Tag Archives: Zamboanga

Quality of Leaders and Barangay Finance

Local Government Units (LGUs) play a crucial role in the Philippines’ economic development. When each barangay, municipality and city improves economically, economic progress in the entire country follows naturally. For Hector De Leon (1997), LGUs can identify the needs and concerns of their localities best, and they can meet these needs by channelling the public goods and services to their constituents who need them the most. De Leon asserts that local affairs can be best regulated by the people in the locality rather than by the central authority. Even literature supports the contention that leaders affect economic growth (Jones 2008; Jones and Olken 2005). Moreover, there is no authority more familiar with local needs and concerns than the barangay leaders themselves.

The Local Government Code of 1991 mandates the following services and facilities that each barangay needs to provide: 1) Agricultural support services which include planting materials, distribution system and operation of farm produce collection and buying stations; 2) health and social welfare services which include maintenance of barangay health center and daycare center; 3) services and facilities related to general hygiene and sanitation, beautification, and solid waste collection; 4) maintenance of katarungang pambarangay; 5) maintenance of barangay roads and bridges and water supply systems; 6) infrastructure facilities such as multipurpose hall, multipurpose pavement, plaza, sports center, and other similar facilities; 7) information and reading center; and 8) satellite or public market.

To be able to carry out its mandate, the LGU at the barangay level has two essential needs: 1) The adequate funding to finance all these responsibilities; and, 2) the competency to raise and use these finances efficiently. Both are necessary; one is deficient without the other. However, the latter is the more important of the two because in the case where finances are insufficient, competent leaders can demonstrate resourcefulness in generating revenues.

The focal contention of this paper is that the financial condition of the barangays is directly related to their kind of local leaders. Specifically, the main research question is: Is the financial capability of local governments affected by the quality of its leaders? This paper, therefore, attempts to measure the extent to which leadership competency contributes to the financial capability of LGUs, specifically of the barangays. The paper first presents the challenges besetting the finances of the barangays particularly in Zamboanga City, and then examines how leadership qualities may have contributed or eased these challenges.

A Review on Barangay Finance

Like any LGU, the barangay has two main sources of funding one of which is the Internal Revenue. Allotment (IRA). The IRA is a share that barangays are entitled to get from the national taxes as assured by Section 285 in Title 3 of the Local Government Code of 1991. Another source of funds is stipulated in section 129 of the same code that allows LGUs the power to generate its own income, which this paper calls own-source revenues (OSR).

With such a daunting mandate, the problem lies on the LGUs’ limited financial resources to carry out its responsibilities. Layug et al. (2010) reported in their study that the bulk of the barangay income in Agusan del Sur and Dumaguete is being spent on salaries and wages. Little money is left for fulfilling the devolved functions of barangays, with most of them failing to finance these functions.

Moreover, the many responsibilities of barangays mean that the limited financial resources are thinly distributed among their several functions. Some of these barangays fail to spend on important basic services such as education and health. In all study areas, no amount was spent on agricultural support services, maintenance of barangay roads, bridges, and water systems, and infrastructure facilities. Expenditures on health and nutrition range from PhP 2,000 to PhP 81,000, and these were spent on paying for utilities expense and honoraria of Barangay Health Workers (BHW) and medicines (Layug et al. 2010).

Another financial concern is the barangays’ dependency on their IRA and their lack of initiative to raise their OSR.

The 2010 Financial Report by the Commission of Audit (COA) reveals that 65 percent of the LGUs’ incomes come from the IRA. In their study, Layug et al. (2010) report that the barangays’ dependency on their IRA ranges from 85 percent to 97 percent. This IRA-dependency of the LGUs has been noted and concurred by several papers (Layug et al. 2010; Manasan 1987; and Quaile 2009). Furthermore, Layug et al. (2010) state that barangays do not address the misalignment of revenue and expenditure assignment, as well as the counter-equalizing and disincentive effects of IRA by not raisingenough OSR in their localities and optimizing their use of corporate powers as evidenced by a zero percentage on borrowings.

In a joint project of the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) and the United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) in 2009, it stated that “without sufficient funding to finance the production, distribution, consumption, or provision of public services, well-meaning public officials are unable, to deliver. Given these perennial constraints, local chief executives are faced with a great challenge to be resourceful and innovative, and most of all, to exercise strong political will in overcoming the limitations and in delivering the needed services.”

Among the reasons for the financial handicap disenabling the barangays to deliver goods and services to their constituents are the barangay leaders themselves. Layug et al. (2010) identify this as the lack of political will among barangay officials to innovate alternative modalities of revenue generation—or optimal use of corporate powers in terms of accessing credit facilities, among others.

This ‘lack of political will’ is due to the inadequate competence of these barangay officials which hampers them from tackling the financial as well as the public service needs of their constituency. The Besley, Montalvo and Reynal-Querol’s (2011) study reveals that economic growth is enhanced by having leaders who are more highly educated.

Traits of a Leader in Multiple Regression and Econometric Model

Ideas on leadership qualities can be traced as far back as the Greek philosopher Plato. In Plato’s Republic, he described that a leader, a philosopher-king, should have the following qualities: Highly intelligent, morally upright, and well-trained.

In the field of leadership studies today, among the theories of leadership that are often discusssed is the trait theory. Trait theory assumes that people possess or acquire certain qualities that make them better suited to leadership. This theory asserts that effective leaders demonstrate certain traits or characteristics. Such traits help explain what makes one leader stand out from others. These traits can be character traits (Esguia and Padilla 2010) or some level of cognitive or emotional intelligence.

This research paper finds its inspiration from Jones and Olken (2005) who assert that quality of leaders mattered for economic—or in this paper’s case, income—growth. They believe that “some leaders are more competent than others and are able to make sensible economic policy choices which enhance economic performance.” This conclusion is supported by Besley, Montalvo and Reyna-Querol (2011) who assert that economic “growth is enhanced by having leaders who are more highly educated.” Butler, Lee and Moretti (2004) add that political affiliation also matters for growth.

This study had drawn some of the variables from the latter literature. It applied multiple regression analysis using cross-sectional data. It estimated how much each of the pertinent qualities of these chairpersons elected last 2010 has affected the barangays’ financial capability. This is expressed in the following model: [Refer to PDF File for the formula (Page 3)]

Methodology, Variables and Significance of the Study

This study utilizes both qualitative and quantitative analyses. For the qualitative analysis, the paper first presents an overview of the consolidated financial condition of the ninety-eight barangays in Zamboanga City, to be followed by a summary profile of all the chairpersons locally known as “punong barangays.” The regression test uses the ordinary least squares method to provide the empirical basis for the quantitative analysis of the estimated variables.

The dependent variable is the Financial Capability which is the total income of a particular barangay’s net of its IRA, denoted as OSR. Urbanized barangays tend to have larger incomes and rural barangays have smaller incomes. To remove this bias toward rich barangays, OSR is expressed in a form of a ratio. Mathematically, it is expressed in the following:
[Refer to PDF FILE]

To approximate the contribution of the chairperson’s qualities on the financial capability of his/her barangay, the change in OSR is estimated. The change here denotes the difference between the levels of barangay income at the end of 2011 and the level of barangay income prior to his/her assumption of office in 2009. This difference will show if this official has brought about a financial improvement, stagnation or decline in the LGU.
[Refer to PDF FILE]

The independent variables that this study will look into include the qualities of barangay chairpersons namely: Education, experience, age, gender, civil status and familial affiliations of the barangay chairpersons.

This paper is interested to find out if educational background is a significant factor in enabling the barangay chairpersons to be good fund-raisers. The level of education represents the knowledge, skills and formal trainings these officials have to make them good leaders of their own locality. This is determined by the highest educational attainment of the barangay captain, in terms of number of years of formal and informal schooling. This study hypothesizes that leaders with higher educational attainment (college or graduate level) are better economic planners, more innovative and open-minded to new sources of revenues than those with lower educational levels Experience is measured by the number of years in public service, either as chairperson or any other official position in the barangay. A first-term official is assumed to have less experience in public service than an official with two or more terms in office. This paper hypothesizes that experience of the barangay chairpersons has a significantly positive relation with the financial capability of their barangays.

Affiliation is another important factor to consider. Butler, Lee, and Moretti (2004) point out that political affiliation is related to economic growth. However, the Local Government Code of 1991 stipulates the apolitical and non-partisan nature of local officials. Hence, generally and by custom, barangay officials have not outrightly engaged themselves in partisan politics. For the purposes of this paper, the term affiliation is referred to as familial which is defined as the number of officials who hold various barangay positions with the same surname. The positions may vary from chairperson, kagawad, Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) chairperson, barangay secretary or treasurer. Since it is quite common for families to reside in the same village, this study assumes that officials with identical surnames are, to some degree, related to one another. By practice in this country, candidates of political clans often get elected, even when political dynasties are discouraged by the Philippine Constitution. This research would like to see if having relatives in the village council, either at present or in the past, affects the barangay’s OSR.

