BENCHWARMER
Ramon S. Dacawi
Ronald
Kollin, fellow Igorot and college buddy who recently came home for the
internment of his sister, Manang Frances Laoyan, was the first to design
T-shirts proclaiming “Igorotak” . Accompanying that proclamation of
identity was the admission: “Igorot Pride, Hard To Hide”. His original design
turned out to be a bestseller at the first Igorot International Consultation in
Los Angeles in 1996.
Ronald
never registered his idea as his intellectual property. It was enough to drive
home the message amidst the lingering ignorance over who and what an Igorot is.
Now and then, the term triggers debate even among those who trace
their roots to the Cordillera where we, Igorots - either by birth, blood,
sentiment and choice - come from.
The
case of Cayat, the Igorot who was convicted in 1937 for having in his
possession a bottle of commercial gin, somehow helps put historical context
into this issue of identity. As the colonial laws that the governed the
Native Americans then also governed the “non-Christian tribes” of colonial
Philippines, Cayat had not right to possess or, worse, drink spirits
other than his native “tapuy”.
Then
young lawyer Sinai Hamada, an Igorot belonging to the Ibaloi tribe,
appealed the case up to the Supreme Court after he and Cayat lost the case in
the lower courts. The duo questioned the constitutionality of
prohibiting tribals from buying, possessing and tasting commercial liquor,
rights exercised only by other adult humans who were Christian or
non-tribal Filipinos.
Commonwealth
Act 1639, the basis for Cayat’s conviction, was repealed by Act 476 which took
effect on June 18, 1939. It was a one-sentence repealing act. While there was
no explanation why, Hamada’s taking on Cayat’s case to the end did open
the window for the national legislature to see things from the indigenous view.
It helped shatter the one-way mirror through which the colonizing West saw the
“Third World” it labeled as such.
It’s
true, the real voyage of discovered lies no in seeing new lands, but in seeing
with new eyes, in this case from the perspective of the indigenous and the
colonized.
Once,
in an international conference, a resource person from the West used the label
“Third World”, referring to much of Asia and the still-developing nations, in
his paper presentation. A delegate from India later questioned the tag demanding
to know what gave the speaker the right to label India as “Third World”.
As
per account of cooperatives advocate Paeng Gayaso, his fellow delegate from
India rightfully pointed out that his country was already at the peak of
civilization when Europe was still in the medieval age.
That
brings us to when the office of then Baguio Mayor Luis Lardizabal was
being swamped by letters from the West condemning our practice up here of
butchering and eating dog meat. Over generous shots of gin and sautéed dog meat
for “pulutan”, the mayor’s staff that included the late newsmen Willy Cacdac
and Freddie Mayo worked out a response.
You
need not look far in trying to protect animal rights, the mayor’s reply,
addressed to the letter writers from Europe, began. There should also be a stop
to the cruel fox hunts in Europe wherein the poor fox is chased, shot and its
body ripped by hounds, only to satisfy the hunter’s need to experience the
thrill of the hunt.
Fox
hunting, considered by advocates as part of rural culture, was eventually
outlawed in the United Kingdom by the controversial Hunting Act of 2004.
Four
years earlier, the Congress of the Philippines passed The Animal Welfare Act
which banned the killing of dogs and animals except “cattle, pigs, goats,
sheep, poultry, rabbits, carabaos, horses, deer and crocodiles”.
The
Philippine law, however, exempts from prosecution the killing of animals,
including dogs, “when it is done as part of the religious rituals of an
established religion or sect or a ritual required by tribal or ethnic custom of
indigenous communities”.
During
deliberations on the bill, Senator Juan Ponce Enrile asked whether the measure
would include human beings, as humans also belong to the animal kingdom. Taking
the drift, Senator Edgardo Angara qualified that its does not cover human
beings as humans had already enacted enough laws to protect themselves from
each other.
Seven
years back , I read about the case of a man in California who was apprehended
for possession of marijuana. Whatever happened thereafter, he initially
argued that the MJ was intended for use in a religious ritual, not a pot
session.
Whatever.
Cayat’s case brings to mind the experience of Albert Namatjira, the Australian
Aborigine noted for his impressive paintings, not in the traditional tribal
form but in water color he was introduced to by visiting non-Aboriginal
artists.
In
recognition of his artistic genius and stature, Namatjira was granted
Australian citizenship in 1957. He was the first Northern Territory Aborigine
to be accorded such status. As citizen, he was allowed to vote, own land, buy
and drink alcohol.
As
an Aborigine, he was expected by custom to share what he had, which he did. As
a result, he was charged of providing alcohol to non-citizens (his fellow
Native Australians), and was sentenced to six-month imprisonment.
Conflicts
between customary and state laws left Namatjira a broken man. When he got out
of jail after two months, he could no longer paint. He died a year after, in
1959. (e-mail” mondaxbench@yahoo.com for comments)
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