‘Sus-uwa’ in Sagada with repainting of SMS mural, Lolita Carbon concert
>> Friday, March 13, 2020
HAPPY WEEKEND
Gina Dizon
SAGADA, Mountain Province –
‘Sus-uwa’ is a ritual in Sagada done as part of a ‘senga,’ a cultural practice
in thanksgiving of an undertaking like construction of a house or the graduation of a
child.
Sus-uwa is also observed by a parent or a sibling for a member of the
family who died.
The ritual is a prayer and the setting is solemn, with no one talking,
sneezing, coughing, talking, walking and even a fart is prevented from breaking
out so as not to break the flow of the prayers.
A cooked part of a chicken or a pig with a bit of rice on a plate and a
bowl of soup is placed on the floor. Also included is a glass/cup of wine. This
will do if there is no ‘tapey’ (fermented rice wine). Although traditionally,
it should be ‘tapey’.
The door is guarded so no one will come in while the ‘amam-a’ (male elders)
do a monotonous prayerful incantation of good health and good luck for members
of the family who did the senga and that Kabunyan (God) take care of the
household members.
The sus-uwa could last for 10 minutes to 30 minutes depending on the incantation
of the elders. The setting is solemn and prayerful.
Now, the sus-uwa is set to be done in reference to the “re-imagination,”
repainting and re-touching of a mural originally done by artist Santiago Bose
at the wall frontage of St Mary School in the 1980s.
The “Sos-owa” as it is titled in big, bold letters on a poster shall be
held on March 8. With the many years that passed, the paint and the sketches of
the figures weathered, withered and unrecognizable with some figures still
visible at the frontage wall of St Mary School.
The original painting then showed figures of persons closely huddled
together and each holding a ‘kalasag’ (shield) and standing in front of rice
terraces.
There is also the picture of a woman holding a ‘labba’ (basket) and in another
section of the mural, a figure of a ‘tinagtago’ (carved form of a human
being) among other features.
Whatever story the mural told, other features are not so clear to see
with the passing of time and the weathering of the paint. Though the message of
the mural must have depicted the beliefs and cultural practices of Sagada folks
who nurture and guard ricefields, waters and forests, one with the waters and
the earth, fire and wind plants and animals and spirits guarding these.
We came to know the painting was and the repainting now is supported by
Boy Yuchengco, son of philanthropist-businessman Alfonso Yuchengco
who donated funds for construction of the now St Mary School building after the
earlier school edifice made of pine wood was burned in May 1975.
Bose died in 2002. His artist friends from Baguio and other Cordillera
artists are now doing the repainting with added features including a rainbow in
the current 2020 project.
After the “Sos-owa” in the morning to be solemnized by elders of Sagada
is a concert at the ball ground with Lolita Carbon, known for her environmental
and social concern songs.
The softball ground was then the site where the Asin folk band once
played their most nostalgic concert one happy night in the ‘80s and
people of Sagada were treated to a groovy and euphoric moment of all sorts with
Asin’s popular Kapaligiran, Balita, Cotabato, Tuldok among other
hits.
That was in the 1980s. Fast forward. It’s now 2020. Some
40 years ago and with less other members of Asin band. Now only with
Lolita and her husky voice. Must still be husky and beautiful now with the
mellowing of time. Lolita comes with a reggae band called Weather the Roots and
another group called Aman Sinaya.
This time, it’s a concert in the afternoon that comes after a prayer
ritual to be held in the morning of March 8. Not really in celebration of
International Women’s Day but a notable day because it’s a Sunday for people to
rest and give thanks to the Lord.
The concert comes with an event entitled Sos-owa. Any Sagada-Igorot who
knows his or her culture shall ask why ‘sus-uwa’ when the setting is a
folk-reggae- concert with drums, guitar and percussion and the mood likely to
be is lively, danceable and groovy.
Quite ironical to the solemn, prayerful, still and monotonous
incantation of elders in a cultural ritual termed sus-uwa.
A Facebook chatbox among some Sagada folks are saying the title of the
concert ‘Sos-uwa’ may not be appropriate. They suggest it better be
called ‘liwliwa’ as it is lively. Though others said ‘liwliwa’ does not come
with drums and gongs as the instruments are played during a feast.
Better, others said, that it be called ‘day-eng’ meaning
music. While another said it better be called ‘sapsapit’
as it shall tell the story of a subject.
And so the issue went on
about the use of a cultural term they said was inappropriate to an event, the
concert. Though ‘sos-owa’ is alright for the conduct of the unveiling of the
mural ritual.
Obviously, the program held in Sagada was not conceptualized and titled
by an iSagada. Sus-uwa pronounced with U's is said with puckered lips and not
sos-owa with rounded O's.
Nevertheless, it’s one's option to be in a prayerful mood to watch the
concert publicly held in the afternoon at the soft ball ground separate from
the venue of the unveiling of the mural ritual done in the morning at the SMS
quadrangle at the same day.
An event many alumni of Saint Mary School will know what the ritual is
all about.
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