Finally, this paper tests whether age, gender and civil status of punong barangays can also affect their ability to raise funds.

For the purposes of this paper, the term barangay chairperson is used interchangeably with the terms chairperson, punong barangay and captain; whereas, barangays are also referred to as villages. The city proper is locally known in Zamboanga City as pueblo and in this paper is also termed poblacion. The OSR is used interchangeably with own source incomes.

The total income is taken from the annual Statements of Appropriation, Income and Expenditures reported by the City Auditor’s Office. The OSR is computed using this total income minus the IRA which is prepared by the Office of the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) in Region IX.

For the independent variables, the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) has compiled a concise profile of all barangay officials in the city.

Meanwhile, this study is important for the following reasons. Firstly, it fills in a research vacuum focusing on barangay leadership and finance. There is limited literature on Philippine barangays per se as more researches tend to focus on cities, municipalities and even provinces due to readily available data. This paper will help provide a picture of the financial as well as economic condition of the barangays in Zamboanga City.

Secondly, institutions that train future leaders, like the Ateneo de Zamboanga University (ADZU) which is a service provider of higher education in Region IX, will benefit greatly from this paper. The research findings can help in evaluating their curriculum and programs and in designing their course offerings that reflect the training of future leaders as well as in inculcating in their students civic duties and responsibilities. More particularly, as a stakeholder and participant of local development, ADZU may find this study helpful in guiding its social development projects.

Thirdly, social planners, both in national and local government agencies, will also find the results of this paper useful in helping local officials become better fiscal managers and the LGUs, particularly the barangays, perform their functions better.

Finally, this study is opportune and relevant in times of elections, specifically barangay elections. It can reveal the importance of choosing the right leaders and the implication of the electorate’s votes on the performance of their LGUs.

Results and Discussion

Financial Status of the Barangays in Zamboanga City

According to the City Auditor’s records, as of year 2011, the ninety-eight barangays in Zamboanga City have a combined total income of PhP 390.7 million, higher by 8.5 percent than the previous year. This is higher when compared to the combined total expenses of the same year, which was PhP 275.5 million. In fact, the barangays in Zamboanga City have been saving since 2009, only that the surpluses have been declining from PhP 132.9 million in 2009 to PhP 121.5 million in 2010 and PhP 115.1 million in 2011. Still, what is notable is that each of these barangays has gained surpluses in all these three years. Not one of them had a deficit. As for the reason behind this, perhaps another in-depth research study can be made on the disbursement process of these funds.

On the issue as to whether or not the barangays in Zamboanga City are dependent on the IRA, records from the DBM show that the total combined IRA given to these barangays in 2011 amounted to PhP 335.8 million. This is 86 percent of the consolidated income of the same year (see Figure 1). Apparently, the 14 percent or about PhP 55 million generated by these LGUs themselves or their OSRs are clearly not enough to fund the PhP 275.5 million expenses incurred that year.

Another point of interest is to know whether or not the fiscal conditions of the barangays have improved in real values since 2009—the year before the current elected barangay chairpersons have assumed office up to their first year in office which was 2011. By real values, it meant using common price levels to make the incomes in these two years comparable. This is made possible by removing the effect of inflation on the 2011 total income. When computed, the real incomes of several barangays were actually lower in 2011 compared to 2009. When totalled together, the total real barangay income in 2011 was a mere PhP 8 million higher than the total income in 2009.

Top and Bottom Ten Barangays and their Chairpersons

When the ninety-eight barangays in Zamboanga City were ranked according to real OSR, the ten highest and the ten lowest OSRs, there were six barangays whose OSRs reached PhP 1 million to 2 million (see Table 1). Surprisingly, the villages with the biggest OSRs were Mampang, Sta. Catalina and Patalon; both the former and latter are rural villages. According to the COA regional office, the reason for Mampang’s and Patalon s sizeable OSR in 2011 was the large congressional fund given to these barangays allotted for medical equipment. For instance, Mampang received about PhP 1.9 million for this purpose.

It is worth noting that the richest barangays with the highest total incomewere not on this list: Talon-Talon, Baliwasan, Pasonanca, Tumaga, Calarian,San Jose Gusu and Tugbungan. These villages have the biggest total incomebecause their IRA are also the largest due to their sizeable populations andland area, while their OSRs may not be as substantial.

TABLE I. Barangays with the Highest and Lowest OSRs
[Refer to PDF FILE]

In terms of the percentage of the OSR to total income, the barangays with the biggest share were Zone III at 41 percent, Zone II at 35 percent, and Zone IV at 29 percent. This result is not surprising because they are all located at the central district of the city. Their OSRs are generated from establishments located in this area. Meanwhile, Tetuan and Sta. Maria had the smallest share in the top ten at 13 percent, Moreover, all these barangays are mostly situated within 4 kilometres of the city proper and are classified as urban areas except Mampang and Patalon which are 6 kilometres and 31 kilometres away from the poblacion, respectively.

The villages with the smallest OSRs are Kasanyagan, Pangapuyan, Tigbalabag, Landang Laum, Panubigan, Manalipa, Busay, Landang Gua, Tumalutab, and Dita. Notice that six of these are island villages and are economically classified as rural areas, except for Kasanyagan which is an urban village located 2 kilometres from the city proper. The six poorest villages with the smallest total incomes are not on this list. These are Latuan, Lumayang, Dulian (Upper Pasonanca), Taguiti, Pasilmanta and Capisan. They were not in the bottom ten barangays because their OSRs were among the smallest.

Table 2 reveals that on the average, the top ten barangays have a relatively larger share of OSR to their total incomes than the bottom ten barangays. This means that the former are relatively less dependent on their IRA allocation than the latter.

TABLE 2. Profile of Punong Barangays of Villages with the Highest and Lowest OSR
[Refer to PDF FILE]

On the average, the chairpersons of the top ten barangays have more years of experience in public service, more years of schooling and are older than the village captains in the bottom ten on the OSR ranking. Moreover, thepunong barangays of the top ten villages happen to be all males, all marriedand less than half of them has or had relatives serving in the barangay councileither at present and/or in the previous terms of office. As to whether thesevariables (that is, experience, education, gender, civil status, age and familyaffiliation) significandy affect OSR, these have to be tested empirically.

Regression Results

When the econometric model was tested using all independent variables,it appears that only education and age significantly affect the OSR of the ninety-eight barangays in 2011. Affiliation, gender and civil status have low values, hence, do not significantly affect the barangays OSR (see Figure 3).

Excluding the insignificant independent variables, the best econometric model with the lowest Akaike Info Criterion (AIC) and Schwarz Criterion is shown in Figure 4. Regression tests reveal heteroscedasticity and spatial autocorrelation problems. The presence of heteroscedasticity is brought about by outliers, with a few barangays having very large OSRs while some others with very small OSRs. Log transformations of the variables in the model have been used to address this problem. The autocorrelation is not a surprise since Zamboanga is a small city. Spillover effects of both positive and negative externalities nature on adjacent barangays are common. To correct this complication, a first-order autoregressive (AR) process (1) is used on the model.

Figure 4 reveals that for every additional year of schooling a punong barangay possesses, the OSR of the barangay increases by 5 percent. For every1 percent increase in the age of the punong barangay, OSR increases by 0.77percent. Both figures are significant within the 95 percent confidence level.Whereas, for every percent increase in public service experience, the barangays OSR gains by 12 percent. The low t statistic of the variable experience reveals that the latter result is still within the 90 percent confidence level. However,this interpretation should be approached with caution. If the auto correlationis uncorrected [or the AR 1 is excluded in the model], the p value of the variable experience is raised, thereby making it less significant. Nevertheless, the F-Stat of this model and its probability value show that this is moderately significant. This model, therefore, can explain and predict 20 percent of the movements in the barangays’ OSR.

It is possible, though, that the education variable depends on the OSR. It is not uncommon for barangay councils with high financial capability,and those who belong to progressive villages with high standard of living, to have an educated electorate. Such progressive villages tend to elect educated officials. To test this possibility, the Granger Causality was used to determine the direction of dependence between these two variables. Results in Table 3 show that the probability of having OSR not causing the variable education  is moderately significant at 90 percent confidence level.

