The dances of the ‘babaylans’ in honor of Sto. Niño

THE CONFLUENCE of pre-colonial indigenous culture and Christianity is shown by the special roles of babaylans during most performances honoring the Sto. Niño.

The Sto. Niño is venerated all over the country with annual festivals celebrated every last two weekends of January through special masses, dances and processions attracting millions of devotees and tourists.

The main religious festivals are the Ati-Atihan of Kalibo, Aklan; Dinagyang of Iloilo; Dinagsa of Cadiz City; and Sinulog of Cebu.

Along with the babaylans, the rites are usually performed with instrumental music, chanting, and often dancing as part of communal life cycles. They serve as a popular medium of dramatic expression and entertainment that reflects the people’s nature, culture and aspirations.

A babaylan was a pre-colonial Philippine mystical healer whose spiritual connectedness was a source of political and social power.

Babaylans were mostly women but there were also feminized men (asog or bayok) who were known for their love and desire to serve their communities in achieving justice and peace.

The leadership roles of babaylans were multi-fold: warrior, healer, priestess, and sage.

In the governance structure that included the datu (tribal chief), the bayani/bagani (warrior), and the panday (crafts person), no decisions were usually  made without consulting the babaylan.

Babaylans served as intermediaries between spiritual and material worlds; they specialized in communicating, appeasing, or harnessing the spirits of the dead and the spirits of nature.  

With powers of healing, herbalism, divination, and sorcery, babaylans were believed to have spirit guides through which they could contact and interact with the spirits and deities (anito or diwata) and the spirit world.

The babaylan, gifted to heal the spirit and the body, spoke in a mysterious language “intelligible” to the gods. They offered sacrifices and danced in a trance.

The ritualistic dances reflected spiritual and social life closely attuned to nature, believing in the spirits that kept their environment and themselves alive.

Some babaylans were political activists who resisted Spanish rule and conversion, and led open revolts.

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Filipino Catholics are known for having sincere, enormous, and extreme expressions of piety considering that the country is the third-largest Catholic population in the world.

The colorful culture of the Philippines is best seen through the vibrant festivals which are essentially fusions of Catholic and secular beliefs and practices that reflected the faith most Filipinos already had before the Spanish contact in 1521.

Festivals are prime manifestations of the Filipinos’ fervent devotion and faith characterized by history, artistry, creativity, and passion.

Even if the Santo Niño statue is a diminutive figure, Jesus is depicted as a small king with royal regalia: crown, red cloak of intricate embroidery, with its left hand holding a cross-bearing orb (a symbol of Christian authority), while its other hand is in a priestly blessing gesture.

In Iloilo, the word “dinagyang” came from a Hiligaynon word “dagyang” meaning “merrymaking.” It was traced to the pact between the datus and the locals after the arrival of Malay settlers and the legendary barter of Panay Island from the natives called Ati.

The main part of the festival is the Ati tribe competition which consists of a number of “warrior” dancers (who hold a shield in one hand and a spear in another) in a tribe (locally called “tribu”) dancing in a choreographed formation and patterns as well as chanting to the sound of loud drum beats and improvised percussion instruments innovated by the respective tribes.

In Aklan, Ati-atihan means “to imitate like the Atis,” that is, pretending to be like the aboriginal natives that once inhabited Aklan. The street parade is known as sadsad, a form of dancing where the foot is momentarily dragged along the ground in tune to the beat played by the marching bands.

In Cadiz City’s Dinagsa, the participants of the street merrymaking are smudged with latex paint on their face while dancing with rhythmic beating of drums in honor of Señor Santo Niño de Cadiz.

In Cebu, Sinulog is the ritual prayer-dance honoring the Santo Niño, which was the baptismal gift the Portuguese conquistador Ferdinand Magellan gave to Raja Humabon in April 1521.

The word “sinulog” came from the Cebuano adverb “sulog” roughly meaning “like water current movement” describing the forward-backward dance movements. The dance consists of two steps forward and one step backward, done to the sound of drums.

The activist traditions of the babaylan must continue in our advocacy as we struggle and work for justice in our society.

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“Peyups” is the moniker of University of the Philippines.

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Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, e-mail info@sapalovelez.com, or call 0917-5025808 or 0908-8665786./PN

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