Search This Blog

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Provision of the Old Baguio Chapter

Regarding the Revised Charter of Baguio City that is now pending in the Senate, one particular provision in the old Baguio Charter that was not included in it is that one for an Advisory Council of five members who shall be Igorots.

The Advisory Council is supposed “to hold meetings on the request of any three members transmitted to the city secretary or when convened by the mayor.  The presiding officer shall be the mayor or other member of the city council designated by him.  It shall be the duty of the said presiding officer to explain or cause to be explained to the advisory council  all action taken or proposed by the city council regarding ordinances, public improvements, and  other matters of general interest to the population of the city, to ascertain its views thereon, and on other subjects  concerning which the advisory council is desirous of making recommendations or suggestions; and to present said recommendations and suggestions to the city council or the proper city officer for consideration”.

For many years, no advisory council of five Igorots has been working with the City Council and/or the City Mayor after the Americans left.

Why this is the case until now, I do not know yet.  May be there is an answer.  

May be an old Ibaloi still living can tell why the Ibalois who were the Igorottes who were deprived of their lands can answer this question.

And may be the young ones now will seek the re-institution of this provision of the Old City Charter and work for a re-revision of the Revised City Charter that is now pending in the Senate.

The Local Government Code of 1991 also provides for the representation of the Indigenous Peoples in the City Council.   At present, there are two (2) city councilors from the Ibaloi/Igorot tribe  of Baguio City.  Although they can speak for the Ibalois also, their presence in the City Council is due to their having been elected at large, or by the citizenry of the City of Baguio, and not as representatives of the Ibaloi/Igorot or Indigenous Sector as provided by the laws.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Baguio as Reservations

 In this issue, I would like to take a break from my storytelling about La Trinidad.  Instead I would like to write about how the Igorottes, especially the people of Baguio, and even the other Ibalois of Benguet are being deprived of their lands which their predecessors have guarded for a long, long time.

In an earlier write-up, I mentioned about how the Igorottes of Benguet, specifically, the Ibalois guarded their territory from invaders.  They  had mountain passes which they guarded so that travelers cannot just get in to their territory and bring their diseases to it. 

Unfortunately, from the time that the Lt. Col. Guillermo Galvey got into the place, braving the rocks and other items used by the Ibalois to prevent their entrance into their territory, life has not been the same for the Ibalois.

They have prevented the conquistador Quirante from staying long here, although someone said he has left somebody as a reminder that he once came here.  

However, due to lack of firepower to keep the Spaniards out, they have not prevented the whole of them Spaniards from getting in, and making their lives miserable.

When Emilio Aguinaldo ran to the Benguet mountains after proclaiming the Independence of the country from the Spaniards, he did not do anything good that the people would remember him by.  Some of those who were interviewed said the Filipinos led by him were more cruel than the Spaniards.  But of course, he did not last long in Benguet.

The Americans followed, and with candies and corned beef,, and chocolates and seeming kindheartedness won the hearts of the Ibalois, who, if they realized it, or not, have taken away their lands successfully with no hard feelings.

But of course, I have not talked with them personally to make such a sweeping statement.

But after allowing the Ibalois (who, individually, and by delegation followed up the promise of the U.S. President that he will return their lands) to have their lands surveyed within a certain period of time, the Americans started proclaiming all the lands not titled in the names of the Igorottes in Baguio as reservations.  With just a stroke of the pen, many of the Ibalois lost their lands.

It was good that they allowed the Ibalois to have their lands surveyed.  Hence the non-inclusion of some lands of the Ibalois in the Baguio City Townsite Reservation to be disposed by the then Municipal Government of Baguio, later City of Baguio in order to raise funds for the government to use for its infrastructure and other needs.

What was bad was that the people they sent to survey the lands applied the Public Land Law of the United States where a person claiming a piece of land should show some improvements thereon in order for him to have that land patented in his name.  They did not consider the fact that the Ibalois were mostly cattle raisers whose fences as that time consisted only of ditches and rocks, and who allowed portions of their lands to rest for a while after their cattle ate up all the grass on it, and others.  

Also, the Ibalois were not accustomed to their law.  They were not used to having their lands surveyed and titled.  

At last, when they were able to understand the new law requiring them to have their lands titled, they were told that time has run out for them who were ‘sloths who slept on their rights ‘.

And that song that has been sung first in the early 20s is the song that the Filipinos keep on singing to them despite the fact that there is now an Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA) law which was instituted to protect the rights of the people who were deprived of their rights earlier.  

Very sad is the fact that even fellow Igorottes or people of the mountains, and fellow Filipinos keep on singing that song in the City of Baguio to the Ibalois who unfortunately were born with a lot of timidity genes in their make-up.

There are of course Filipinos and non-Ibalois who sympathize with the Ibalois of Baguio and Benguet.  Not all of them are bad.

However, there are some of them who laugh at the Ibalois, taunting them with the statement that “they may have the papers, but they (the non-Ibalois) have the land.  

May our good Congressman and Mayor take a stand also for the Ibalois some of whom have intermarried with their tribe, and fight also for them because it is not only their tribesmen who put them in office.  May they not insist on fighting for Section 78 of the IPRA Law which is making the Revised Charter of Baguio as a law against the Ibalois of Baguio who have not taken advantage of the time before the passage of the IPRA law to have their applications processes.

