Just one of the items we brought home from Baguio City was the Gangeh Di Montanyosa (Mountain Sound) by the Mofamco Cultural Guild. We bought it from the Tam-Awan Village
where there are galleries of artworks by local artists and
installations of different kinds of Cordillera ethnic dwellings. It is
a place maintained by local cultural workers with the help of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA). In this regard, we cannot help but wonder if the same effort can be done by giving our Agta brothers
in Mount Asog the chance to also showcase their art in exchange of
livelihood derived from tourism. But then Baguio has that edge, because
it is already a favorite destination by Filipinos and foreigners alike.
Besides, it is apparent that cultural workers in the area are more
united like the Baguio Writers Group.
There must be
something about cool temperature and level-headed creativity. It is a
known fact that many of our writers love to visit the place not to have
a vacation but to write and finish some important manuscript. Jun Cruz
Reyes goes there to write. Cirilo Bautista
owns a house and lot there. And every summer, writers and mentors troop
there for the annual national writers workshops. Writing will keep you
warm in a cold place (ala Butch Dalisay). Even critics will be more polite.
At the Tam-Awan village (sounds like the Iriganon term Tan-Awan,
really), we tasted hybridity via the unique concoction of
Benguet-Batangas coffee. Not as aromatic as Davao coffee but just as
reinvigorating. We were planning to look for it at the public market
but sort of forgot, succumbing to our appetite for the local version of
the longganisa and our penchant for Bul-ol and other wooden figures.
Ironically, we seemed
not so fed up with the SM outlets in Metro-Manila. We went to check
their branch there and found it to be better than the others in terms
of architecture. Of course, there was no centralized aircon, but cool
winds coming from the mountains freely circulated in and out of the
building. This was made possible by its terrace and canopy-like
structure.
Our vacation was worth our while albeit cut short by the Araw ni Balagtas
held at the Mabini Social Hall, Malacañang Palace last Monday (April
2). We were there to attend the awarding ceremony for the Talaang Ginto: Gawad Surian sa Tula, Gantimpalang Collantes (for my poem Hagbayon). It was also the occasion for the Gawad “Soc” Rodrigo Award, Gantimpalang Carlo J. Caparas sa Komiks and the launching of the Ani ng Wika 2006.
Present were the Teatro Marikeño, Brenda Jean M. Postero, Dr. Fe
Aldave-Yap, Eduardo Ermita, Cecile Guidote-Alvarez, Jessli Lapus,
Carlito Puno, Isabel Martin, Carmelita C. Abduraliman, Ricardo Ma. D.
Nolasco, Dr. Sheilee B. Vega, Atty. Dalisay Ople-San Jose, Cerge
Remonde, some students and academicians, and the winners for this year’s awards.
It was a surprise
that we were also given KWF and NCCA’s Gawad Francisco “Soc” Rodrigo,
making me bring home two distinctions that day. We know the late
senator as a lawyer and an ace-debater and orator. But he was also
known for his Tagalog poems, particularly his tanaga that
dealt with the social and political issues of his day. Truly, in poetry
content is form and form is content, as exemplified by Sen. “Soc”
Rodrigo.
http://www.hagbayon.wordpress.com