^

Nation

Maguindanao begins preparations for Sagayan fest

The Philippine Star

MAGUINDANAO, Philippines -- Local officials, the police and military are initiating  security plans  for the February 1-14 Sagayan Festival in the province.

The festival, a yearly event,  also seeks to celebrate the fragile peace now in what used to be a dangerous Maguindanao, and as thanksgiving for the gains of the  peace talks between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).

Maguindanao Gov. Esmael Mangudadatu, officials of the Army’s 6th Infantry Division and its component-brigades discussed Friday in Buluan town the security measures needed to ward off saboteurs, and to protect guests including dignitaries, prospective investors, and national officials.

The Sagayan is a centuries-old ethnic Maguindanon "war-and-courtship dance" depicting the group’s inclination to be at peace always with non-Maguindanaons, regardless of their religions and racial identities. Sagayan dancers also depict in their steps the readiness of native Maguindanaons to defend at all cost their lands, race, and Islam from any aggression.

Mangudadatu told reporters this year’s Sagayan Festival will also highlight  the political and investment climate in Maguindanao in recent years.

No single armed encounter has been recorded between government forces and MILF guerrillas in any town in the province in the past four years.

Investors, among them Puerto Rican capitalists, and Malaysian merchants, have been frequenting the province lately in preparation for their planned investment in  Cavendish banana plantations, and oil palm farms, respectively.

Maguindanao is a known bastion of the MILF, where it has dozens of enclaves scattered in the area's 36 towns.

“We have so much to celebrate and thank for,” Mangudadatu told reporters.

Col. Dickson Hermoso, spokesman of 6th ID, said the division is ready to provide a battalion of soldiers to secure  the festival.

Most activities during the festival will also showcase Maguindanaon traditions, particularly those pertaining to camaraderie, hospitality, and the resilience of  its residents.

The term Maguindanaon means “people of the perennially flooded plains,” or the Moro communities in the marshy ilod (downstream area) and raya (upper delta) of Central Mindanao, around the Liguasan Marsh, which is the world's largest and said to have vast deposits of natural gas and oil.

The Sagayan Festival was pioneered by Mangudadatu after his first election as governor in 2010. The culmination of the festival coincides with the birthday of his spouse, the late Genalyn, one of the 58 people that perished in the  November 23, 2009 “Maguindanao Massacre”.

Mangudadatu said he is thankful to the Maguindanao provincial board, led by its presiding chairman, Vice Gov. Lester Sinsuat, for recently drafting a resolution institutionalizing the Sagayan Festival as a yearly event.

The resolution also allocated at least P7 million yearly grant to fund the activity.

Board Member Bobby Katambak, chairman of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan’s committee on appropriations, said the governor, for the purpose of streamlining the use of funds allocated for the annual festival, decided to fuse the celebration with the yearly November 5 to 22 commemoration of the founding anniversary of the province.

Katambak said the provincial board separately allocated P7 million for Maguindanao’s yearly founding anniversary celebration. 

Katambak said Maguindanaon folks will start celebrating the fused Sagayan Festival and the founding anniversary of the province in November of 2015.  - John Unson

vuukle comment

BOARD MEMBER BOBBY KATAMBAK

CENTRAL MINDANAO

DICKSON HERMOSO

ESMAEL MANGUDADATU

FESTIVAL

MAGUINDANAO

MAGUINDANAON

MANGUDADATU

SAGAYAN FESTIVAL

  • Latest
  • Trending
Latest
Latest
abtest
Are you sure you want to log out?
X
Login

Philstar.com is one of the most vibrant, opinionated, discerning communities of readers on cyberspace. With your meaningful insights, help shape the stories that can shape the country. Sign up now!

Get Updated:

Signup for the News Round now

FORGOT PASSWORD?
SIGN IN
or sign in with