The Ibalois are also citizens of the Philippines and have rights equal to the rest of the Filipinos, Ibontocs. Ifugaos, etc.  They should not be deprived of their rights for the benefit of other Filipinos. The land of the Ibalois have been proclaimed for public purposes “without just compensation” for them:  the Busol Watershed, the Wright Park, the Manasion House, the Forbes Reservation, the Dairy Farm, and others.  If the government wants to continue using them for the purposes that they have been earlier reserved for by the Americanos, let them be used for the same if the reasons for their reservation still exist.  However, let the original owners thereof, the Ibalois, be compensated for them in accordance with Constitution of the Philippines which is the Country where the Ibalois also belong.  And because the law says the government can only pay for ‘titled lands”, let the Ibaloi get his title so that he can be compensated for his land in accordance with the law.  

And considering that the titling of the lands for the original settlers thereof is by the operation of the IPRA Law, let the Ibaloi get his title thru the process specified in such law.  Do not let the reservation for public purposes of the Ibaloi’s land be a reason for not granting him his title if that land truly belonged to his predecessors because the proclamation of that land as a reservation happened at a time when the country was just acquired by the United States, and the Igorottes including the peoples of the Mountain Province, the Kalingas, the Apayaos, the Ifugaos, and other Igorottes were not yet fully conversant in the English language, and on the laws of the United States  so that they were not able to question such proclamations, such as the Cordillera Forest Reserve which included even a portion of the Mountain Province, if not the whole of it.  Beaulah T. Pistola

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Legitimate Claimants

In the last issue, I asked how the reader would feel when people who are not from his place talk about their forbears sacrificing so much for the improvement of a place.  

I, for one, do not feel good about it, especially when I see or hear of relatives or friends or neighbors who are being mocked because they are trying to fight for their rights over lands that belonged to their ascendants.  

Again, I would  say that there are those who claimed lands that are not really their forebears’, or who claimed more than they should.  This does not mean that there are no legitimate claimants.

Unfortunately, those who are not legitimate claimants are the ones getting recognized.  The legitimate ones are given a difficult time,  asked to submit so many requirements to prove their claims.  

Anyway, I would like to continue with my story about La Trinidad, or share what little I learned about the place.  Later, when I pick up some info, I will share the same if and when there is or are, and when there is still a time and a place where I can share the same with everyone who would like to know.

From the book of William Henry Scott entitled The Discovery of the Igorots, I read that the Distrito de Benguet which was established in 1846 referred only to La Trinidad which the Ibalois called Benguet., or shime khawad an ni eman benget  long before the Spaniards came.  The place was the first target of the Lt. Col. Guillermo Galvey’s travel to Los Pais de Igorrotes in 1829.  Galvey burned the houses of the Igorottes when he came to the place in search of the illegal tobacco plantations.  He also burned the fields of the Igorottes.  Then he called the place La Trinidad after his wife.  


In 1850, when the La Union  province was created as a militarily governed province, it absorbed the 1846 Distrito de Benguet, or La Trinidad.   The research made by Scott showed that there were more Igorots in that La Union province than lowlanders at that time.    To be continued. 


Sunday, September 7, 2014

Ibaloi sacrifices without prior consent

As an Ibaloi, how should one feel when others talk of Baguio as one where their forefathers have sacrificed so much in order for it to become what it is now, especially when that one talking is a non-Ibaloi whose forebears have come from places other than Baguio?

How should an Ibaloi act during the anniversary of the place where his forebears have been eased out of because the government needed their lands for some perceived needs of the government without their prior consent, and without just compensation or relocation?

Should the Ibaloi be happy parading during the anniversary of something that
deprived him of his lands which were his source of livelihood?

Should he be happy when he sees others claiming the lands his forebears owned but which they were deprived of by stealth?

Today, the Ibalois who now claim the lands of their forebears with the use of the IPRA Law are mocked because they are now exercising their right. May be, there are those who are claiming more than they should. It does not mean they are all wrong. If you dear reader are the Ibaloi, what would you do in such circumstances? (To be continued) B.T. Pistola

B.T. Pistola

(Authority to repost given by Author)

Published at:
Volume 1, No 8
TNT, Baguio City, Philippines
September 7, 2014
https://thenortherntribune.blogspot.com/

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Registration of the Lands of the Natives in Township of Baguio

Other Ibaloi families who once occupied portions of  Baguio which is now known as the Central Business District were the Sepic families of Belshang, the Daroan families, the Sungchuan families, and others.  The Sepic clan include the Zarates who once owned the place where the Bermuda Subdivision now is, the Quinios where the Pacday Quinio Elementary School now stands, the Saguids and the Nabuses.

The Daroan family included the late Eugene Pucay who was once a member of the Baguio City Council.

These were besides the members of the Apulog Minse and Padya Clan, and the Apsan Carantes Family.   As earlier stated, the Apulog and Padya family included the Enrique Ortega or Dangbis family, the Pinaoan Baticalang and Picnay Apulog family, the Badjating and Tadaha or Talaca family,  the Wakat Swildjo or Suello family, and others.

The  late Mateo Carino married the daughter of Enrique Ortega or Dangbis named Bayosa or Sa’bot.   He was also a descendant of the (Am)kidit from whom his wife Bayosa descended.

When the Americans came and started getting applications for registration of the lands of the natives which they or their predecessors owned, the late Mateo Carino for himself and his children filed applications for the registration of the lands within the Township of Baguio. (To be continued).

 

B.T. Pistola
 
(Authority to repost given by Author)
 
Published at:
Volume 1, No 5
TNT, Baguio City, Philippines
August 17, 2014
https://thenortherntribune.blogspot.com/