Katutubo: Memory of Dances by Philippine Center For I Nvestigative Journalism
Katutubo: Memory of Dances by Philippine Center For I Nvestigative Journalism
Katutubo: Memory of Dances by Philippine Center For I Nvestigative Journalism
JOURNALISM
TAGBANUA Coron, Palawan
Main invaders were Moros and Spaniards
11 lakes in Coron is sacred for the Tagbanua’s
Kayangan Lake is the most accessible
Coron to be under RA No. 7586 or the National Integrated
Protected Areas System (NIPAS)
No roads, no electricity, no doctors resulting to death from
malaria
HISTORICAL INJUSTICES
Outsiders use explosives,
cyanides, and dynamites when
fishing, thus, resulting to the
whitening of the corals
Outsiders steal relics in their
ancestral lands (caves)
The gov’t wants to make Northern
Palawan a tourist center
In 1993, they applied for the
Certificate of Ancestral Domain
(CADC)
A writ for the claiming of
their ancestral lands
They were claiming over
20,000 hectares including
Coron and Delian
It took them 7 years,
however, local officials
ignored their right to
their ancestral land
Tourism will bring destruction to
their lands
IBALOI/IFUGAO Sierra Madre and Cordillera
Igorot –a community of Ibaloi and Ifugao
Migrated in 1950 to Vizcaya
Wood carving
Cañao –performed to heal a sick person
They outnumber the Bugkalots
HISTORICAL INJUSTICE
The gov’t built the Ambuklao
Dam –their homeland and this
resulted to the ff:
Gov’t forbade them to farm
No livelihood left
BUGKALOT Kasibu, Nueva Vizcaya
A warrior tribe of headhunters or known as the Ilongot
HISTORICAL INJUSTICE
In 1992, the gov’t planned to build
a dam
Mining
MANOBO Bundok Apo, Mindanao
Rich in natural resources
Highest mountain in the Philippines
In 1936, it was declared as a National Park
Tribe of hope
In 1996, they started a movement called Cultural Regeneration
Movement as a way of reviving their culture
HISTORICAL INJUSTICE
In 1980, the Philippine National
Oil Company planned to build the
Geothermal Plant
Manobo’s sacrificed but
benefits never came
INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES, LAWS, AND INJUSTICES
RA 8371 Indigenous People’s Rights Act (IPRA)
Sen. Juan Flavier –principal author
Approved on October 29, 1997
PD NO. 1109 Pres. Marcos declared archaeological areas in Cagayan,
DATED MARCH 28, 1977 Kalinga, Apayao
There were 68 sites
BANAUE RICE 2, OOO years old
TERRACES
FIRE MUMMIES OF 2,000 BC -15TH century
KABAYAN
APO ANNO 12th century
A stolen mummy
Nebalikong, Baguias, Benguet
Benguet Hunter
ELEPHANT HILL Rizal, Kalinga
Ancient fossils and artifacts like stone flakes
Elephas –fossils of humans with elephant
FORBIDDEN MOUNTAIN Cordilleras
The term came from the Spaniards for not having been able to
colonized the mountainous part of Northern Luzon
Indigenous people are Filipinos that Spain failed to colonized
HISTORICAL INJUSTICES Moral wrong committed in the past which has wide-ranging
impact on the well-being of the victims at the present time
IMPACTS OF HISTORICAL INJUSTICES
LAND DISPOSSESSION Regalian Doctrine
Land must be traced to some grant from the Spanish
crown
All lands that was conquered by Spain belongs to Spain
Unconquered minority never submitted to this concept
Laws during the American Period
Torrens System of Land Registration
PH Commission Act of No. 178 of 1903 –all
unregistered lands became part of public domain
Mining Law of 1905 –acquisition of public lands by
Americans for mining purposes
Laws during the Philippine Republic
Mining Act of 1995 –the gov’t have the right to take
ancestral lands and displace its people for mining
developments and investments
PD 705 (Forestry Code) -18 degree slope
National Integrated Protected Area System –an
ancestral area will be known to the public as a national
