Typhoon Pirazo
>> Tuesday, October 14, 2014
LIGHT AT THE END OF
THE TUNNEL
Roger Sinot
ASIN HOT SPRINGS, Tuba, Benguet- Let me share copy of
contents of a Certificate of Ancestral Land Titles, commonly called as CALT
that every ancestral claimant dreams of.
Most of the 854 ancestral land claimants of Baguio that
have originated from the 48” Igorot Claims” have still their folders in the
Ncip-Baguio office for almost a decade after they were turned over by the Depat.
of Environment and Natural Resources . One by one, the claimants and their
heirs died without seeing the fruits of their efforts to have their lands be
titled.
Here is the contents of a CALT, “ Know all men by these
presents: Whereas, pursuant to the mandates of the 1987 Philippine Constitution
to protect the rights of Indigenous Cultural Communities to their ancestral
lands and domains, respect and preserve their culture and ensure their
economic, social and cultural well-being, and in accordance with the provisions
of R.A. 8371.
An Act to recognize and promote the rights of indigenous cultural
communities/indigenous peoples, creating the National Commission on Indigenous
Peoples, establishing implementing mechanisms, appropriating funds thereof and
for other purposes ... (then the name of the beneficiary) ...belong to the . .
.(tribe) Indigenous Community/Indigenous Peoples, having continuously occupied,
possessed and utilized since time immemorial under the a claim of ownership
certain ancestral land situated in ...(location)... containing an area of ...
(in hectares or square meters) ... more or less, more particularly bounded and
described on page 2 hereof is/are hereby recognized of their rights thereto.
To have and to hold ownership the above-described Ancestral Land.
To develop, control, manage, utilize and conserve the
said Ancestral Land with all the rights, privileges and responsibilities
appurtenant thereto, including the rights to/among members of the Indigenous
Cultural Community/Indigenous Peoples, subject to the customary laws and traditions
of the said community “.
Indigenous peoples, according to the United Nations,
“those people having any historical continuity with pre-invasion and
pre-colonial societies, consider themselves distinct from the other sectors of
the societies now prevailing in those territories or parts of them. They form
at present non- dominant sectors of the society and are determined to preserve,
develop and transmit to future generations, their ancestral territories and
ethnic identity, as the basis of their continued existence as people in
accordance with their own cultural pattern, social institutions and legal
system.”
While doing a review on files submitted by
conflicting claimants for settlement at the Council of Elders, I was all eyes
on an old Real Property Declaration which states, “ I, PIRAZO (one name),
residing in the town of TUBA, Province of Benguet, hereby certify that I am the
owner of the following property located in the Barrio of GUISAD, township of
Tuba. (note- the property is located in Guisad but in Tuba Township. It is an
Inoman Pastureland, a 10 hectare land. This tax declaration was sworn and
subscribed by then Tuba’s El President, WAKAT SUELLO. “ My grandfather Wakat Suello
was the El president of Baguio. When the real property declaration was signed,
he was then the El President of Tuba 1918, when the city was separated from the
Township of Tuba”, according to Mrs. Marrie Suello Kitma, the granddaughter of
Wakat Suello.
So, with the original copy of the Baguio Charter missing,
being the best source of information, Guisad valley(of Baguio) could have been
a part and parcel of the Municipality of Tuba just like in the case of Loakan,
whom the old folks claimed that they also paid taxes in Tuba in the early days.
Guisad Valley at present consists of barangays along the
hills that surround Guisad. Quirino Hill barangays, Pinsao-Pinget, Pilot and
Proper, Quezon Hill and Irisan. My question, “ Does the Inoman of Guisad declared
by my grandfather Pirazo lies along the hills? Or at the very heart of
BPI(Bureau of Plant Industry)? A cousin and newsman March Fianza texted and
said, “ As far as I recall, the junction of Bukawkan road and Magsaysay Road
was the “Inomantibaka”, where Agrix building is now located.”
At the back of the pasture hills were full of pine
trees and woodland forest. The Bureau of Plant Industry Compound was paddies of
rice fields.Before the Americans, Ibalois were in Guisad Valley namely, the
Pucays, the Bugnays, Heirs of Pirazos, Heirs of Sinot Solano, Heirs of Pasi,
and the Heirs of Kiangs in Badihoy. They were ruled by their elders.
They also maintained their forests called,
“Kakadkajowan”, similar to the Muyong of Ifugao. Then was the time when the Ibalois
took no more than they needed of trees for lumbers and firewood. The brooks and
streams, springs and rivers were never thought to be polluted. They had the
fullest of what their natural resources could bring. Those were the times when
one has to set aside the trees to find that Ibaloi hut at the middle of the
forest.
***
Typhoon “Mario” passed Baguio. This weekend comes Typhoon
“Neneng”. Watch out when the Typhoon “Pirazo” comes bit by bit. Guisad Inoman
is just one of the ancestral claims of his descendants here in Baguio and in
the neighboring towns of Benguet.
If and when the NCIP, the arm of
the government, mandated to give way for the IPs of Baguio rightful privileges,
am favorable that Baguio be in CADT statues. But for this Ibaloi writer, it
would be just his conclusion rather than his opinion.
“Happy trails to all indigenous people of the
Cordillera”. This October is Indigenous People’s month. “On baknabaknang kitejo
nemin!”
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