Basic
Profile:
Ethnic
Group: Higaonon
Language:
Binukid/Higaonon
Location
The
Higaonon is one of the least known ethnolinguistic groups that inhabit
North-Central Mindanao. They occupy the mountainous regions of Misamis
Oriental, Bukidnon plateau, the mountain borders of the provinces of Agusan
and Lanao in the east and west, respectively.
Population
There
is an average of 6.3 members in an Higaonon household (a range of 6.04-6.9).
The estimate of Higaonon population in a 15-20 kilometer radius is between
10,000 and 20,000. From Misamis Oriental to Cagayan de Oro City, there
are approximately 100,000 Higaonon members.
Literary
Arts
The
Higaonon have their own system of writing. Their myths and legend speak
of a great ancestor named "Suwat" who kept a list of the people who were
living and dead during the great flood that took place long ago.
Lore
A
memory devise used by the Higaonon in recounting ethnic history, religion,
traditional law, war, agriculture, and hunting customs is in the form of
a piece of wood provided with notches and incisions representing units
of the narrative.
Mythology
Archaeological
excavations in some caves in an area where no Higaonon are living anymore,
yielded decorated pot shards, deer bones, sea shells and skeletal remains.
The sites were disturbed and much has been lost through the collection
of guano in the caves. It is believed that there are affinities between
the Higaonon and the people that used the caves as burial grounds.
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Religion
The
indigenous religion of the Hiagonon no longer exists. Vestiges of this
still remain with the older generation. Even when already Christianized,
no one is against the recounting of stories concerning their traditional
religion. Marriages, baptisms and other sacraments are done in churches
administered by the Catholic priest or Protestant minister, respectively.
When baptized the Higaonon keeps two names - a Christian and an Higaonon
name.
Culture
of Peace
An
ancient ritual for making peace or for settling modern-day conflicts is
the tampudas hu Balagun, or the treaty of the green vine branch. Literally
it means the cutting of the vine, and is symbolic of the act of cutting
short feuds among the ethnic groups. Tampudas, according to oral traditions
of the Higaonon, are re-enacted whenever feuds rise between groups
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Means
of Livelihood
The
main economic activity is slash and burn cultivation of upland rice and
corn. The agricultural cycle starts during March and April when the Higaonon
devote themselves to clearing and planting. They also engage in food gathering.
Their livelihood is supplemented by logging timbers like apitong, lauan,
yakal, kamagong and narra. The timber is cut by hand and the logs are hauled
using carabaos as draft animals to bring the logs down to the Agusan river.
The hunting of banog, bats, snakes, field rat, monkey and different kinds
of birds is prevalent. Fishing is also one of the major activities. Occasionally,
poisons are used in streams. Spear guns are also employed.
The
average income of a Higaonon household as computed in the Salug area alone
is approximately one hundred pesos a day.
Political
System
The
political system of the Higaonon revolves about a datu. There is usually
a principal datu who rules over an entire group composed of several units
that are each headed by minor datus. These minor datus form a counseling
body for the whole community. The datu assumes multiple roles in the community.
He is at once headman, supreme judge, medicine man, ceremonial man and
the military commander. As headman, he is responsible for looking into
the needs of his people. With such a task goes absolute power. He is supposed
to be the wisest and bravest among his people.
The
datu's right-hand man is the bagani, the war general who is usually the
best warrior of the community. He heads a platoon of young warriors who
are in time of peace the datu's body guards.
Datuship
is both acquired and achieved. It can be inherited as when a dying datu
passes on his title to one of his children. A son is selected preferentially
although primogeniture is not usually the rule. It is usually the most
deserving son who acquires the position.
Kinship
and Social Organization: True to almost any society, the extended family
in the Higaonon world is the major social and economic unit. The extended
family may be composed of several nuclear families, which may include the
families of daughters together with their respective husbands and children.
With
the practice of polygamy in Higaonon society, the kinship has a patrilateral
bias. The husband maintains systematic supervision over his wives who,
nowadays, average three to a household, live with him under a single roof.
Children
in polygamous marriages are considered equals. No discrimination is made
between those of the first marriage or those from later marriages. Any
child grows up as one born into a monogamous family.
Marriage
and Courtship: Marriage in Higaonon society is arranged mainly by the parents
of the boy and girl. The arrangement is a long and tedious process. Prior
to the wedding, the boy must live in the girl's house for about a year
to prove his worth and where he is scrutinized by the parents of the girl.
The
wedding ceremony is elaborate and expensive. Feasting lasts for several
days at the residence of the bride and groom. The marriage of a datu is
even more elaborate.
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Reference:
www.ncca.gov.ph/ORGANIZATION/SCCTA/SOUTHERN/southern_higaonon.htm |