Monday, May 22, 2017

Torogan

  1. TOROGAN 

  2.  The Torogan is the ancestral house of the upper-class Maranao in the Lanao Region of Mindanao. It is the dwelling place of the datu along with his wives and children. There could not be any house larger than torogan of the datu within the sultanate, for this signifies rank, prestige and wealth.  The existing torogans were built by the community and the slaves for the datu in 1800s. 

  3. ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTERISTICS 

  4. The windows of torogan are slits and richly framed in wood panels with okir designs located in front of the house. The communal kitchen is half a meter lower than the main house is both used for cooking and eating. The distinct high gable roof of the torogan, thin at the apex and gracefully flaring out to the eaves, sits on a huge structures enclosed by slabs of timber and lifted more than two meters above the ground by a huge trunk of a tree that was set on a rock. The end floor beams lengthen as panolongs the seemed to lift up the whole house. The torogan is suffused with decorations. There were diongal at the apex of the roof, also an intricately carved tinai a walai, okir designs in the floor, on windows and on panolongs. There were also brightly colored weaves or malongs hanging from the rafters, it was hung up using ropes around a particular territory for privacy. The house was built to sway


  5. ARCHITECTURAL FEATURES of Maranao Torogan house:

  6.  The most noticeable feature the torogan is the panolong, wing- like house beam with pako rabong or fern or naga serpent motif. of a a or  These are ends of the floor beams that project and splay out like triangular butterfly wings on the façade and side elevations. The motifs are chiseled in high


  7. ARCHITECTURAL FEATURES 

  8. The interior of the house is a cavernous hall with no permanent wall partitions.  Supporting the kingpost of the highridged roof is the rampatan or tinai a walai central beams considered as the intestines of the house.  What serves as the ceiling is a cloth suspended from the rafters to absorb the heat from the roof. A carabao horn ornament at the roof apex of the rumah adat in Batak, Indonesia is distinguish from the Maranao dongal. To asses the torogan’s strength and

Moro graduate tops Civil Engineer licensure exam

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DAVAO CITY (MindaNews / 12 May) — A Moro graduate topped the Civil Engineer Licensure Examination given earlier this month,  with an average of 94.60%,  the first among 2,514 passers out of 6,998 examinees.
Hisham Adiong Sacar of Lanao del Sur, a graduate of the Far Eastern University-Institute of Technology, topped the exam given by the Board of Civil Engineering in the cities of Manla, Baguio, Cagayan de Oro, Cebu, Davao Iloilo, Legazpi, Lucena, Pagadian, Tacloban , Tuguegarao and Zamboanga earlier this month.
Hisham Adiong Sacar, 21, a Meranao from Lanao del Sur and a graduate of the Far Eastern University – Institute of Technology topped the May 2017 Civil Engineer Licensure Examination with an average of 94,60%. Photo from his Facebook account.
                                                                                                                                                                The members of the Board who gave the licensure examination are Engr. Praxedes P. Bernardo, chairman; and Engr. Pericles P. Dakay and Engr. Romeo A. Estañero as members.
The results were released three working days after the last day of examination, the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) announced on its website on May 11.
According to his uncle, Zia Alonto Adiong, Majority Floor Leader at the Regional Legislative Assembly of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, the 21-year old Sacar is son of Engr. Rakiin Sacar and Minang Adiong, both traders in Greenhills.
“This is a pride of the Bangsamoro minority,”Adiong wrote on his Facebook wall.
Sacar, according to Adiong, is one of 14 children of the Sacar couple. A number of his siblings are doctors and engineers. Sacar is also the second cousin of Lanao del Sur Vice Governor  Mamintal Alonto Adiong.
On his Facebook wall, Sacar wrote: “Alhamdullilah!!!! Maraming salamat… Maraming salamat po sa lahat ng Master ko… Congrats sa lahat ng bagong Engineers!!! -Engr. Hisham Adiong Sacar.”
The Top Ten passers are:
1.Sacar, Hisham Adiong                         FEU-Institute of Technology                    94.60%
2.Sanguyo, Christian Paul Dela Cruz       Mapua Institute of Technology-Manila      93.55
3.Advincula, Jericson Hernandez            Mapua Institute of Technology-Manila       93.20
Castro, Jan Carlo Marcelo                   UP Los Banos                                         93.20
4.Tupas, Danielle Casurao                      Mapua Institute of Technology-Manila      93.10
5.Arago, Robert Pinero Jr.                      Central Colleges of the Philippines            92.90
Cuevas Dustin Glenn Cuevas              Mapua Institute of Technology-Manila       92.90
Dela Cruz Allan Dave Abbariao           Mapua Institute of Technology-Manila       92.90
6. Lapus, Rusy Villadolid                        Cebu Technological University-Main          92.85
7. Arita, Mary Joy Galvez                       Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila         92.75
8. Martinez, Archimedes Umblas             Manuel L. Quezon University                   92.65
9. Zulueta, Joel Batoon                          University of Baguio                               92.55
10. David, Vinzon Paul Saplala                Mapua Institute of Tecnology-Manila       92.50
The date and venue for the oath-taking ceremony of the new successful examinees will be announced later, the PRC said.
It added that registration for the issuance of Professional Identification Card (ID) and Certificate of Registration  is from May 19 to May 25. Registration will be done on-line through www.prc.gov.ph. (MindaNews) 

