Article Dancing With The Kalinga

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Dancing with The Kalinga: Homage To A Brave Past

By: Michael Gonzalez

[In 2017, the author travelled around the Philippines on a Fulbright grant to study the impact of
globalization on indigenous and artisan crafts. This is part of an ongoing series about the
experience]

We arrived at Tabuk City, Kalinga Province shortly before midnight after a 12-hour drive from
Manila with Fe, my friend and our hardy driver, Roniel. Fe, an ethnomusicologist, was going to
collect a few more chants as part of her lifelong work on music cultures. I, was on my first
excursion outside Manila on a Fulbright grant, to investigate the effects of globalization on
indigenous weaving and craft cultures. We were to meet up later next day with two other intrepid
students of culture, Rod Hall and Nik Ynchausti, who flew into Tuguegarao airport, a mere two-
hour flight from Manila on good weather.
The road to Tabuk, Kalinga in February was still verdant from the last monsoon. Road trips
however arduous it may sound, give you the opportunity to appreciate the beauty and potential of
the countryside. It was a road I was familiar with up to Nueva Ecija until it splits, Northeast towards
the highway to Baguio and Northwest towards Kalinga. Provincial road traffic is awful at the
city/town center where anything with wheels from motor or pedal bikes, carabao-drawn carts, and
tourist buses, compete for a lane in an otherwise narrow two-lane national highway. It eases up
past the town, and the air cleared free of diesel and smog from trucks and tricycles. You know then
that it will be a long stretch of rice fields before the next town.

As our vehicle sped past the rural landscape towards the Cordilleras, you can feel the vibrancy of
Philippine culture and its economy. The verdant hills and farm fields, the cluster of government
housing at the town's outskirts, and a parade of produce trucks headed south to Manila seem to
give evidence to progress. Gold, extracted by a few multinationals, is a major export. With great
leadership and collective participation, there is still much to hope for— indeed, as most Filipinos
have been wanting for so many decades.

Tabuk City, a rising major urban center northwest of the older Tuguegarao metropolis, was
bustling with construction and preparations for the upcoming Tabuk festival of trade, culture and
Kalinga foundation day. During this week, the city showcases Kalinga’s economic reputation as
Cordillera’s rice granary and source of farm products such as coffee and ginger. Products galore
from wood work to fashion are lined up for sale along the main street as evidence of this prosperity.
As the only other City in the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR), Tabuk is emerging as an
economic and cultural center outside of Baguio, the other City. The concept of CAR is to leave
the development of its ancestral domain with little interference from the national central
government, historically known for its ‘imperial’ attitudes towards its provincial constituents.
Kalinga are proud of their solidarity and struggled hard to keep their independence and cultural
integrity from Manila’s imposition. Manila’s proximity to Baguio show signs of over-development
in that city. Tuguegarao, a city that exhibits a similar unmitigated, haphazard and poorly adhered
to development standards, foretell an ominous signature of progress with traffic jams that imitates
Manila’s and soon, Baguio’s notoriety. In comparison, Tabuk’s traffic was light, its central
boulevard spacious and wide open. I sensed this even during darkening light of dusk, from the
fresh scent of evening dew and the uniform silhouettes of trees that lined the highway, that this
was a tree-lined avenue to the city. This pleasant drive was confirmed on our way next morning to
collect our friends from the Tuguegarao airport. [The road to Tugegarao was unremarkable beyond
the all-weather national highway that made for a comfortable ride.]

The Tabuk Grand Zion Hotel seems like an odd name for a Kalinga hotel were it not for the
imposing edifice of the Iglesia Ni Kristo temple across the street, but it was comfortable enough
to get a good night’s sleep after the long road trip. A rooster crowing in the morning reminded me
that the place was still provincial. Fe’s Kalinga friends, Godfrey, Joe and daughter, Felis joined us
for a rice-and-eggs breakfast where I was re-introduced to Kalinga coffee. I remember my aktibista
college friends who have been to Kalinga on cultural exposure trips during the Marcos years, boast
about the coffee’s qualities - strong and brave, just like its growers. I also remember their advice
should I ever find myself in the Cordilleras, coffee is always served as the norm for greeting guests.
I mentally tell my gut to brace for many nights of Kalinga coffee.

Felis, Joe and Godfrey were from the Pangsiw clan of the Mandukayan, a subgroup of the Kalinga-
speaking peoples. They pride themselves to be musicians and for having been Fe’s resource
persons for studies on Kalinga music. Felis herself studied for a Masters in ethnomusicology in
Manila. But they were anxious to honor my request to meet weavers first, so off we went to see
their grandmother, herself a weaver and who learned the craft from her mother. Apo Onang, now
78 years old, is an aunt of Felis’ mother from the Tanudan village. Apo Onang said she learned
from her mother when she was very young. Her fine noble features were outstanding as is her
gentle yet commanding presence. In my mind, here is a lady of substance. A woman of Kalinga
culture, she had an armful of tattoos to show for it. She told her story (translated into Tagalog by
granddaughter Felis):

Apo Onang learned to weave from mother, as did her other sisters, but some of them who became
educated stopped weaving. All the women learned to weave. The men on the other hand, wove only
baskets. Her clan, the Mandukayan have their own designs for skirts, loin cloths, or head bands.
They wove home grown cotton before which they got from neighboring villages who grew them.
When they migrated to the city, all this changed. Now they weave using commercial
polycotton. She tried teaching Felis, but Felis finds it hard learning by verbal transmission.

