Festivals like Lang-ay, a matter of timing and people
>> Tuesday, May 5, 2015
HAPPY WEEKEND
Gina Dizon
BONTOC,
Mountain Province -- Any festival is considered successful when people are
around to watch shows, attend events and buy goods. It is collectively planned
considering availability of participants and attending public most especially.
This adds relevance to activities and information on the event.
And so the Mountain Province Lang-ay Festival
was held April 10 to 30 separated from the holding of the Foundation Day of the
province held April 7.
Various activities were lined up during the
20 day Lang-ay event to include the cultural expositions held April 20-24 where
municipal delegates were witness to their own performances with unsatisfactory
public presence held April 20-24.
This was noticed when I passed by the
Multipurpose Hall on April 24 to see the Paracelis delegation performing among
themselves and watching their own performance. I came to know other
municipalities had the same non-festive frustrating experience with no
satisfactory attending public to watch their show with two town performances
scheduled per day on said week.
A friend said Mountain Province is not like
Baguio where almost any day draws people to watch a show. Baguio
holds its month-long Panagbenga festival with a variety of events starting
February.
Municipalities in the province are located an
hour distance drive away to the capital town of Bontoc with eastern barangays
having two to eight travel hours before reaching the main town.
This means going to the capital town is a valuable day for intentions to be
done within a limited time at a certain given day to consider expense and work
left at home.
To be going to Bontoc just to watch a
cultural exposition of two municipalities for a day and the next four days
would be an impractical thing to do.
It seems those from Bontoc are the ones
expected to watch the event but of course barangay constituents from Bontoc too
are located an hour drive from the main town except those from the central
zone. But of course they too have their own preoccupations and work to do
on regular weekdays. And for the province where an estimated
80% of the populace as farmers, people are busy working on fields or attending
to other matters.
Mountain Province is basically an agricultural
town unlike Baguio where the major source of income is entrepreneurship to add
to those office based.
The second week of April signals the time
when rains come and people start cleaning their fields and planting corn and
legume seeds. With livelihood and field work more of a priority than attending
events makes events not enticing enough for work to be sacrificed to watch a
show.
It is a respite that the street dancing and
cultural presentations were held April 25. It had been a successful event
that the streets were swarming with the attending public from the different
municipalities of the province who came in droves to attend the much loved and
attended event.
There is a season for everything and the
street dancing and cultural presentations were scheduled on April 25.
Whatever day the street dancing event could have been scheduled could have
shown that people could have given up what they were regularly doing to
attend an event where the ten municipalities perform and show their distinct
cultural dances to the delight of the crowd.
A friend said a onetime cultural
event where the 10 municipalities come together would be perfect. I agree
with her. The onetime event within certain period of time is cultural. Just
like begnas or a babayas or wedding celebration where people come together and
enjoy each other’s company dancing and being with each other on a given
significant occasion. Babayas is culturally scheduled May and
December.
Again, timing is important to consider being
together.
While the nine towns of the province were
enjoying the provincial scenario, it is was an unfortunate event that one
cannot attend as it is their annual festival day.
Natonin is part of Mountain Province. Its
absence was felt during street dancing and cultural presentations on April 25
which date also coincides with their annual Sas-aliwa festival.
The theme of the Lang-ay One People,One
Heritage, One Direction towards Cultural Integrity missed the presence of one
vital and important part of the oneness of what the theme expressed
-- the supposed presence of Natonin during a most participated
street dancing event.
Towns have their own similar festivals which equally draws people and decreases
attendance to a neighboring festival held on same dates.
The Sagada booth I came to see was abandoned
as early as the 16th of April and the agro booth owner-entrepreneurs
having attended the Hungduan festival scheduled April 18 to 25 to sell their
wares.
The Hungduan event must have been more
enticing that the Sagada agro booth folded up and carried their wares to sell
at the Hungduan festival. Banaue’sImbayah Festival falls on the last
week of April by the way.
And so I came to know the Lang-ay days except
the much attended April 25 street dancing day did not see much people milling
around to make the 20 day event festive for people to come together and buy
what is displayed.
It must have been reason Sagada booth holders
cut their display days during the Lang-ay event and went instead to a more
entrepreneurial opportunity obviously as I find no other convincing reason
otherwise.
If there are not much people, there is less
sales. I asked some trade fair booth entrepreneurs how their sales
were and one said she was only able to sell 240 pesos for day and
worse for the other booth holders as one sold only P120 a day. This was April
24.
I consoled the vendor from Baguio saying
there will be more people tomorrow for sure because it’s the street\ dancing day
on the 25th.
I went back on the last day of the festival
April 30 to ask her sales and didn’t find her with her booth already folded up.
It’s reassuring to note from Ifugao and
Bontoc entrepreneurs selling woven products who were still present during the
last day on April 30 that they had promising sales. Their sales as compared
to the previous years when the event was held first week of April, surpassed
previous year’s sales.
“With the long 20 day festival we incurred
more expenses,” one said.
Comments from booth holders and the public
bared one week-long festival was good enough.
And so with the above, either the Lang-ay
festival shall revert on the first week April as previously held and have the
last day with or separated from the Foundation day on April 7, or begin the
celebration after April 7 but before the
2nd week of April when festivals from other neighboring towns and provinces are
held and when rains come and farm work gets busy.
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