Source: http://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2017/05/moro-graduate-tops-civil-engineer-licensure-exam/


Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Jose Abad Santos' Exile in Malabang


José Abad Santos y Basco (February 19, 1886 – May 7, 1942) was the fifth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines. He briefly served as the Acting President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines and Acting-Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines during World War II, in behalf of President Quezon after the government went in exile to the United States. After about two months, he was killed by the Japanese forces for refusing to cooperate during their occupation of the country.

José Abad Santos was born in San Fernando, Pampanga to Vicente Abad Santos and Toribia Basco. His brother, Pedro, would eventually emerge as a leading socialist leader during the Commonwealth era. In 1904, he was sent to the United States as a government pensioner. He finished a pre-law course at the Santa Clara College in Santa Clara, California; his Bachelor of Laws at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois; and his Masters of Laws at George Washington University in 1909. He was admitted to the Philippine Bar in 1911 and later served as Assistant Attorney at the Bureau of Justice from 1913 to 1917 .

In 1919, Abad Santos would become instrumental in laying the legal groundwork, as well as drafting the by-laws and constitution of the Philippine Women's University, the country and Asia's first private non-sectarian women's institute of higher learning. A staunch Methodist, Abad Santos worshiped at Central United Methodist Church along T.M. Kalaw Street in Ermita, Manila (then known as the Central Methodist Episcopal Church).

He was later appointed as the first Filipino corporate lawyer of the Philippine National Bank, Manila Railroad Company and other government corporations. He went to the Department of Justice where he became Attorney-General, Undersecretary of Justice then Secretary of Justice from 1921 to 1923. In July 1923, he resigned as Secretary of Justice together with other department secretaries as a result of the controversy between Governor-General Leonard Wood and Filipino leaders.

Abad Santos then served as Chief Counsel of the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines. In 1926, he went to the United States as head of the Philippine Educational Mission. He was again appointed Secretary of Justice in 1928 and re-appointed on July 1, 1931. In 1932, he became an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. He became its Chief Justice on December 24, 1941. As part of the emergency reorganization of the Commonwealth government, Abad Santos, in his capacity as Chief Justice, was given the responsibilities previously handled by the Secretary of Justice (the position of Secretary of Justice was abolished for the duration of the war). Abad Santos accompanied the Commonwealth government to Corregidor, where on December 30, 1941, he administered the oath of office to President Quezon and Vice-President Osmeña for the second term they'd been elected to in November of that year. He also undertook, with Manuel Roxas, the supervision of the destruction of Commonwealth government currency to prevent its falling into enemy hands.