When the difference between 2011 real barangay income and 2009nominal income was regressed, only experience was the significant factor.All other variables do not directly affect nor contribute significantly to the change in barangay income. The result in Table 3 reveals that for every percent increase in the number of years of experience, the change in OSR increases by 50 percent. However, this result is not conclusive since the regression tests accepted only eleven out of ninety-eight observations in the model.

One probable reason for this result in Figure 5 was the short interval between the years the data have been taken. By 2011, the current barangay chairpersons had been in office for just over a year. By this time, only second and third term chairpersons were able to exercise their taxing powers more effectively than the first-time barangay captains. Moreover, the inclusion of the gender variable generates better regression results than without this variable in the model.

Delimitations of the Study

This paper covers chairpersons of all the ninety-eight barangays of Zamboanga City who were elected last 2010. This excludes the other barangay officials elected on the same year, such as kagawad, SK chairperson,barangay secretary and treasurer. It also excludes other city or municipal officials whether elected or appointed. Hence, the results, conclusions and implications of this research may not directly be applicable to other LGUs and elective officials. However, the information derived from this study provides evidence and support to the premise that abilities of local officials can and does affect the financial capabilities of the localities they serve.

Another limitation is that not all qualities of the punong barangay were included in this study due to non-availability of data such as profession.Only thirty-three out of ninety-eight chairpersons indicated their profession or means of livelihood in their file at the DILG. Among the explanations provided by the regional director of DILG is that these officials are bound not to report their means of livelihood because several of them ceased practicing their profession to devote themselves to full-time public service.

As to the latest available OSR used in this study which is 2011, the current barangay captains were in office for just a little over a year. The fiscal impact of these local executives on their villages’ GSRs is not yet fully realized, especially for the first-termers.

Moreover, the OSR may include endowments, grant and gifts that may be freely given to certain barangays or may be attained through a collective effort of the barangay council or even by some private individuals residing within or outside the concerned barangay. Consequently, the entire OSR may not be directly attributable solely to the personal leadership efforts of the village chairperson. Nevertheless, this paper was written on the premise that the qualities of the chairperson are important considerations to the willingness of private individuals or government officials to financially help the pertained barangay. In other words, the OSR is a product of both the direct efforts of the punong barangay, and indirectly of his personal qualities.

Finally, the financial conditions of these barangays depend solely on the financial reports filed by the barangay to the City Auditor and DILG. This research study assumes the figures on these financial records are accurate and has, therefore, no means of verifying unreported funds.

Conclusion and Recommendations

The purpose of this research study is to answer the question: Is the financial capability of local governments affected by the quality of its leaders?with ‘financial capability’ defined as OSR, and local government specified in this paper as barangays. The regression results support the hypothesis that education, age and experience of punong barangays positively contribute to the barangays’ financial capability in Zamboanga City.

However, in terms of raising real incomes in future years, only the experience of local chief executives appears to matter. This implies that to be able to have sustainable barangay funds, it is advantageous for a barangay chairperson to have years of experience in public service.

Both findings imply that for village councils to have sufficient and sustainable funding, the electorate has to choose quality local leaders who are well-educated, experienced and old or mature enough to be able to generate and maintain local funds.This paper recommends that villages in the bottom ten barangays in terms of the lowest OSR, as well as the poorest barangays should elect educated, mature and experienced village officials.This recommendation is also applicable to other LGUs. One possibility is for the government to appoint qualified local leaders in poor localities instead of having the usual democratic elections, but only until such time when a certain level of development has been achieved in these areas.

This paper also recommends that further research studies be conducted on the revenue structure, disbursements of funds, even case studies on the barangay chairpersons and other relevant issues which this paper was unable to cover. Further research can be conducted where the OSR is itemized and divested of grants such as congressional funds and endowments that are not directly attributed to the personal efforts of the barangay chairperson.

The Subanen Buklog

This presentation is based on field research carried out by the writer among the Subanens in the Zamboanga peninsula; Zamboanga del Sur, Zamboanga del Norte, and in Misamis Occidental, over the period of some fifteen odd years, in an attempt to describe and document some important aspects of Subanen culture particularly their folklore. The project was generously funded by Toyota Foundation.

By folklore, I choose Archer Taylor’s broad definition and scope of the area which includes the whole of traditional culture — materials that are handed on by tradition either by word of mouth or by custom and practice. Folklorists are also particularly interested in other verbal subject matter like legends, myths and epics which reflect beliefs and value systems or those folk traditions which do not rely upon verbal communication in fixed forms such as folk medicine, food, festivals, taboos, folk aesthetics, etc.

Data for this paper were gathered from various places that still practice the buklog festival, although, I have also interviewed several informants in different places who have valuable information regarding the subject matter. Facts about the Subanen Buklog will be presented in this paper, some interpretations, to be sure, are unavoidable, but I have done it very objectively and sparingly Supporting information have also been gathered from LimpapaSiocon, Sindangan and Zamboanga del Norte Subanens. These areas have celebrated the buklog and this researcher had the opportunity to participate and also observe the activities.

The Subanens

The term is given to a group of Philippine ethnic community that inhabit areas in the Zamboanga or Sibugal peninsula, and the mountain areas of Misamis Occidental. The name means riverdwellers, from the word suba, river, and “nun”, “nen”, or “non” an adjective postfix indicating origin or inhabitation. This term was applied to the tribe and to the Moros and Christians of Zamboanga peninsula who are coast dwellers. Probably, the term was first applied to the Subanens by Christian and Moros, but it is now well known to the tribe and used by it . It is not, however, the only term applied by these people to themselves. A Subanen when asked as to who he is will often answer tau bukid, or tau buid, hill man.

Many years ago the coastal areas of Zamboanga peninsula and Misamis Occidental were home to the nomadic, timid and shy Subanen, but they were always harassed by other tribes particularly the dominant Moros who were inhabiting the nearby islands and were constantly marauding the shoreline inhabitants to capture and later sell them as slaves. Then, later the Islamized Moros were also trying to convert them to Islam. Folk oral history has it, that only one of the four brothers accepted Islam, the rest fled and settled somewhere else. The group is also continually being pushed farther into the interior by Christian settlers and their kaingins have been taken over by Christian homesteaders. These people had no recourse but to move deeper and deeper into the forest and stayed there for many generations. It was only when they were converted to Christianity or have been influenced by their Christian neighbors that they stopped their nomadic life and settled in places they found abundant with food and the soil is fertile. The Subanens are relatively friendly and peace-loving people, but because of the many years of constant harassment from the more dominant groups, they learned to fight back. Their epics and folktales have accounts of their ancestors being good swordsmen and fine warriors. Their men and women fought side by side to survive. Through the centuries they struggled to gain some form of identity as a people, to maintain their cultural heritage and also be able to continue practising the traditions handed down to them their ancestors.

A traditional Subanen in hsi lifetime would wish that he can sponsor or put up a buklog. But because of the cost involved in the festivities most Subanens die without having fulfilled their dream.

By and large, the Subanen Buklog is a socio-religious activity. Perhaps one can safely say that this is one of the few Subanen observances that involves the whole settlement or community. When word circulates around that a family is going to put up a buklog, the women prepare their fineries, i.e., clothes and ornaments, and the men hone their expertise in dancing especially on the platform where tournaments in the form of who can topple his opponent by tripping his feet while dancing around the pestle of puthaw. They also prepare their own contributions of gasi or rice wine. If they had experience death in the family, and wished to “send” goods to their dearly departed, they can also prepare clothes and signify to the main sponsor their desire to do so, provided that the Buklog is celebrated for the benefit of the dead. Most of the preparation goes to the sponsor.

While an average traditional Subanen will be able to verbalize some aspects of his culture, it is not easy to get him to talk about what he believes in. In most conversations one can infer that they acknowledge the existence of environment spirits who are either benevolent or melevolent, and who will have to be propitiated or appeased when on incurs their anger, or have trespassed their territory. Hence the Subanene observes the buklog for various reasons. According to my informant Thimuay Vicente Imbing, the buklog can be offered as fulfillment of a promise upon recovery from illness, a bountiful harvest of crops and most importantly, in memory of the dead. The said activity has also sub-categories, like a buklog can be for prestige purpose or when a Subanen assumes leadership in the community.

