BENCHWARMER
By
Ramon Dacawi
(This
revisit of a piece written after I met this peacemaker in one of the “Lang-ay”
festivals in Bontoc, Mt. Province is out of our joy – and privilege – over
having met and known him and former Mayor Tom Killip of Sagada, Mt.
Province. Tigan-o now sits as town councilor of Sagada, representing indigenous
peoples. They need him there, even if the other members are also natives of
Sagada, indigenous like him. – RDacawi.)
While he is usually called to play
a crucial role early in the process, Jaime “Tigan-o” Dugao hardly figures in
the news about a peace pact restored or a truce forged to allow amicable settlement
of a clan, inter-village or tribal dispute in these Cordillera uplands.Understandably
so, as he and other traditional peacemakers are not the party to conflicts they
are asked to help resolve, sometimes with extreme urgency, by one or both of the
protagonists, their relatives and villages.
After all,
while the actual signing of the truce or settlement caps the process, it’s not
the defining moment. The breakthrough, which must be worked on early on, comes
when the aggrieved party accepts the peacemaker’s white flag, partly out of
trust in the latter’s integrity and fair-mindedness. A truce defuses tension,
averts escalation of violence in the case of grave criminal acts like murder,
and allows talks towards peaceful settlement.
At a chance meeting with friends from Baguio during the annual Lang-ay festival in Bontoc, Mt. Province, Tigan-o, a 65-year old father of six, broke into an almost toothless smile when asked how and why he got himself into the thick of things.
At a chance meeting with friends from Baguio during the annual Lang-ay festival in Bontoc, Mt. Province, Tigan-o, a 65-year old father of six, broke into an almost toothless smile when asked how and why he got himself into the thick of things.
He recalled
having been initially asked to settle differences between individuals and then
to resolve lot boundary conflicts. His successes at brokering began to pile up
until he was asked to convince villagers on the warpath over a killing to
change course and accept his truce offering, traditionally a metal item such as
a machete.
In one
attempt, he said it took almost a day before a village agreed to negotiate. His
party had traveled for hours to reach the village.
“We were
famished but couldn’t ask to be fed until they would accept our token for
truce,” he recalled. “It was four o’clock in the afternoon when they did,” he
added, grinning again.
“In this,
you learn the virtue of patience, to keep quiet and to listen…and know when to
speak,” he said over coffee at the second-floor veranda of the Churya-a Inn as
the Lang-ay cultural parade moved on through Bontoc’s main street below .
“We always
believe they (feuding parties) know the solution if only they would go back to
it,” he stressed.
Still, why
agree to mediate and withstand the stress of it all?
“Kasla
ragsak nga ag-pacify (It’s a joy to pacify),” he answered with the tact and
restraint of a seasoned peace broker.
Tigan-o was
into it even before his three-term service (from 2002 to 2010) as punong
barangay of Amkileng, Sagada town where he also served as municipal councilor
representing the barangays.
His group’s
biggest breakthrough came in the 1990s, after a slow and painstaking
groundwork for the restoration of peace and quiet in Sagada. The result was the
establishment of a Peace Zone that now serves as a model for adjoining towns,
other localities in the country and even in other countries.
Sagada then
was besieged by armed encounters between government soldiers and New People’s
Army rebels. With civilians being caught in the crossfire and residents unable
to work and till their farms, the people made clear their position for
demilitarization of Sagada to top brass of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
and the NPA.”
In numerous
dialogues with both sides, Tigan-o, then Sagada vice-mayor Thomas Killip, then
parish priest and now Bishop Alex Wandag, Fr. Peter Alangui, Dr. Andrew Tauli
and others tried to sink in the message: Please wage your firefights
outside Sagada.
“The Peace
Zone effectively set in concrete terms the supremacy of civilian rule, upheld
and upgraded the rules of engagement and fleshed out the meaning of self-rule
or autonomy,” then Presidential Assistant Killip pointed out last year. “The
Peace Zone was the people’s collective act of self-determination.”
“The AFP
saw it as a ploy of the NPA to gain foothold in Sagada, while the NPA suspected
it as an AFP strategy to pit the civilian population against them,” Killip
explained.
“We were
consistent in our position from the start that demilitarization from both side
was the will of the civilian population,” Tigan-o said. “Both sides swore to
serve the people and we said we were and are the people.”
The
breakthrough, Tigan-o, pointed out, came when then Senator Rodolfo Biazon
recognized the wisdom of it all, leading to its approval in principle by then
President Fidel Ramos.
Sagada’s
quest for peace led to the establishment of a cluster zone of peace also
covering the towns of Besao, Bontoc and Sadanga, initially chaired by the late
Catholic Bishop Cornelio Wigwigan and then former Bontoc mayor Alfonso
Kiat-ong.
Aside from
preventing armed encounters between government and rebel forces, the peace zone
cluster, Killip said in April last year, had mediated 17 village and
tribal conflicts. These include the rift in 2009 between Data, Sabangan,
Mt. Province and Taccong, Sagada on one hand, and Tulgao, Tinglayan, Kalinga on
the other, over the murder of a Tulgao-based businessman.
“Their
names were not in the papers but those who actually brokered the peace were
there from the start, from the crucial moment of having to hold on to a fragile
status quo to prevent further bloodshed and give them the time needed to set
into motion the peace talks,” Killip stressed.
Among
others, he cited Tigan-o, saying “it was he who saw through the negotiations
until the last ritual that restored peace pacts between and among the
communities”. (e-mail: mondaxbench@yahoo.com for
comments.)
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