With the Japanese invasion rapidly advancing to the southern part of the Philippines, President Manuel L. Quezon was advised by General Douglas MacArthur to establish a government in exile to the United States, Quezon invited Chief Justice Abad Santos to leave with him. The latter declined preferring to remain in the Philippines and carry on his work and stay with his family. On March 17, 1942 the day of Quezon's departure at Zamboanguita, Negros Oriental for the US by way of Australia, he appointed Abad Santos as the Acting President with full authority to act in the name of, and on behalf of the President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines and become the Acting-Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines in some areas unoccupied by the Japanese.

On April 11, 1942, Abad Santos, his son José, Jr. (nicknamed Pepito), Col. Benito Valeriano and two enlisted men were captured by the Japanese in Brgy. Tubod in Barili, Cebu while traveling by automobile to Toledo, Cebu.[1] He identified himself as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines. He and his son were then taken to a concentration camp in Basak San Nicolas, Cebu City. When asked to cooperate with the Japanese, he refused. Although he had nothing to do with military operations, as acting president, they imputed to him the destruction of the bridges and other public works in Cebu done by the USAFFE forces to delay the invasion of the island.

The Japanese High Commander Kiyotake Kawaguchi took him and his son aboard a ship on April 26, 1942 thinking they were heading to Manila. Instead, they arrived on April 28 at Parang, Cotabato (now in Maguindanao). The next day they were brought to Malabang, Lanao, arriving on April 30. After two days confinement at Japanese camps, Chief Justice Abad Santos was called in front of Kawaguchi and was informed about the order of his execution. Before he was shot to death, he was able to talk to his son Pepito. His last parting words to his son were "Do not cry, Pepito, show to these people that you are brave. It is an honor to die for one's country. Not everybody has that chance." Jose Abad Santos was executed at 2:00 p.m., on May 7, 1942 under a tall coconut tree near a river bank. He refused to be blind-folded and refused the last cigarette offered to him.

Later that afternoon of May 7, 1942, two Japanese interpreters took Jose's son, Pepito, to his father's grave. It was a small mound - too small, Pepito thought, to hold his father’s remains if properly buried. On top of the grave lay a rock as large as a coconut. Pepito begged that he be allowed to mark the grave with a cross, but his request was denied.

After the war, an intensive search for the place where Jose was buried failed. Pepito did not find the hut and the trees, which would have served as points of reference for locating the grave. The area where the execution took place had been plowed and planted to root crops.[1]

The date of his execution is often reported as May 7, but as former Supreme Court Justice Ramón C. Aquino, Abad Santos' biographer put it, "This (May 7) was the date given by Pepito himself during his testimony at the trials of Generals Yoshihide Hayashi and Kiyotake Kawaguchi. But on the basis of the testimony of Keiji Fukui, the interpreter during Abad Santos's confinement, supported by notations in his diary, the date of Abad Santos' execution was definitely ascertained to be at two o'clock on the afternoon of May 2, 1942."

When the Philippine Women's University established its primary and secondary education divisions in 1949, they named the school as Jose Abad Santos Memorial School in honor of Abad Santos who was a former Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the university.
The municipality of Trinidad in Davao del Sur province, created in 1948, was renamed as the Municipality of Jose Abad Santos in his honor in 1954.
The Abad Santos Avenue is a 3-kilometre (1.9 mi) six to eight lane divided city street in Tondo, Manila.
He is commemorated on the ₱1000-peso banknote of the Philippines together with Brigadier General Vicente Lim and Josefa Llanes Escoda, founder of the Girl Scouts of the Philippines, who were all killed by the Japanese Imperial Army during the Second World War.
On 1945, one of the six campuses of Arellano University was built in Pasay City and its name is derived by his name.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9_Abad_Santos


