LETTERS FROM THE AGNO
March Fianza
Years ago, an Ibaloy
family sub-clan in La Trinidad wanted to hold their reunion somewhere in the
vicinity of the former Sepic Rd., the thoroughfare named after the headman of
the original family of Ibaloy settlers in that place. But alas, the family had
to hold their clan reunion with all the works and rituals elsewhere because of
the lack of a wider space at Sepic.
Sepic road that
connects Ferguson and Bokawkan roads is now fully crowded with walls of residential
houses nearly abutting each other. What has to be pointed out is that the
practice of indigenous ceremonies as part of a culture comes to a pause with
the possibility of vanishing if such rituals are not frequently performed.
By the way, decades before
the scheduled clan reunion, Sepic Rd. was renamed Roman Ayson St. through
legislation for reasons that have not benefited the descendants of Sepic or the
people of Baguio anyway.
Space therefore is an
important feature in the preservation of cultural rites, in addition to the
availability of pigs and animals to be butchered. Minus the two, it is
impossible to gather relatives and perform a cultural ritual.
What keeps the Ibaloy
customs and rituals alive today are occasional events such as the death of a
tribal member, death anniversary celebration of a prominent tribal member,
wedding rituals and thanksgiving rites.
The most common and
practical way of gathering clan members now is to schedule a reunion. This may
be held anywhere depending on the choice and approval of the organizers.
Financing and mobilizing such an event are voluntary and by “passing the hat”
for contributions.
In exceptional
reunions, a family or sub-clan agrees to perform a ritual and sponsors
additional pigs and animals to be butchered. Of course, the venue would be
nowhere else other than the family’s home yard. In that case, the ritual cum
reunion would be performed with lesser expenses on the part of other clan
members.
Seldom do we hear
about Ibaloy feasts being held now, especially in Baguio. But we still have
them in communities dominated by Ibaloys where space, pigs and animals for the
feast are available such as in Pico and other barangays of La Trinidad, and in
the 12 other towns of Benguet. They do still perform canyaos, batbat or peshit.
So while descendants
of Baguio’s original families perform Ibaloy rituals where they have
permanently settled, celebrating a common indigenous ceremony for the different
sub-clans such as the Ibaloy Day could not have happened without the space in
the Ibaloy Heritage Garden at Burnham Park.
Relative to having
open spaces for genuine cultural performances and other uses, there is need to
identify and preserve heritage and historical sites in the city, in Benguet and
other places.
Not that a group is
set to interfere with the plans and projects of the city and of private
individuals but Baguio’s physical environment has to take a break from
destruction due to too much construction. It is time for Baguio’s more
permanent citizens to assess the direction the city is taking.
Last January,
individuals belonging to private and government organizations were invited to a
discussion to identify and suggest heritage sites and places with historical
value that may be preserved and maintained.
The group consisted of
the Pine Cone Movement, Univ. of the Phil. Baguio, City Environment and Parks
Management Office, DOTourism, DepEd, Univ of Baguio, Baguio Heritage Foundation
Inc., Baguio Museum, city councilors, ancestral lands claimants and media.
They were assisted by
the Baguio City Heritage Stocktaking Project Team of Chat Delos Reyes, June
Prill-Brett and Rowie Boquiren who took suggestions and insights from the
participants.
The free exchange that
intermixed with the validation and consensus on what sites and structures to
protect was very enlightening. There was already a list of sites for validation
that were identified by the centennial commission, but these were private and
public structures mostly built after the city charter of 1909.
Prescilla Camdas
Balacio who was all of 94, came all the way from Nangalisan to listen to the
conversations that seemed to bore her. Maybe it was because she is way ahead of
us, has experienced time settings we know nothing about and she has been to
places we will no longer see.
If I had my way, I
would propose to mark the whole of Baguio as one heritage site. That would be
the shortest way to preserving and maintaining what remains of the natural
physical environment and private/public structures in the city.
The proposed heritage
sites for validation and possible preservation, if I may suggest, should
include structures that were built years before the city charter of 1909, and
historical sites that have been there “since time immemorial”.
No one knows exactly
how old is “since time immemorial” which, according to NCIP Commissioner Bas
Wandag may be equivalent to around a hundred years, based on assessments and
studies made by the agency.
It is also equivalent
to at least three generations of which one generation is 30 to 35 years. So
that in claiming that ancestral lands were continuously possessed “since time
immemorial”, or that a certain place with a historical value has to be
preserved as a heritage site, affiant-elders who give their testimony should testify
not only on their personal knowledge but also on what has been relayed to them
by those before them. Thus, “since time immemorial” should be three generations
above the present generation where the affiant is identified with.
No comments:
Post a Comment