The festival was known to be regularly practised in Subanen country, but for some reasons or another onlt a few places now observe the buklog festival. An informant in Lapuyan told me that some places do not practice putting up the buklog because of their fear of binaloy curse or petrifucation, or turning to stone. They even have evidence to show for it. In Lapuyan, they still observe the buklog, but with much discussion and deliberation among the tribal leadership. Perhaps, this is brought abotu by the conflict of religious ideals, since most of the Lapuyan Subanens have been converted to Christian Alliance Protestantism, which has taken root or is now deeply rooted in the hearts of Subanens living in this area. The Lamassons’ were the first American Christian missionaries who worked with the Subanens as early as 1920. Lapuyan is even known as “little America” because you can communicate with the Subanen in English. The first time I visited these people in 1977 I was really caught by surprise when I went to the market to drink coffee when someone behind me asked if I wanted cream with coffee. I turned by back and was met face to face with a very old woman, who had wrinkled face, about two or three teeth remaining … asking me, if I wanted cream to go with my coffee. Anyway, this was my introduction to Subanen Country.  Linguistic communication with other groups of Subanens in other places was not at all difficult, in Sindangan for instance, they spoke Visayan quite fluently, in the Limpapa-Siocon area by they either spoke Visayan or Chavacano, and those who have resided in the lowland areas, speak Visayan, English or Tagalog. In other place Subanens are either Roman Catholics or Protestants.

While the festival of the buklog has been mentioned so many times in the epics, folktales and legends, it is, however, only in E.B. Christie’s, The Subanons of Sindangan Bay that the buklog is described in detail. His work has been of great help when I was doing my own field research in an effort to establish traditional Subanen customs, practices, oral literature and other form or folklore.

Generally, when a man or his family decides to give a buklog, for some reason or another, he begins to store rice, and to collect a large amount of chickens, pigs, and eggs. A festival of this sort lasts three to seven days, and is frequently participated by a large number of persons coming from the locality and nearby communities, so that consumption of food and gasi (rice beer) is enormous, relatively to Subanen resources. As the time for the feast approaches, friends and relatives from all the surrounding localities bring contributions of food and very frequently the guests at the festival bring with them some small contribution in the way of a chicken, several pieces of eggs or a measure or two of rice but in spite of aid rendered by friend and guests, it is safe to say that most of the food and drink are usually furnished by the hosts.

The buklog festival derives its name from the platform that is erected for this purpose. It is prepared as a structure some 10 to 18 ft. high, although in Limpapa the height was about 40 ft. above the ground, consisting of a highly resilient platform supported at the corners by upright beams. A beam passes through the middle of the platform which above extends like a maypole and below reaches to a short, thick log, laid on the ground. The log is hollowed out like a drum and is laid over a number of large earthen jars sunk in the earth which serve as resonators. A few leaves and sticks are interspersed to prevent the jars from breaking. A crosspiece which joins the long central pole of beam to the platform makes it go up and down with the latter as the Subanen dance around the pole. The long beam as it comes down strikes the hollow log and makes a loud booming sound which animates the dancers. This is actually their only music.

the materials needed for the platform have also been prepared and gathered months before the actual construction begins. In fact, my informant, Datu Agdino Andres from Sandingan, said that even during the gathering of the wood to be used for the platform, some ceremonial, offerings have already been made, and certain taboos are also observed. For instance, the log used for the mortar comes from the bayug. While it is being cut and carried down from the forest, the Memwati singer or chanter asks the bayug tree god to protect them from harm and that He be with them as they celebrate the buklog, this goes with the debalod, another type of wood which is used for posts and beams. The Memwati chanter addresses the tree god for their blessing and protection. The bayug becomes the impersonation of the god, the moment it is taken or cut down, and Subanens treat it with reverence and respect. The pestle could either be made of bakhawan (a certain tree species that grow in marshy places) or ilang-ilang, and should be felled or cut down together with the tree for the mortar. This, too, is also given some form of respect, i.e., the wood is carried, never dragged on the ground.

The buklog platform cannot be constructed until the idol (fetish or carved representation of Apo Asog) on one of the pots is carved. A series of purification rites are also done. After this is done, the men who earlier had dug eight holes for the posts that will hold the platform, will start mounting the posts. As in the previous activity, and as the poles are being put up, there is music and dancing. The pole with the fetish (idol) is the main post which is placed into the second hole facing north, the idol facing east. The posts are placed not straight up but radially, going outwardly. This is done so that the flooring made out of split bamboo swings sideward and forward as the dancing is done on the platform. During the placing of the posts into the hole, the out kitchen is also build. Balaba or bigger strips of rattan are used to hold the wood together. No nails are used in putting up the buklog.

The workers start digging the hole for the mortar or the hollowed out log. At this time they start to play music in their agongs, dancing this time is done by a female. The jars are also laid in their place. It is now late in the evening, the buklog structure has just been completed. Musical instruments and the Memwati singer continues singing, describing everything that is taking place. Her songs are extemporaneous compositions, based of traditional tunes, melodies that are exclusively used for buklog activities only.

The balian now prepares for the formal opening of the structure. Three chicken are brought in.  A female dancer starts dancing, she is joined by another female, music and dancing continues, the gasi or rice wine is also brought out and a table is decorated by palm fronds of pisa, cooked rice wrapped with the coconut leaves in the shape of a crocodile, the feet are represented with unripe banana fruit, and the tail, midportion and eyes, of boiled eggs. Music and dancing stops; the balian invites the elders to go up with him to the buklog structure after having passed incence on the table where the offering for the diwata is placed.  He passes incense on the gasi jars, prayers are said by the balian, then he puts on his bolo, and together they go up the ladder leading to the buklog platform. Prayers are said and everyone is invited to take a sip of the gasi. The chicken and pig is also brought up the platform, incense is also in place, a porcelain bown and two plates are placed in front of the Thimuay (or tribal leader), who goes up the platform with the balian, gasi jars are also brought up.

The pig and white chicken are tied tot he floor of the platform near the pestle. The blood of the chicken will be shed down the hole so that it will fall directly on the wooden or hollow drum, below the elevated platform. At one corner to the east and west of the buklog are altars, these are where offerings  are placed. Then the balian invites people to come up the platform, mostly elderly men and women, no young girls are permitted. They are made to dance, so that the hollowed drum underneath the platform will sound. The tied pigs gets loose, blood is flowing through his mouth and nose, it is permitted to run around the platform; after a while the pig is caught and tied to the floor again. The dancers have to continue dancing until they are able to produce a “good sound”. It is the balian who determined this. Finally a “good sound” is produced and another set of seven persons are invited to come up the buklog platform, and dancing continues.

The balian is ready to make the offering, gets out his bolo and hands it over to the sponsor of the Buklog, the rooster is killed, blood flows down the pestle and the pig is butchered too. With the white rooster and the pig killed, the buklog is formally opened. Everybody is enjoined to come up the platform and dance. Those who had been dancing and tired may sit on the benches on the sides of the platform provided for them. Those who are old and can no longer dance but want to participate can still go up and just sit on the side.

The activity goes on for three to seven days – for as long as there are people who would want to go up the buklog and dance. It is the obligation of the host to serve food and drinks. While the activity goes on, extemporaneous singing by the balian continues, gongs are beaten, stories are told, there is a renewal of ties ans friendship. Meanwhile the balian sits in a phintuan or a small hut just outside the house and he continuously beats the porcelain bowl. The buklog comes to a close with the balian going about the house with a lighted torch … and a piece of grass and leaves, putting them in a basket and upon reaching the hearth, puts out the torch. Lastly, the balian leaves the house with his assistants but the activity i.e., dancing, eating, socializing continues. Incense is burned and the chanter or Memwati sings describing what is going on. If for example the thimuay or datu observed unusual things happening then he informs the balian to pray more to avert the curse of the binaloy. If, signs of turning to stone is taking place then the datu will be forced to kill the balian and his blood will be sprinkled on the people to prevent them from turning into stone.

Concluding Remarks

The description gives some idea of the atmosphere in which the religious ceremonies of the buklog are performed. It is apparent that there is nothing that can properly be called solemnity. While the dancing, eating and drinking among the people go on, it is the balian and his assistants who carefully perform the ceremonies; for the Subanens the less they mix in the delicate matters of the supernatural world, the safer for them.

The buklog exemplifies man’s concerns for himself, his fellowmen and his environment. The very fact that when he or a member of his family gets sick, he makes a promise to put up a buklog conditional on the recovery of that sick member which he has to fulfill otherwise he will incur the ire of the diwatas; for a Subanen believes that become sick could be cause by an environmental spirits because one has displeased that spirit or an ancestral spirit has been neglected and to remind the living causes a member of the family to get sick. The buklog shows environmental concerns, especially so when the materials that are to be used for the platform are gathered. These are not cut down without a proper rituals and offerings.

