge. Respect for the environment and understanding of sustainable development. Thorough grasp of
landscape engineering. Innovation, creativity, sheer industry, clear vision,
mission, goals, objectives and targets.
Ecological and management
gobbledygook may help you understand how in the world the ancient Ifugaos could
have carved out their magnificent and extensive rice terraces from the
mountainsides.
Exclude forced labor as a
strength in your analysis of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats
-- slavery was never part of Ifugao history and culture. Wit and humor, as much
as betel nut chewing, are.
Include the element of
laughter and your hypothesis will be on the right track. It's no joke,
especially if you're dead serious and at your wit's end figuring out how they
were able to do it, sans iron implements, much less a bulldozer.
If shared laughter is
off-tangent, what else could have sustained and inspired our Ifugao forebears
during the tedious, cumbersome, protracted and back-breaking toil of leveling
and stonewalling the terraces?
If not humor, what pushed them
on to build the upland paddies that, we're told, would go halfway around the
world if placed end to end?
Ask any Cordilleran about the
Ifugao's natural wit and inclination to humor and laughter. They'll readily
dish out a sampling to perk up your day, sometimes at the expense of the Ifugao
character.
Ifugao jokes are aplenty and
continue to evolve, such that amusing anecdotes from other tribes are often
mistaken to be Ifugao in character and origin.
Even one-liners are enough
signs and proof of the preponderance of wit and humor in the Ifugao mind.
The late Baguio journalist
Jose "Peppot" Ilagan and this writer realized this while trying to
unwind after conducting a basic writing workshop for kids in Lagawe, the
capital town of Ifugao province.
We met provincial prosecutor
Joseph Tumapang, who generously treated us to rounds of beer at his
sister's restaurant near the provincial capitol. After several bottles, the
host turned serious and complained aloud that many of his lawyer friends in
Baguio always expected a joke every time they saw an Ifugao.
To avoid a clash over the issue, Peppot went to the comfort room. After relieving himself, he came out, grinning ear-to-ear and said: "Sorry, fiscal, but I just discovered there's only one comfort room here. From the door, I looked up and saw the sign, 'He or she but not together.’
The same advisory is posted on
the bathroom doors of the youth hostel in Kiangan, former capital town of
Ifugao.
Later, along the Lagawe
highway, Peppot spotted a hairdresser's salon sign. Notwithstanding his
receding hairline, he insisted on posing for a photograph beside the shop's
trade name so he could mail the print to then President Fidel Ramos. It read:
"Hair 2000."
A gasoline station in Banaue
had no restroom. Instead of building one, the management put out a positive
sign to discourage male motorists from answering the call of nature upon the
establishment wall. It read: "Only Dogs May Urinate Here."
A Banaue native narrated how
another Ifugao was emptying his bladder when he looked up and saw the sign. Too
late.
“So he raised his left foot
and finished his personal business."
Like most jokes, Ifugao humor
is better told than read, considering the impact of animated narration. Anecdotes
with local color are also best when told in the local dialect and its diction.
Something is always lost in the translation, given the nuances of language.
Perhaps translating the
following dialogues in Ilocano would help readers get the drift:
An old man halted a
Baguio-bound bus in Kiangan. The conductor peered out of the door and politely
asked, "Papananyo, ama [Where are you going, old man]?"
The old man shook his head,
pointed to the door and replied, "Ania dayta nga saludsod? Dita uneg ti bus
mo, ania pay ngay koma; isungarud nga pinarak [What question is that? Inside
your bus, where else?; precisely that' s why I flagged it down]."
He sat beside another Ifugao who was having a severe attack of hiccups. Wanting to help, he gave his seatmate shock treatment - a hard slap on the back. It worked but the impact drew anger from the seatmate who complained to a policeman among the passengers.
”Apay kano nga sinipat mo ti katugaw mo?
(Why did you slap your seatmate?),” the officer asked the old man.
”Sinipat ko a, apo pulit, ta
kumittab mit (I had to slap him, Mr. Officer, because he was trying to bite
me).”
Along the way, another
Ifugao passenger handed a bill to the conductor and waited for his fare change.
"Naggapuan na daytoy [Where from]?" The conductor inquired.
"Kaniak [From me]," the passenger retorted. "Papananna [Where
to]?" The conductor asked. "Kaniam [To you]."
Upon arrival in Baguio, the
Kiangan patriarch went to Burnham Park for his betel nut chew. A policeman saw
him spit on the ground and approached. The Ifugao stood up and placed his left
foot on the red spittle. The cop ordered him to raise his foot. The old man
raised his right. When the cop told him to lift the other foot, he pointed out
the obvious: "Mr. Officer, you know I can't lift both feet or else I'll
fall down."
Ignoring the need for a
cutting permit, an Ifugao woodcarver felled a huge tree, attracting a forest
guard who rushed to investigate. "Apay nga pinukanmo daytoy kayo [Why did
you cut this tree]?," the guard demanded. Matter-of-factly, the carver
answered, "Pinukan ko a ta saan ko ngarud nga maparut [I cut it because I
can't pull it out of the ground]."
”Adda kadi permisom, wenno kasuratan
nga mabalin mo nga pukanen [Do you have permission or a document allowing you
to fell it]?," the irate guard inquired. "Awan, ngem pinukan ko ta
inmulak daytoy [None, but I cut it because I planted it.]"
”Adda papeles mo nga mangpaneknek
nga mulam [Do you have papers to prove you planted it]?" "Awan, ngem ammok
mulak daytoy ta nag-tubo. Adda kadi inmula yon nga taga-gobyerno nga nagtubo
[None, but I know I planted this because it grew. Have you in government ever
planted anything that grew]?"
Exasperated, the forest guard
shouted in the vernacular, "Don't be a smart aleck; talk sensibly or else
I'll arrest you." Unperturbed, the Ifugao retorted, "Are you angry?
If so, wait while I set on this chainsaw so you can talk with it."
His anger turning to fear, the
poor guard shifted to friendly mode. "Ok, I'll not book you anymore. Let’s
be friends, instead. Is your water potable? Can I drink it?" The logger
offered his jug and, with the straight face, told his new friend, "You can
even chew it, if that's what you want."
Having had too much to drink
one evening, an Ifugao youth fell asleep on the roadside while on his way home.
A policeman on the beat came to check, pointing his flashlight directly to the
teener’s face, waking him up.
”Oh, so the moon came down,”
the boy uttered in disbelief, prompting the cop to ask if he was drunk. The boy
swore he was sober.
”If you're not drunk, can you
recognize me?"
"Yes, sir, you're a
police officer. How about me, sir, do you know me?"
”No!"
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