park and IP’s will not be able to have a right to take it back
and claim it as theirs
DIFFERENTIATION This became the norm because the IP’s, after more than 300
years, did not acquire the ways of Spanish colonizers which
majority of the Filipinos did
William Keen –his book I Believe in God and in Evolution
showed that Igorots have tails
Carlos Romulo –his book Mother America: A Living Story of
Democracy stated that Igorots are not Filipinos
MARGINALIZATION IP territories was seen by state as a source of raw materials
Cordillerans received minimal benefits from mining and hydro-
electric dams
Biased in Filipino majority
IP culture should be mainstreamed into the culture of the
colonized majority
IP anti-colonization struggles was rarely mentioned in Philippine
History books
PHILIPPINE INDIGENOUS CULTURAL COMMUNITIES
PHILIPPINE TODAY 2.5 million Muslims (Southern Island of Mindanao –Jolo, Sulu –
and Palawan)
5 million Non-Muslims
Most numerous are Igorots
Minorities comprise about 12% of the national population and
represents 68 ethnolinguistic groups
SOCIAL MAJORITY Most power in particular place
Differential and unequal treatment, objects of collective
discrimination
SOCIAL MINORITY Physical or cultural that a society has subordinate
Lacks power
BENEVOLENT US came not as invaders or conquerors but as friends to protect
ASSIMILATION the natives
President McKinley issued this proclamation
Announced in the Philippines on January 4, 1899
A euphemism to justify the US colonization of the Philippines
ASSIMILATION Adopting the ways of another culture and fully becoming part of a
different society
INTEGRATION Incorporating individuals from different groups into a society as
equals
REASONS FOR IPs STATUS AND DIFFERENT TREATMENT
Distinction between majority and minority
Differential treatment is derived from policies used by the US regime and extended by the
independent RP
Christianization
Cultural hispanization
Permanent resettlement in towns and cities
Military conquest
Political submission of the IPs
DIVISION OF POPULATION (SPANISH COLONIZATION)
Hispanized and Christianized lowlanders
Muslims and Pagan mountain dwellers
BUREUA OF NON- Groups were to be assimilated non-Christians and their lands
CHRISTIAN TRIBES were to be administered under a special reservation system
Low grade civilization
REP. OF THE PHIL Not assimilation but integration
INDEPENDENCE FROM Law no.1888: Commission on National Integration
US IN 1946 Set up to implement and to render real, complete, and
permanent the integration of all National Cultural
Minorities into the body politic (Section 1 of the Act,
1957)
EDUCATIONAL ACT OF English as official medium in public schools
1901: EDUCATIONAL
REFORM
2 FOCI OF THE COLONIAL PEDAGOGY IN THE CORDILLERA
To make it easier for Americans to communicate
To dove-tail the school courses to the needs perceived by the Americans
SPANISH TO AMERICAN INFLUENCE
TREATY OF PARIS Ended hostilities between Spain and US
December 10, 1898
DAHILAN NG PANANAKOP NG AMERICA
Hilaw na materyales
Merkado para sa sobrang produkto at capital
Base military para malawak ang kanilang kapangyarihan sa Asia Pacific
NEW RP AFTER AMERICA
Hispanized, Christianized, Americanized
Minorities have to fight for survival
Lands were the final frontier
HUKBALAHAP Hukbong Bayan Laban sa Hapon
Resistance army: peasant farmers
Luis Taruc –el supremo
OPEN REBELLION LED Moro Liberation Front (MLF)
BY: Cordillera People’s Liberation Army
NEW GOV’T AGENCIES Presidential Arm on National Minorities (PANAMIN)
Southern Philippines Development Authority (SPDA)
DEVELOPMENTS IN THE CONSCIOUSNESS AND ATTITUDE OF THE PHIL.STATE
Dualist conception of the state
Integration was abandoned in favor of autonomy
Development in the terms used to designate the minorities