Mohammad Dipatuan Kudarat- Sultan of Maguindanao



Muhammad Dipatuan Kudarat (1581–1671) was Sultan of Maguindanao from 1619 to 1671. During his reign, he successfully fought off Spanish invasions and hindered the spread of Roman Catholicism in the island of Mindanao much like the other Muslim rulers of the southern Philippine Archipelago. He was a direct descendant of Shariff Kabungsuwan, an Malay-Arab Johor noble who brought Islam to Mindanaw between the 13th and 14th century. The Autonomous Muslim Mindanao Region province of Sultan Kudarat is named after him, together with the Municipality of Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanaw, where his descendants of Datus and rulers are still the current political leaders.

Under the presidency of Ferdinand Marcos, Sultan Kudarat became a Philippine national hero.

Ruler and Sovereign[edit]
Sultan Dipatwan Kudarat, the Corralat according to prolific Spanish historian Combes. The word Dipatuwan is Malay in origin and means "master" or "sir." The word Qudrat is Arabic and means "Power." The letters d and q and r and / are interchangeable in Moro, and the word Qudrat is commonly pronounced qudlat or kurlat; hence the corrupted form "Corralat." Sultan Kudarat overshadowed his father, Bwisan, and ruled with a strong hand. He was probably the strongest and greatest Mindanao Sultan that ever lived. He fought the Spaniards well and held their sovereignty in check for many years. His sea warriors constantly attack Luzon and the Visayas for allowing themselves to become foot soldiers of the newly arrived Iberians, and providing them provisions and passage. His Sultanate controlled the southern seas for a long time.

In 1636 General Corcuera led an expedition against him and after considerable difficulty reduced his fort and defeated his forces. Kudarat had a large quantity of gunpowder and firearms, and his fort was very strongly fortified. The Spaniards captured 8 bronze cannons, 27 Lantaka or culverins, and 100 muskets.

In 1645 his relations with then Imperial Spain had undergone a distinct change. He had become more powerful, but he was naturally desirous of peace and made a treaty with the Spanish Government. This treaty was in the nature of an alliance for mutual aid and protection. It secured better commercial facilities and gave the Jesuits the privilege of building a church in the sultan's capital. Thirteen years later hostilities were renewed and another campaign was directed against Simway. This time Kudarat succeeded in blocking the river at different places and successfully checked the invasion.

Kudarat was the most famous ruler of the Magindanaws. He succeeded his father as chief of Magindanaw in 1619 and was titled Katchil.

In 1619-1621, there was a war between him and the Rajah Bwayan that was either dynastic in character or a contest for primacy in the Pulangi. Both sides asked help from the Dutch East Indies who decided to stay neutral but who warned them that the war was only to the advantage of the Spaniard Conquistador.

In 1622, Kudarat appeared to have suffered some reverses which led him to sail to Cebu to pillage some artillery from the Spaniards. Soon after this, he was able to hold his own against attempts of Bwayan Sultanate to solely control the lucrative Pulangi waterways.

In 1625-1626, because its Datu, an ally of Kudarat, was ousted, Kudarat attacked the island of Sarangani, burned its capital, slew scores of his enemies, and captured many others. The people of Sarangani were then made part of the Sultanate and tributary to him.

In 1627, Sultan Munkay Datu Maputi (Amunkaya), whos father, Rajah Bwayan Silongan is the instructor of then young Kudarat in Kampilan and Kris martial arts. Rajah Bwayan Silongan and his brother, Datu Mangubal are the ones who led the first Mindanaw defense against the Conquistador Figueroa, thus Kudarat grew up in his experienced court inland the Bwayan Sultanate. This successor and young ruler of Bwayan, recognized Kudarat as his co equal partner in the defense of the great length of Pulangi. The next year, the Dutch sent an ambassador to discuss plans for a concerted effort against the Spaniards. Kudarat knew that the Dutch were using him as a tool for their own imperialistic policies; so he put in a few conditions of his own which the Dutch were not willing to accept. At this time, Kudarat was rightly apprehensive about Spanish missionary activities in areas like Butuan, Caraga, and Dapitan which the Iranun feared would be used as bases against them in the future as the usual coloniser pattern of the Spaniards in the Bisayas.

