Bago City Charter Anniversary is celebrated every February 19 in the city of Bago, Negros Occidental, Philippines. It is a commemoration of its cityhood and often dubbed Babaylan or Babaylanes Festival. February 19 can be a holiday such as Proclamation No. 656-A issued on February 15, 1970 and Proclamation No. 887 on January 14, 2020.
History of Bago City
Bago first entered into recorded history as an encomienda of Juan Gutierrez Cortes on September 6, 1571. Then in 1575, Augustinian friar Fr. Geronimo Marin arrived from the nearby Binalbagan and put up a church that was placed under the patronage of St. John the Baptist. It is also the year that the town was considered to have been first organized. Subsequently, historian Angel Martinez Cuesta stated that Bago was one of several villages in Negros island by the 17th century. Officially, its pueblo was recognized by the colonial government in 1800 when its population along the banks of Bago River increased.
Furthermore, the secular clergy who administered the church until 1882 was replaced by the Augustinian Recollects.
Towards the end of the Spanish rule, its townspeople joined the revolution. On November 5, 1898, General Juan Anacleto Araneta declared the entire island Republica de Negros. A historical marker commemorating the event was placed in the town plaza by the Philippine Historical Institute in 1951.
Republica de Negros ended during the American occupation, and the municipality was headed by a succession of appointed and elected leaders. Its progress was disrupted with the coming of the Japanese forces in World War II, with recovery and reconstruction only possible after its liberation on March 29, 1945.
The town developed in post-war years. Finally, it was converted into a city by virtue of Republic Act No. 4382, otherwise known as An Act Creating the City of Bago, which was approved on June 19, 1965. Its inauguration took place on February 19, 1966, the date that Bago City Charter Anniversary commemorates every year.
History of Babaylan Festival
Bago City’s Charter Anniversary is marked by Babaylan Festival (also known as Babaylanes Festival) which was first held in 1998. It celebrates the babaylan, the matriarchal religious and community leaders of pre-Hispanic Filipinos.
The word babaylan is used in Visayas, in other places people playing such historical role were called shaman, katalonan, etc.
Before the archipelago was transformed by western conquest and Christian influence, the natives embraced animism and ancestor worship. They believed in spirits that lived in the natural world, and praying to them could give protection from dangers, grant favors, or lead to a great harvest. Their ruler was the datu who led settlements which may comprise a dozen households or could be made up of a large population of dwellers. The authority of the datu was not only political but also supernatural, for the leader was believed to possess powers such as causing harm on enemies with just a stare.
The babaylan, meanwhile, were women and effeminate men endowed with natural and spiritual gifts. They were revered and respected members of society, and their role was crucial in the life of the community. As mystics, they could access the spirit world and spoke the language of the spirits. So they could pray to them or drive evil away, something that was crucial when clearing lands for agriculture or preparing for the planting season.
Likewise, babaylan were healers who used their knowledge of the natural world for remedies and medicines, and they perform healing rituals for sick people. As priestesses, they led in performing rites in religious ceremonies and important communal celebrations. And as courtiers, they were well-versed in oral history and esteemed advisers to the ruling nobles.
The position that babaylan once held, as well as the belief in animism, was threatened during the time of the Spaniards. One babaylan in Bohol named Tamblot incited opposition against the colonizers in what is now known as Tamblot Uprising. But in time the influence of babaylan in general lessened and suppressed as Christianity began to spread, eventually fading into the outskirts of culture and society.
Yet traces of these age-old beliefs and the powers attributed to babaylan persist in some form such in the Folk Healing Festival in Siquijor and, of course, Babaylan Festival in Bago City. These fests are part of the larger movement in reclaiming lost culture, tradition, and identity.
Bago City Charter Anniversary Activities
The calendar of Bago City Charter Anniversary activities vary from year to year: from February 1 to February 19 in 2019 and from February 10 to March 6 in 2021. Its highlight occurs on February 19 when the charter day program is held that recalls the transformation from a municipality to a city. Moreover, it is also the day that the city witnesses the parade, Babaylan Street Dance, and Babaylan dance drama or stage competition that remembers the history of the babaylan.
Other mainstays are the Agro-Industrial Cultural and Educational Trade Fair and the prestigious beauty pageant called Diwata Sang Bago. In addition, the city gives out the Gawad Bagonhon awards to outstanding citizens who have demonstrated excellence in their fields, taxpayers, and stakeholders of the city.
Other events may also include cultural programs, workshops, sports, concerts, variety shows, live band, job fair, cookfest, music fest, arts fest, comedy shows, inter-barangay competitions (such as Best Product Search)
party, fireworks display, etc.
How to reach Bago City, Negros Occidental
Bago City is over an hour away from Bacolod-Silay Airport.
References
- About Bago City. City Government of Bago. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Bago celebrates sustainable leaps on 57th charter anniversary. Daily Guardian. February 14, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Babaylanes Festival. Tourism Promotions Board Philippines. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Glazyl Masculino. Recovery, progress highlighted as Negros City celebrates 57th charter anniversary. Manila Bulletin. February 15, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Proclamation No. 656-A, s. 1970. Official Gazette. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- REPUBLIC ACT NO. 4382, June 19, 1965. Supreme Court of the Philippines E-Library. Retrieved February 19, 2023
- Proclamation No. 887. Official Gazette. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Marc Conaco. Ang babaylan nga nahimong bayot. Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Mario Alvaro Limos. The Fall of the Babaylan. Esquire Magazine PH. March 18, 2019. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Brenda Rodriguez Alegre. From Asog to Bakla to Transpinay: Weaving a Complex History of Transness and Decolonizing the Future. Alon: Journal for Filipinx American and Diasporic Studies , March 2022, Vol. 2, No. 1 (March 2022), pp. 51-64. Retrieved February 18, 2023
- Romanillos, Emmanuel Luis A. Augustinian Recollect Legacy to the Church in Negros Island. Philippine Social Science Journal. December 31, 2020. Retrieved February 19, 2023
- Republica de Negros. National Historical Commission of the Philippines. December 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2023
- National Heritage Month Feature : Church of St. John the Baptist in Bago. Negros Season of Culture. May 19, 2021. Retrieved February 19, 2023
- Significant battles in Bohol PT 2: Tamblot Resistance. Bohol Chronicle. October 29, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2023
Bago City Charter Anniversary Summary
Name Bago City Charter Anniversary Celebration Contact (034) 447 8181 Country Philippines Date February 19 Duration Varies Email thecitybridge@yahoo.com Established 1966 Historical event Cityhood of Bago Location Bago City, Negros Occidental Organizer City Government of Bago Website bagocity.gov.ph
Name | Bago City Charter Anniversary |
---|---|
Celebration | |
Contact | (034) 447 8181 |
Country | Philippines |
Date | February 19 |
Duration | Varies |
thecitybridge@yahoo.com | |
Established | 1966 |
Historical event | Cityhood of Bago |
Location | Bago City, Negros Occidental |
Organizer | City Government of Bago |
Website | bagocity.gov.ph |