Dinagyang Festival is celebrated every fourth weekend of
January to honor the Christianization of the natives and to respect the Holy
Child Jesus. On this day, streets of Iloilo City will once again come alive as
the Ilonggos celebrate the annual festivity. It is a very colorful parade
coupled with a dramatization in honor of the patron Saint Sto. Niño as the
object of performs offerings and prayers amidst the cracking of drums and
shouts of "Viva Señor Santo Niño." The thundering of "Hala Bira"
by the tribe members makes the celebration a lively one. It is also a very
popular tagline used by Ilonggos to express their warm participation during the
"Dinagyang" celebration. A tribute in honor of Señor Sto. Niño whom
Ilonggos believe was very miraculous in times of famine and drought.
Dinagyang is an annual event, when the whole town rejoices,
shouting their pride of being an Ilonggo and telling their culture. It is a
wonderful looking back to the past. It is not just a celebration, it is a
religious evangelization. Going back to Iloilo is more like a past fulfilled
and a looking forward for future celebrations. It is our culture. The Aeta
culture. That's why it is painting the town black.
The Birth and Evolution of Dinagyang
The root word is dagyang. In Ilonggo, it means to make
happy. Dinagyang is the present progressive word of the Ilonggo word, meaning
making merry or merry-making. A religious and cultural activity, it is a
celebration of Ilonggos whose bodies are painted with black in effect to
imitate the black, small and slender Negritos who are the aborigines of Panay.
The warriors are dressed in fashionable and colorful Aeta costumes and dance
artistically and rhythmically with complicated formations along with the loud
thrashing and sound of drums.
Before, Dinagyang was called Ati-atihan like that of the
Kalibo festivity. History tells that it started when a replica of the image of
Señor Sto. Niño was brought to the San Jose Parish Church in Iloilo from Cebu.
The people of Iloilo honored the coming of the image and then became devotees.
Until they made the day of the Image's arrival as his feast day which falls on
the 4th Sunday of January. Since 1968, it was already considered a yearly
celebration, culminated by a nine-day Novena, an Ati-ati contest and a fluvial
procession on the last day.
Iloilo City's Dinagyang has its early beginnings in 1968,
when a model of the image of Sr. Santo Ni¤o was brought from Cebu City to the
San Jose Parish Church by Fr. Suplicio Ebderes, OSA with a delegation of
Cofradia del Sto. Niño, Cebu members. The image and party were enthusiastically
welcomed at Iloilo City by then parish priest of San Jose Church, Fr. Ambrosio
Galindez, OSA, then Mayor Renerio Ticao, and the devotees of the Sto. Niño in
Iloilo City. The image was brought to San Jose Parish Church and preserved
there up to this time, where a novena in His honor is held every Friday. The
climax of the nine-day novena was the Fluvial Procession.
If the festival had to be developed into a major tourist
attraction, it would be so big in magnitude and the Confradia thought that it
could no longer cope with the demands of a tourist come-on. The year 1976 also
brought another feature of the festival. Street celebrations and audience
participation were introduced and encouraged.
They also include a brief dramatization of how Christianity
was brought to Panay and the arrival of the 10 Bornean Datus telling about the
exchange of the Aetas of their land for the Borneans' Golden Salakot (native
hat) and a long pearl necklace which is also parallel with the Kasadyahan
celebration. During the celebration, people participate with the Kasadyahan.
Some dressed in Aeta costumes, some paint their faces with black paint, some
put on colored artificial tattoos and wear other Aeta ornaments. At night,
there is public dancing on selected areas.
ang cute! pwede sumali? ..
ReplyDeletecge bhe punta tau sa iloilo hehe...
ReplyDelete