The Pangsiw menfolk are musicians and who make their own bamboo instruments. To Kalinga
Joe Pangsiw and his musician brothers, a good sound, a beautiful music is, mabaro. This, I imagine
is the perfect assembly of harmony and rhythm. It is said that Kalinga music and dancing is
primarily a way to talk to spirits and to celebrate community. The Pangsiw brothers wanted to play
the gangsa gongs to celebrate our presence but a recent death in the community would have made
it inappropriate. The loud and piercing sounds of the gangsa would have been disrespectful and
disturbing to the spirits. Instead, Joe took out the bamboo instruments. Played well, the sounds
when played in ensemble, are more mellow with gentle tones like a bubbling brook. Joe tried
teaching me how to play the kullitong (kolitong), a bamboo zither with five fiber strings. The five
strings correspond to the number of gongs the Kalinga play as a standard. Each string is equivalent
to a gong. Gongs are played in ensemble. In this construct, the zither replicates the gongs as a solo
instrument. The kullitong is constructed from a two-feet length of 3-4 inch diameter tube, cut at
the nodes, from a bamboo specie unique to the Cordillera. One node is punched open, so the sound
could resonate outward. A slight crack is made on a one side to create additional tonal qualities.
The larger the diameter of the tube, the deeper the sound. Before the bamboo completely dries,
five bamboo "strings" are slit and lifted from the skin of the bamboo. They approximate 1/4 inches
wide. The strings are then tuned with bamboo bridges about 1/2 long by 1/4 inches high and slid
upright under the strings. The pitch of the string varies based on the distance from the other end of
a similar bridge. The closer the bridges are together, the higher the pitch. A kullitong tube then
would be strung with these five strings throughout; two strings are closer to each other at the
bottom and the three other strings spaced evenly at the top. Joe gave me a signed five-stringed
kullitong. To play the kullitong, the bamboo tube is rested on the belly to hold it upright. Both
hands pluck the strings. The tube rests on the heels of both palms while the right and left thumbs
play a steady rhythm and the rest of the fingers plays the tune.
I joined the dancing that was in progress, the brothers Jose, Fred and Godfrey, played the bamboo
gongs. The older women danced barehanded, using their hands and extended arms to follow the
rhythm of the beats. We danced in a circle. Felis, Joe's daughter, also drummed on the gongs and
coached me how to dance-- jump and a slight bop up and down according to the beat. There we
were, me and the three brothers, a nephew, Joe's daughter, her mother and an aunt and Fe, jamming
on a Kalinga beat. Later Rod joined us, his tall figure bopping up and down to the beat. On signal
from the leader, the circle stops and then go counter clockwise. This happened several times,
alternatingly. At the end of the song, we all came together in the center of the circle and we left
our gongs bunched together, upright and standing as if in celebration. The feeling was truly
celebratory and with a communality induced by dancing in a circle.

Finally, Godfrey, obviously the singer among the brothers, gave a thank-you hymn. Sang in the
Mandukayan dialect, just on tonal quality alone, what I felt was a superb rendition of high tones
with smooth and a low aspiratory tonal singing, almost in a whisper, almost as if weaving, in
talimbat style, where several tunes softly slip in and out of the main melody.

Thirty-five years and many harvests ago during the 1980s, the valleys and hills of the Cordillera
from Bontok to Tabuk were threatened to extinction by the construction of the Marcos-sponsored
Chico River Dam Project, a World Bank funded mega-hydroelectric dam that would have
flooded the population centers, ancestral homes and the centuries-old heritage of these
Cordilleran communities forever. Faced with a worldwide protest by environmental and urban
activists, academics, and the Cordilleran peoples themselves, World Bank withdrew the project.
The murder of the leading Cordilleran activist, Macli-ing Dulag, a Kalinga elder was the last
straw. Philippine Army soldiers with long arms came to his village and fired shots at his home,
killing him and wounding others. Every April 24th, the people of the Cordillera Administrative
Region (CAR), the other ironical outcome of this protest, celebrate and honor its truly genuine
hero, and keep alive the anti-dam consciousness amidst stirrings of building new ones. Most of
my early research has been in Southern Tagalog observing fisher folks, farmers, and healers. I
always envied my colleagues who were in the field north of Baguio and Sagada, the furthest
north I have been. During the tumultuous years of the 70’s skirmishes between the communist
New Peoples Army, the Philippine Army, and the Igorot resistance were always on the news.
Kalinga and many mountain territories were battlegrounds.
Thirty-five years ago, Tabuk and much of Kalinga would have been underwater. When the
opportunity to go to Kalinga, with no less a Kalinga expert musicologist, I could not resist the
invitation. I have relished the experience ever since, fortunate for having knowledgeable friends
and indebted to the resistance of Macli-ing Dulag and the courageous Cordilleran people have who
have bestowed us, lowlanders, the opportunity to share the blessings of their wonderful land and
heritage. Better yet, we danced with the Kalinga.

Dr. Michael Gonzalez has degrees in History, Anthropology, and Education. A professor at
City College San Francisco, he teaches a popular course on Philippine History Thru Film. He
also directs the NVM Gonzalez Writers' Workshop in
California. http://nvmgonzalez.org/writersworkshop/index.html

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