Sprituality of the Fort-Pilar Pilgrims

Using an anthropological lens, I aim to describe in this paper the spirituality of the pilgrims of Fort Pilar Shrine in Zamboanga City. I will start by situating pilgrimage as a subject matter in anthropology and offer my choice of treating the same subject matter, as I appropriate Michel de Certeai’s praxis. I will then proceed by showing a glimpse of the historical Fort Pilar field to contextualize the physical space where the devotion to the La Virgen del Pilar emerges through time. Tracing a history of this devotion will introduce us to a kind of practical spirituality, characterized more by actions and practices and less by reflection. Then, I will proceed to show that practical spirituality is praxis and a rich ground for reflection and spiritual discoveries. In this part, I will also attempt to imply that reflection is also praxis. Then, I will end this paper with a few suggestions on how to facilitate the practice of reflection for greater spiritual emancipation.

Pilgrimage in Anthropology

In anthropological literature, the pilgrimage phenomenon has largely been treated with a structuralist tone, if we recall Emile Durkheim and Victor ‘Rimer, although Alan Nlorinis (1992) gives credit to “Bharati (1963; 1970) and ‘Rimer (1973; 1974a; 1974d; Turner and Turner 1992, 7) as those who first gave the subject serious attention within the anthropological mainstream.” With the Durkheimian inclination, “many writers on pilgrimage have perceived the activity as a crucial operator which welds together diverse local communities and social strata into more extensive collectivities- (lade and Sallnow 1991, 3). Pilgrimage, therefore, has an integrative function to societies and cultures. limier, however, offers an alternative to this functionalist view of pilgrimage. For him, it is a liminal phenomenon, with the pilgrims motivation towards communitas. Pilgrimage stands against, if not outside, structures as opposed to the functionalist’s pro-structural inclination.

More recent field researches on pilgrimage have however challenged, if not contradicted, the Turnerian view. The problem with the Turnerian model is that it “not only prejudges the complex character of the phenomenon but also imposes- a spurious homogeneity on the practice of pilgrimage in widely differing historical and cultural settings”(5). Sallnow and Eade look at the functionalist and Turnertan approaches to pilgrimage study as both with structuralist foundation because pilgrimage is “seen as either supporting or subverting the established social order” (5). In acknowledging the shortcomings, Sallnow and Eade say: “In order to transcend this somewhat simplistic dichotomy, it is necessary to develop a view of pilgrimage not merely as field of social relations but also as a realm of competing discourses” (5). The trend, therefore, shifts to discourse analysis.

While my fieldwork shows incongruence with the Turnerian model, it also deviates from a discursive treatment of pilgrimage. The main reason is that the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage is more of a practice than a discourse. If I wish, I may succeed in showing competing discourses within the whole sphere of my fieldwork, but only if I were to interrogate the pilgrims’ thoughts and voices. Then I can put together those views for comparison and contrast of some competing discourses about pilgrimage. Yet, the subjects may not even think the matter worth discussing with other people. If no one asks, they may not express them. The ethnographer’s text of competing discourses may not really mirror the field in which people do not really engage in discussions. In the Fort Pilar Shrine, pilgrims neither compete with their ideas on spirituality nor on pilgrimage. In fact, Dudut, one of my pilgrim interviewees, says: Wala man namo na ginahisgutan kung unsay buhaton or unsa and among ginabuhat didto sa Fort Pilar: Ginabuhat lang man namo (We don’t seem to really discuss what to do or what we do in Fort Pilar. We simply do).

The focus of this study then tends toward viewing the pilgrims’ practices which are rooted in their tradition–interactions with locations, religious objects, built structures, and people—as they do pilgrimage at Fort Pilar and find new expressions in their dispositions. One basic element in pilgrimage is travel. As pilgrims start out on a journey, they walk on roads, pathways, and on spaces. They may take a ride, but as they enter the Shrine, they walk on specific locations. There, they touch objects, catch smoke from the burning candles, and even kiss statues of saints. Sometimes, they may hurry to leave the Shrine. At other times, they may want to linger and pray in different bodily positions. Going to the Fort Pilar Shrine means something to them.

Yet, all this has a bearing on how these pilgrims are introduced to this kind of spirituality. Pilgrimage is a product of traditions and the pilgrims’ simple improvisations. Hence, this study focuses on the spirituality embodied in the pilgrimage to Fort Pilar as a practice. To complement such kind of spirituality, this study will also show the need of reflection to harness the beauty of praxis as the nature of practical spirituality. I employ both interpretive and qualitative designs by interviewing pilgrims and personally involving myself in the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage.

Spirituality as praxis

What lens will I use as I start to see, travel, and sense with the pilgrims? Here I will demonstrate my appropriation of spirituality as not mere faithfulness to some theological doctrines whereby pilgrims have to follow what the doctrines say, but as a matter of experience only made possible but not determined by the doctrines. The miracle-legends, for example, of La Virgen del Pilar, to use Certeau’s word, permit different spiritual experiences, without objectifying the legends, since these experiences cannot exhaust their permitting character. In the same way, the miraculous experiences of the Fort Pilar pilgrims allow them a different way of looking at the world and life, thereby permitting them to experience spirituality in various ways. “The event is `historical’ not because of its preservation outside time owing to a knowledge of it that supposedly has remained intact, but because of its introduction into time with various discoveries about it for which it `makes room”‘ (Certeau 1997, 144). The miracle-legends of La Virgen del Pilar seem to have become a condition for pilgrimage and devotion to Fort Pilar.

Certeau claims that “die event is lost precisely in what it authorizes” (145). What it authorizes is a manifestation which “is no more than a multiplicity of practices and discourses which neither ‘preserve’ nor repeat the event” (146); that is why the original event is lost int he plurality of what it allows. Certeau also mentions however that the initial event becomed an inter-location: Something said-between” (145). It seems then that as the original event becomes “more and more hidden by the multiple creations” (147), it also reveals itself as it is said in between, though not revealed in any one. It is in the continuing growth of the plurality that we might see the increasing revelation of the past event. This revelation, however, does not finalize in any form of multiplicity, hence the past event still cannot be objectified in knowledge or in a doctrine. Similarly, the Fort Pilar pilgrims’ continuous devotion to La Virgen del Pilar is plurality of spiritual experiences made possible by some past events, revealing the richness of its beginning without objectifying it at once. The past event dies in the particular but lives in the plural.

It is by this that we can posit the authority in the plural as Certeau puts it: “The plural is the manifestation of the Christian meaning” (148). In this light, the truth of the Fort Pilar pilgrims’ spirituality lies not with any group known in the Fort Pilar Shrine or any priest managing the communal activities, but in the plurality of the pilgrims’ experiences. This plurality is not reduced to one. What marks spirituality is its capacity to pluralize in difference. Difference should not be placed in the context of opposition, but in the context of plurality manifesting a reality of spirituality.

In the context of difference, every “one” has a limit. “The limit is the ultimate law of death (the irreducible existence of the other is manifested in the experience of one’s own limit and death), of solidarity (each one is needed by the others), and of meaning (which cannot be identified with an individual presence or with knowledge or an objective property because it is given by the very relationships of faith and charity as an interlocution)” (149). It is by this that we suspend our judgment about the so-called fanaticism often associated with popular religiosity.

While the condition of the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage implies a past event, its understanding implies the integration of the present, which in turn implies a moving on to the future. Moreover, pilgrimage is not just a movement in time but also in space where boundaries are traversed. It is in crossing boundaries that one realizes its limit. Popular spirituality is indeed a movement-praxis. Praxis “belongs to a different order from the institutionalized of theological statements from which it starts, and which it may condition” (152). Language, and perhaps meaning, cannot contain praxis. It departs from them and conditions another language and meaning. In other words, praxis is an act in the light of knowledge, but also in its darkness. It is a risk. “Praxis always brings about . . . gradual or abrupt displacements which will make possible other laws or other theologies” (152). Hence, Fort Pilar spirituality may spring from the miracle-legends, but continually reformulates them in a variety of new personal miracles, stories and experiences.

It is this spirituality as praxis that in turn sustains the pilgrims’ sacred journey as practice, from which it is also grounded and permitted. “Irreductible direclty to language, yet finding its meaning in language and providing yet new levels of meaning to language, this praxis, formed by separation from and transceding language, is fundamentally a necessary and permanent conversion” (153). The pilgrims’ spritual travels are enriched by the same pilgrimages, which also enrich their spirituality. Fort Pilar spirituality may indeed be a new form of spirituality made possible by praxis.

The Fort Pilar in Zamboanga City

One of the oldest and most historic structures in the Philippines is a square-shaped stone fort called Fort Pilar. It is situated at the southeastern part of Zamboanga City. At this corners are four bastions, of which the main is the southwest corner facing the sea, forming an ace of spades technically known as orillon (Spoehr 1969, 4). Originally, there were two entrances: One was where the present and the only entrance is situated; the other was located where the present and the only entrance is situated; the other was located where the present shrine stands and was the main entrance then (6). “Subsidies (for its construction) came from Mexico and from within the community in Zamboanga. After Cavite, it was the most important naval outpost in the entire country [Philippines]” (Rodriguez 1995, 30).

As early as 1598, the Spanish colonizers under Juan de Ronquilo built a fort in La Caldera to protect the first Christian communities. It did not last, so another forth had to be built, this time near Rio Hondo in Zamboanga City. Under the supervision of Father Melchor de Vera, SJ, a famous missionary-engireer and architect, the Fuerza Real de San Jose was built on 23 June 1635. The Spaniards abandoned this fort on 7 January 1663 in order to fortify embattled forces in Manila. Over time, the fort succumbed to neglect. By order of General Gregorio Padilla y Escalante in 1719, the Fort was reconstructed over the ruins of its old foundation under the direction of the Jesuit priest and engineer Juan de Ciscara. It was renamed Real Fuerza de La Virgen Nuestra Senora del Pilar de Zaragoza.

Gen. Vicente Alvarez attacked the Fort and defeated Spanish Gen. Diego delos Rios, who surrendered on 18 May 1899. I .ed by Gen. J.C. Bates, the American forces seized the Fort on 16 November that same year. On 2 March 1942, Fort Pilar was seized and occupied by the Japanese Imperial Forces. The American liberation troops, in collaboration with the Philippine Guerillas, recaptured the Fort three years later. ‘Fhe Fort was taken over by the Republic of the Philippines on 4 July 1946. Later, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) claimed Fort Pilar in its name.

It was perhaps the protection and security provided by the various forces that occupied the Fort that allowed its surrounding communities to develop. The influence of the Fort Pilar on Zamboanga and its people is indeed historical and it is for this reason that its influence has continued to the present.

According to Enriquez (1984, 89): “Her image [Our Lady of the Pilar], a garishly painted basso rilievoio of a woman with a child [Jesus Christ] in her arms, high up on the parapet of the moss-covered muralla [Fort Pilar], was, on the 19′ of October of each year, the object of the biggest pilgrimage in all Mindanao.”

At the start of every October begins the festivities intended for the celebration of the Fiesta Pilar in Zamboanga City. For a week or so, the festivities include agri-aqua trade, regatta, street dance, street party, parade, cultural presentation, beauty contest, sportsfest, competition, concert, exhibit, and other entertainment. The traditional afternoon procession and the High Mass at the Shrine of La Virgen del Pilar highlights the feast day on the 12th.

Stores proliferate in and around the Fort Pilar Shrine. Within the Shrine itself are the altar, the trapezoidal houses, the Blessed Sacrament, the benches, the Shrine’s office and, the candle site. Pilgrims visit the Shrine with certain levels of interests—some influenced by their promise, some by the need of grace, and others for thanksgiving. They buy candles from the stores or from itinerant vendors who begin to ply their trade as early as five o’ clock in the morning. The vendors also sell different religious objects. Pilgrims can also have souvenir photos of their visit taken by photographers who actively encourage them to avail of their business.

Within the Shrine are locations of prayer and devotion where pilgrims visit with indefinite priorities because of the unpredictable conditions brought about by having to share space with other pilgrims. There are times though, like at noon, when many of these locations are deserted. There is also the Shrine’s office where pilgrims can ask about thanksgiving masses and other Shrine activities from the clerk assigned by the administrator, who is usually a priest from the diocese. There are two main groups that coordinate with the administrator: One is the La Liga that serves in the mass activities, and the Corte de Honor that helps in the physical maintenance of the Shrine. These groups attain some cultural and social capital as they develop themselves to better serve their purpose in the Shrine. The Philippine National Police (PNP) secures the Shrine in coordination with the administrator.

The Fort Pilar Shrine may be seen as a field of “structured spaces of dominant and subordinate positions based on types and amounts of capital” (Swartz 1997, 123, citing Bourdieu). But as a field of pilgrimage, it is beyond being a field “of power struggles among holders of different forms of power, a gaming space in which those agents and institutions possessing enough specific capital to be able to occupy the dominant positions within the respective fields confront each other using strategies aimed at preserving or transforming these relations of power” (Pilario 2005, 170, citing Bourdieu).

A history of the Fort Pilar devotion

Taking off from biblical and theological bases to some concrete observations, Rodriguez (1995) describes the national as well as international historical development of Marian devotion. The extensive historical observation of Marian devotion in the Philippines only points to the needed situational observation on Our Lady of the Pillar devotion, particularly in Zamboanga City. It needs historical digging from literary archives of the people of Zamboanga and empirical evidence of what precisely these devotees in Zamboanga City perceive and do about their devotion. Thus, a line between doctrinal prescription and actual manifestation must be drawn in representing the devotees of a particular setting.

Moreover, the rapid processual changes in the Fort Pilar Shrine and in the devotees appeal to the need to focus on these people on the manner of their belief, predisposition, and spirituality. The particularly of the devotion in Fort Pilar to Our Lady of the Pillar of Zamboanga may show a different historical process of devotion indeed. For instance, Rodriguez says, on the other hand, that “the historical development of Mary’s cult can be attributed, as both cause and effect, to an extraordinary flourishing of Liturgical texts; especially well known are songs and homilies by Eastern and Western Fathers of the Church” (47). On the other hand, Enriquez says that “this undocumented incident [the miracle-legend of the sentinel and the Virgin], enacted in reladas during her fiesta almost every year at the Fort, must have given rise to the people’s belief in the Virgin’s love for Zamboanga” (190), hence their devotion. What used to merely be a frontispiece atop the main entrance of the sentinel and Mary. In time, the Shrine earned the reputation of being miraculous to both the Catholics and the non-Catholics who go there (Navarro, 1982; 1984, 197). In this sense, the devotion to Our Lady of the Pillar in Zamboanga City was born out of The legendary miraculous intervention of the Virgin Mary for the City and the people therein.

All this only points to a further research that does not see devotion only according to what is written, but also according to the pilgrims’ practices, which are rooted in previous events. It might be helpful at this point then to reiterate Fr. Alejo’s appeal on matters of popular religiosity: “Please let us give serious attention to the way ordinary people are finding God” (Alejo 2004, 52).

Tradition, according to Ellenie, a nun and a pilgrim of Fort Pilar, is mainly the first element that brings many people of Zamboanga to the Fort Pilar Shrine. Their relatives or guardians would usually bring them to Fort Pilar Shrine. Their relatives or guardians would usually bring them to Fort Pilar for various religious purposes. Mamang Choleng traces the roots of her devotion to La Virgen del Pilar: Porcausa se na mi maga mayores (It was because of my parents that I got to go to the Shrine). Daisy and Dudut, said: Ya principia yo mi debocion cuando ya segi yo con mi mayores si ta anda sila na Pilar (I started my Fort Pilar devotion by going with my parents when they went to the Fort Pilar Shrine). Today, many parents bring their babies to the Fort Pilar Shrine, notwithstanding the dusty roads and crowding people. Even the “elbow to elbow” crowd during the street dance on 12 October does not prevent parents from carting their babies or small children on the roadside to watch the spectacle. Jojo, another Fort Pilar pilgrim says: My mother used to bring me to the Shrine when I was a child.” This clarifies what Nanay Presing, an old Fort Pilar volunteer and pilgrim, also says. In her words: Cuando ya abri yo miyo ojos, ansina ya man kame (When I opened my eyes, that’s the way we did things already).

There are stories and miracles about the Fort, to include miraculous apparitions of the La Virgen del Pilar, told in some legends and as experienced by the pilgrim’s relatives or guardians. These testimonies are taken on faith and serve to influence Zamboanga pilgrims to personal devotion. Encultration obviously plays a major role as to why Zamboanga residents do pilgrimage at Fort Pilar. However, these are not the only reasons.

Some start their devotion because they experience great personal problems. For this reason and with the advice of other pilgrims, they visit the Fort Pilar Shine to ask for guidance, help, or healing. Eventually, La Virgen del Pilar’s indulgence is felt as they find relief and allevation from their difficulties. Tintin, a married pilgim, has a story: “El di miyo andada na Fort Pilar porcansa na maga pesao problema ya pasa cumigo cuando casaoya yo. Ya pruba yo primero pidi ayuda alla na Fort Pilar. Despues ya experiensia yo el epecto poreso hasta ara ta anda yo siempre alla na Fort Pilar.” (My going there was because of some compelling problems that happened to me when I got married. I tried at first to seek help from Fort Pilar. Then I experienced the effect, so that until now I still go there at the Fort Pilar Shrine). This then leads to the belief, in the same way other pilgrims are led to, that La Virgen del Pilar in miraculous.

Mamang Choleng, a Zamboangueña pilgrim, has her own reason, too: Yo principia yo serioso anda na Pilar cuando ya experiensia yo un milagro. Un dia, yaman aksidente yo. Dol nu puede ya yo kamina. Ta lleba cumigo mi tata na Fort Pilar y alya ta resa iyo. Despues, ya queda yo bueno como un milagro kay maka estrania el di miyo alibio (I started to seriously go to Fort Pilar Shrine when I experienced a miracle. I met an accident and it was almost impossible for me to walk. My father brought me to the Fort Pilar Shrine and there I prayed. Then, I got miraculously healed).

Belief, then, has something to do with their experiences rather than with what they simply hear from other people or from teachings. As pilgrims like jojo, Mommy Angelin, and Nanay Presing acclaim: Ta cre yo ay ya experiensia yo su milagro (I believe because I experience her miracles).

As the pilgrims continue to go to the Shrine, they eventually internalize the practices and gain a sense of owning their experience. This means visiting the Shine is not based on sheer obedience, tradition, or the novelty of the experience, but also because they will it. The belief they have of Fort Pilar and its patroness is, in the first place, a product of their interaction with the Fort environs from which emerges a personal explanation of their need to go to the Shrine. The foundation of the belief they have of the Lady and the Fort finds connection and relevance to their current needs. For the pilgrims, these needs are usually special and important; they are relative to survival, health, economics, moral, mental, attitudinal — almost constitutive of a person’s well-being.

The belief they have of La Virgen del Pilar is historical and not limited to only one epoch or to the many legends attributed to her that pilgrims vaguely remember today. It is not also traceable only to their observations with their parientes (relatives) from long time ago. Included in the sources of their belief are the day-to-day experiences of the many answered prayers believed to have been miraculously facilitated by the La Virgen. Ellen, an Episcopalian pilgrim of Fort Pilar, confidently says: Cuando ya pidi yo ayuda cunel La Virgen ya pasa yo miyo board exam (When I asked help from the La Virgen del Pilar, I passed my board exam). Dudut has the same story when she passed the Test on English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) that allowed her qualification to work abroad. They believe that it is God who answers their prayers, but La Virgen plays a big role as intercessor. This makes La Virgen their “mother.” Yet, there are those who think that it is La Virgen del Pilar who directly answers their prayers.

Other people’s experiences of answered prayers strengthen belief and motivate many to go to the Fort Pilar Shine. The pilgrims seem to be the kind of people who are willing to try what others suggest or believe, especially when urgent needs arise. Perhaps many of them uphold what Mommy Angelin, an old pilgrim, claims: “To see is to believe.”

For many, the Fort Pilar is a more inviting destination to express their hopes and desires. The Churches are considered merely as places for attending masses and for normal thanksgiving or prayer. In the Fort Pilar Shrine, aside from the everyday mass, the pilgrims sense the loving presence of a mother who can guide and help them in fulfilling their important needs, especially the difficult-to-achieve ones. That is why Dudut, a nurse and a pilgrim, professes: Mu anha ko’s Fort Pilar labi na kanang depress or broken hearted ko (I go to Fort Pilar especially when I’m depressed or brokenhearted). She considers Mary as her “Ordinary mother.” Ellanie, another pilgrim, even considers Mary as a real friend with whom she has an intimate relationship.

Yet, there is also a gray area as to why people go the the Shrine. In many instances, pilgrims say, nu sabe yo porque (I don’t know why). After acknowledging the element of belief and miracles, some would still find mystery in what they do and could not really say why they go. As Ellanie muses, Ta lleba lanf comigo niyo pies (I am just carried by my feet). In moments of deep emotional stress, she just finds herself in the Shrine. Pilgrims find mystery in shy they just find themselves preparing to go to the Shrine without much planning and decision. They find themselves in the practice of pilgrimage and do not have enough awareness why they travel.

This is not to say that they do not entirely know why they go to the Shrine. This is only to imply that pilgrimage and devotion is more of an act than a fact. Pilgrimage and devotion is not usually talked about, but walked about. Thus, words fail to explain why and it is only when they are asked, like in an interview, that they start to articulate what is implied in their pilgrimages. It is in this sense that I find the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage a potent phenomenon to explore.

Practicality in Spirituality

I notice in mu encounter with the pilgrims of Fort Pilar that they organize (although with much variation) space, time, meaning, and communication implicity. By implicity, I mean the organizing acts lie much in the level of practice than in the level of reflection. For example, Daisy, a working mom and a pilgrim, says: Hinde ya yo ta pensa cunel camino (I don’t think of the route anymore). Tintin, another pilgrim, also says, “The length of the travel is not important. We do not think of it anymore.” Their devotion start in tradition then proceeds to belief. They organize time as manifested by their choices and temporal manipulation. Their spirituality is formed through the immediacies and urgencies of their daily life, but they hardly reflect on them. They organize communication as they have ways and forms of praying or dialoguing with their Deity or saints. They convey messages in their gestures and in their silence without really reflecting on these. In Daisy’s words: “It has been practiced, but not discussed.” They organize meaning as they put value and significance on many things they do in the Fort Pilar Shrine. They also have the sense of the many figures and symbols in the Shrine, but very few moved to articulate this. Their spirituality takes form in the recreation of meaning, but they hardly sense this.

Pastoral theologian Mary G. Durkin (1988, 19), comments that “parents are the first and most influential religious educators, “For many of these pilgrims, the beginnings of the devotion to Fort Pilar rest on the practice of accompanying guardians or parents as they go on their pilgrimage. There is an element of blindness here. Aside from having been brought to the Fort Pilar Shrine at a very young age, children were clarified by adults on what and why they reach the age of reason, they more often than not carry on this tradition of practical spirituality, seldom feeling the call to articulate it.

The central characteristic of practical spirituality is practice. It is a spirituality of actions and practices rooted in a culture less of reflective expressions of piety. It is popular religiously in the context of ordinary spatial, temporal, and communicative involvement. To be reflective is to be consciously sensitive to the messages and implications of what happens, to be thinking beings actively “re/reading” human experiences to further awareness. Practival spirituality does not necessarily help the pilgrim grow in terms of reflective ability, but it may very well be for this reason that it can recruit practitioners.

This, in as far as I reflect, this is my reading of the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage. I must, however, warn that I do not intend to purport the idea that no one practices reflective spirituality in the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage. There are those who reflect on what they do as they travel to Fort Pilar, but they are few. This phenomenon perhaps explains the pilgrim’s struggle to find expression about what they do when they are asked about their pilgrimage. Most readily admit that Nu sabe yo porque yo se la ase (I don’t know why I am doing that). Others say, Ancina ya came cosa ta ase (That has been how we do things), Ansina ya came ya engranda (We grew up with this kind of practice), and Por enasa se na di among mayors (It is because of our parents or guardians). The most unexpected answer I got as to why they go the Shrine was. No bay lang (It is just nothing). At that time, I was tempted to think that perhaps the question was wrong because it assumed reflective spirituality on a phenomenon that lacked such.

Part of the practical spirituality is the habit of simply hearing (as different from listening) religious doctrines and popular experiences. Even if many attend the everyday mass at Fort Pilar Shrine, many still do not exhibit the messages in their communities. As diocesan priest Fr. Mike says: “(It) is widely observed that people do not apply what they need hear and say” — and indeed, the observation may hold true for many Christians in Zamboanga City. During mass, recollections, and retreats, the priests remind the faithful of the gospel messages in layman’s terms. As one observes, there are many churches in downtown Zamboanga City and in its barangays. The people attending masses in there places of worship are numerous, too. Yet the question still lingers, “Why don’t we do what we hear and say?” Perhaps it is because people are embedded with practical spirituality. Of course, there are many who apply what they hear and say within the context of their belief. Yet, my interviews with many pilgrims of Fort Pilar seem not to show this.

During the 2004 and 2005 Ateneo de Zamboanga University (ADZU) processions to the Forth Pilar Shrine, the novena prayers were said loud enough, attracting mush attention from the people on the sidewalks. The procession/pilgrimage to the Fort Pilar was indeed full of prayers and and show of sacrifice. No wonder, my impression was that it was a spiritual act and an expression of who the participants were. This impression was not entirely wrong.

My interview with some students and friends who participated in the 2005 ADZU pilgrimage did not disprove the mentioned popular opinion — of not doing what they hear and say — perhaps because my interviews were not about it. However, there was a common thread that ran through their answers to my queries: They did not bother to ask what they were doing in relation to their spirituality. The students agreed that they were not really thinking about the pilgrimage, even as they participated in it. What was quite clear to them was that they joined the procession, they walked, they prayed and they went with their companions. Behind the actions was nothing really related to the question of their action and spirituality.

There seems to be a rich spiritual experience as many pilgrims do pilgrimage, novena, rosary, and attend mass. However, this spiritual experience seems to lie more in practice than in awareness. Many of my questions about what they did and what these actions meant were left unanswered. They seems to do what they hear perhaps because they think less of what is heard. Also, these pilgrims who do not often think of what they do seem not to do what they say. Perhaps this is because these pilgrims think less of what they say. Saving is actually doing, hence practical. It is an act that very few of the pilgrims think about or reflect on.

This is where the organization of spirituality rests more on practice than in awareness. However, there seems not much growth in simply doing things without being aware of them or internalizing them. What growth would there be in the self when it is not deeply aware of itself?

Praxis and reflection

To understand practical spirituality requires that one not only relate it to its past or dig up its characteristics, but also to situate its being present in the context of a process for the future. As a continuing act, practical spirituality is a movement-praxis. Practical spirituality may spring from events and discourses of miracle-legends or from a tradition, but that it also continually reformulates them. “Irreducible directly to language, yet finding its meaning in language and providing yet new levels of meaning to language, this praxis, formed by separation from and transcending language, is fundamentally a necessary and permanent conversion” (Certeau, 153).

One example that leads to this point is perhaps how many pilgrims of Fort Pilar consider La Virgen del Pilar as the mother of Jesus Christ who serves as the intercessor to the grace of God the Father. In other words, many pilgrims are aware that when they ask for healing or any help, the first share it to La Vrgen del Pilar and ask her to deliver those pleas to the Most Powerful God the Father.

But there are pilgrims who directly pray to La Virgen del Pilar in the belief that she can miraculously heal and help them. They feel no need to bother God the Father with their concerns. They think of La Virgen del Pilar as a Divine Mother who miraculously helps them in their needs and problems in the same way as God the Father does. The pilgrims’

communication to La Virgen del Pilar has become so intimate that the dialogue seems to have gone exclusive and personal. Hence, to these devotees, La Virgen del Pilar seen-is to be on the same footing as God, a belief that courts unorthodoxy if not outright heresy. Whatever the case, many pilgrims articulate their spirituality in the context of religion with small “r” rather than with capital “R”.

In recognition of the pilgrim’s tendency toward this unorthodox belief, the administrator of the Fort Pilar Shrine tries to lead pilgrims into the Eucharistic awareness rather than what is believed to be popular religious practices.

It can be noted, however, that this unorthodox belief does not even threaten the day-to-day pilgrimages in the Fort Pilar Shrine, contrary ‘ to what Turner implies when he says, “I am at present inclined to favor the view that a pilgrimage’s best chance of survival is when it imparts to religious orthodoxy a renewed vitality, rather than when it asserts against an established system a set of heterodox opinions and unprecedented styles of religious and symbolic action” (1972, 229-230). There are many other unorthodox practices in the Fort Pilar Shrine that are observable up to the present, like some of the sacramentals (punas-punas, putting of rosary beads in the vehicle for safety, kissing the statues of saints, etc.), but do not in anyway lessen the pilgrimage’s survival. On the contrary, I am inclined to believe that they contribute to the propagation of pilgrimage to the Fort Pilar Shrine because many have proven the emancipatory effects of these unorthodox practices in their ordinary lives. Pilgrimages like this promise to proliferate because their value and significance resonate with the humanness and the mundane life of pilgrims.

The pilgrims’ dialogue with the Deity and/or deities does not only show dependence vis-a-vis providence, but also intimacy. This intimacy is clear in the way pilgrims relate to La Virgen del Pilar. This relationship is so intense that in its being so popular, some describe this religiosity unorthodox. Beyond comparing this religiosity to doctrines is its appeal to solidarity in prayer – an appeal more to the truth of the pilgrims’ being as experienced in everyday life than to the truth found on texts.

This observation surfaced during my interview with those pilgrims. However, the observation was not foremost in their mind. It was my series of questions that led us to acknowledge their communication with La Virgen to be so, especially to those pilgrims who have a background on some Catholic doctrines. This only implies that they do communicate more than they think about their communication. It is in an event, like an interview, that a realization such as this happens. It is in communication still, like in an interview, that how they communicate and what it implies can be observed. To assume, therefore, that “you can’t wink (or burlesque one) without knowing what counts as winking or how, physically to contract your eyelids, and you can’t conduct a sheep raid (or mimic one) without knowing what it is to steal a sheep and how practically to go about it” (Geertz 1973, 12) is without assurance.

The pilgrims’ consideration of La Virgen del Pilar as God implies praxis that may have been influenced by some institutionalized doctrines (although much of the influence is from the miracle-legends of La Virgen in the Fort Pilar in Zamboanga City), but which may condition or influence the same doctrines. This practice is indeed different from the institutionalized prescription on Christian spirituality. This does not even resonate with what many learn from schools or from seminaries.

It is in this fashion that the institutionalized spiritual language finds difficulty in accommodating this peculiar practical spirituality. It is the nature of this kind of spirituality that challenges the language of dogmatism and orthodoxy. What is exciting here is what this practice can contribute as it shakes norms and accepted maxims. It can indeed open up new theologies or new ways of becoming spiritual. In it lies the potential for better understanding and learning of popular spirituality.

As praxis, practical spirituality emerges as a rich ground for reflection and spiritual discoveries. Its being practical for quite a long time in the history of the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage increases its potentiality for understanding and meaning. It awaits its revelation through the pilgrim’s reflective responses. It is there, ready to be deciphered and to be reflectively organized. It is Waiting to be thought of and to be articulated. In a culture of much practicality, the call for reflection is not only more of a need, but also of a promising project for spiritual growth.

Abstract images usually accompany reflection. The latter in its process would normally find much sense and product by focusing on the former. It is my contention, however, that reflection can best harness its worth when complemented with praxis. Abstract images can indeed broaden imagination and reflection, but may not find expression in the actuality of life. Many of those imaginations are enjoyed mostly by the mind, less by the body. ln this sense, reflections from images empty of actuality usually have short life spans in the consciousness of people. It is perhaps when reflection is derived from praxis that it will easily be practiced. What use does reflection have when it does not penetrate into the everyday life of people? Its worth is seen when it is able to give language to what is happening in communities and by which new praxis emerges to Continue this process.

Considering practical spirituality as praxis would constitute a call for attention and focus. This call, however, is never a simple cultural project. It may require a paradigm shift, but this shift must start on the practical level. A culture with much focus on practicality has to use what it has mastered in developing a new habit. Reflection, therefore, is not a mere mental act but must also be practiced. Pilgrims have to slowly make a habit of reflecting over their own spiritual experiences. Making reflection a habit will surely unearth the mysteries of the long-been-waiting practical spirituality to be self-manifested in language and praxis. It is by developing the habit of reflection that the Fort Pilar spirituality may be given proper attention and pilgrims may gain better grasp of their own spirituality.

Juxtaposing reflection with practical spirituality may give pilgrims the venue for better spiritual understanding. It will be a process of organizing meanings on t he nature of their spirituality. Their spiritual experiences will then be names and descriptions. It is by this that practical spirituality will be given processual form and substance and would truly become praxis.

The call for reflection over practical spirituality then is a call not only to understand the kind of popular spirituality pilgrims practice, but also to decipher its relevance for the everyday life in the community.. Durkin (21-4) suggests that there is a failure to link Marian devotion to real-life situations, like the male-female relationship and family life. Perhaps the reason for this gap is that the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage is a practical spirituality with less reflection and hence the same project of reflection may bridge the gap. Even Durkin’s suggestive integration of Mary’s images in the family spirituality (26-31) presupposes a reflective element in the believers.

If indeed it would seem difficult for a culture immersed with practicality to reflect over its spiritual experiences, reading reflections that are based on events rather than mere words would be helpful. These reflections are often read in papers and heard in masses or spiritual discourses. Reflections based on words or texts may help, but much more proper for reflection is the popular spirituality of the people themselves. This is because praxis is ricer that words. