| Rituals
and Festivals
From the life of Apo Tabunawai and in the long years of communing with
the elemental beings, spirit of saintly ancestors,
spirit helpers and divine
host of Megbebaya, the earlier village developed a worship system to the
Most High (also to whom the names Midlimbag (Creator) Maminteran (Divines)
and Misuara (Voice) are attributed.
To accent the volition of the faithful, rituals and festivals are designed
to appropriately express the Arumanen spirituality. The common denominator
of spiritual expression is the "Pongapar," the burning of dukat (incense)
offering of betelnut and the prayer of the ritual expert. The following
are the major rituals and festivals the Arumanen celebrate:
a. Kanduli. Ritual to celebrate life (from fetus to adulthood) as well
as to heal a sick person. Could be undertaken by a family or the whole
group. The foundation of the act of worship is "Pongapar" followed by an
offering of food
b. Beliley. This is a collective effort of the faithful of a given sacred
place which could be shrines or sites noted to be where the Megbebaya's
holy light is anchored or shines in a given time of the year. Still the
"Pongapar" is undertaken and a feast of community-prepared food.
The noted Belilayas are: the whirlpool of Kiintekin Pangantucan, Pinamaloy
(lake in San Carlos) and Pool of Apo Apiyao (Quezon) all in Bukidnon. In
Cotabato, the noted pilgrimage sites are Tinuntunan (Midsayap) and Sinimburan
Pool (Carmen).
c. Semeya-an/Bulongan. This is After-Harvest Festival with Pongapur
featuring the ritual expert, procession of faithful with chants, white
and red rooster and the parade of virgins celebrated with yells and fire
crackers.
From the results of the cockfight, omens of peace and productivity are
inferred from the fate of the white rooster and from the red, the opposite.
The succeeding matches are merely for fun and celebration.
Food, songs, music, dances and epic chanting are heard and presented at
the eve of and after the ritual. The more formal issues are tackled by
the Council of Elders such as the review and reconstitution of community
policies for the coming moons. To bring omens of good tidings, abundance
and societal well-being, marriages of young people are arranged and undertaken
on the post-festival evenings.
Marriage ceremony is one major ritual and festival for the Arumanen because
it is a societal investment of life and goodwill.
Sometime in 1910, the worship system of the Arumanen was elevated to an
institutional and networked worship of villages. This was instituted by
Timuay Mampurok Palao and called the system "Langkat" with its worship
house called "Bentona." This is practiced in Mt. Akir-Akir (Pigcawayan)
and extending to Mt. Karatungan among the Pulangiyon.
Among the 100,000 Arumanen-Manuvu is an upsurging volition to recapture
the relatedness/correctness of Apo Tabunawai -- the Arumanen people, through
communication with the spiritual realm through rituals and festivals, being
the reservoir of |