The garrisoning of the Lumad into Reducciones in Caraga caused Kudarat to act. He induced the people there to resist with the result that it took the Spaniards more than two years to pacify the Indigenous of Caraga. The Spaniards blamed the fierceness of the resistance to the persuasion and Kudarat's aid.

In 1634, his men called the Sulugs to join him in an attack on the Spanish Reduccion in Dapitan and further on the Visayas where Europeans always get men to populate most of their villages. To protect their settlements and contain the activities of the Magindanaws, the Spaniards, on Jesuit advice, built a strong fort in SambuwanganZamboanga the year after. Fear of the growing strength of Kudarat led the Spaniards to lead an expedition inland to Mindanao in 1637. The aims were to destroy his Kota (cottas), capture or kill him, and make Catholics of the Muslims as well as the non-Muslims Lumad in Mindanaw. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, the experienced Spanish Governor General from the Mexico Colonisation, personally led the expedition.

Kudarat's capital of Lamitan (close to the present Baras) fell on March 13, 1637, and one of the first things the Spaniards did was to burn its Mosque. Kudarat, with 2000 of his warriors, retreated to three cottas in the nearby heights. In spite of the determined and brave defense of the Iranun, the cottas fell one by one. The Spaniards were able to capture treasures, signifying the accumulation of many years. Kudarat was wounded in the defense and he was brought to the interior of the Butig area by his warriors to recover. In a short while, he was able to raise a new army and get the sympathy of the Samal in Sambuwangan Zamboanga and the Iranun on Illana Bay area.

Soon, Spanish shipping, forts and garrisons began to be harassed. The Spaniards, too, were having trouble with Bwayan Sultanate's Datu Maputi attack, who, while happy about Kudarat's former reverses, had "no intention to have the Spaniards as his new masters".

In 1639, the Spaniards invaded the lands of the Maranaos. Kudarat hurried there to have a conference with the datus of the Lanao Lake. He explained to them the effects of submitting to the Spaniards and appealed to Maranaw pride and love of independence. In a matter of months, the Spaniards were forced to leave hurriedly the lands of the Maranaws for safer parts towards Zamboanga, which is Fort Pilar, and never ventured to inland Lanao again.

The famous speech of Sultan Kudarat is recorded by a Spanish Ambassador to the Magindanaw Sultanate;

"...You men of the Lake!, forgetting your ancient liberty, have submitted to the Castilian s. Such submission is sheer stupidity. You cannot realise to what your surrender binds you. You are selling yourselves into slavery to toil for the benefit of these foreigners. Look at the regions that have already submitted to them. Note how abject is the misery to which their peoples are now reduced. Behold the condition of the Tagalogs and of the Visayans whose chief men are trampled upon by the meanest Castilian. If you are of no better spirit than these, then you must expect similar treatment. You, like them, will be obliged to row in the galleys. Just as they do, you will have to toil at the shipbuilding and labor without ceasing on other public works. You can see for yourselves that you will experience the harshest treatment while thus employed. Be men. Let me aid you to resist. All the strength of my Sultanate, I promise you, shall be used in your defence! What matters it if the Castilian s at first are successful? That means only the loss of a year's harvest. Do you think that too dear a price to pay for liberty?..."

True as the speeach, The Maranao after offering patient defense, thereafter enjoyed 250 years of peace during the whole duration of Spanish withdrawal in the Archipelago in 1899.

By the end of 1639, an understanding was also reached between Kudarat and Datu Maputi for a united front against the Spanish invaders. Datu Manakior, Datu of Tawlan, who was previously friendly with the Spaniards, at this time, began to really suffer serious reverses in Mindanaw with his European allies.[3]

In 1642, Kudarat almost massacred a Spanish expedition coming to attack his new capital in Simway. Spanish forts were soon abandoned as the Europeans retreated.

In 1645, the Zamboanga Governor personally went to Simway to beg a peace treaty with the redoubtable Datu. In this treaty, Kudarat was recognized as sovereign over the whole contiguous area from Sibugay River to Tagalook Bay (the present Davao Gulf) while Bukidnon and part of the present Cagayan de Oro were asserted as belonging to his sphere of political and military influence. By this time, Kudarat had formally assumed the title of Sultan.

In 1649, the peace between Kudarat and the Spaniards nearly broke when the latter made incursions in his territories and captured some of his Indigenous vassals. Hasty explanations from the hurriedly-sent Spanish Ambassador kept the tenuous peace.

However, in 1655, relations with the Spanish once again started to deteriorate. The Magindanaws and Bwayan Sultanates refused to accept Jesuit missionaries due to their conduct. There were mutual accusations concerning bad faith regarding the return of captives and artillery. Things came to a head when Baratamay, the new Rajah of Bwayan, had two Jesuit priests killed, one of them an Ambassador who had previously insulted the Sultan by insisting on his conversion to Catholicism. Anticipating a strong Spanish retaliation, Sultan Kudarat wrote to his allies and vassals to take up arms against the Spaniards. Declaring Jihad, he wrote to the Sultans of Sulu, Ternate, Brunei, and Makassar to support the struggle which he proclaimed was a defense of Islam and the Shari'ah. The Spanish offensive did not materialise, as they know that the Moro are ready according to their expectations. A tit for tat war then ensued. Once again, the Spaniards were expelled from the Great Pulangi.

In 1662, on account of the Koxinga threat, the Spaniards, in spite of Jesuit objections, decided to abandon their forts in Ternate and Zamboanga (Sambuwangan). In 1663, Zamboanga was abandoned and the Samals there became vassals of Kudarat while most of the indigenous Catholic converts reverted back to Islam. There was then to be a long peace between Kudarat as the Spaniards kept their distance.

In 1671, after a reign of more than fifty years, the Sultan died of old age. In his last years, he was being considered a "holy" man. Actually, he was learned man in Islamic jurisprudence Fiqh and was considered to be one of the best Panditas of the reign. He was an extremely pious man and fulfilled all of his Islamic duties. Utterly brave, he was invariably magnanimous in victory. His regal name was Nasir ud-Din, that is, "Helper of the Faith." He is buried near a sea embankment in Simuay.

He died at about 1671 at the age of 90, and his grandchildren referred to him always as Nasir ud-Din. He is always remembered in Mindanaw even to this day.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Kudarat


According to Maranao folklores, the tomb of Sultan Kudarat is found in Picong Lanao del Sur.

Sultan Kudarat is a Moro hero known for his leadership, bravery and wisdom, who fought valiantly to protect the land during foreign invasion. He shed his blood to protect the culture and traditions and the land of Mindanao.

He is famous in the provinces of Maguindanao, Basilan, Sulu and Lanao del Sur.

A burial ground that include a tomb believed to be that of 17th century Muslim hero Sultan Muhammad Dipatuan Kudarat is in danger of being eroded by the strong current of the Ramitan River here.

Resident Sonaira Amatunding, herself a descendant of the hero sultan, said the tomb used to be some 50 meters from the riverbank. But she said the changing course of the river has eroded a burial ground where some 30 graves have been wiped out.

Source: https://www.facebook.com/dpwharmmontheroad/?hc_ref=SEARCH

Tademan ko mga Hapon



This is a tunnel built during the Japanese occupation in the Philippines located at Picong (then Sultan Gumander), Lanao del Sur. Photo taken from Facebook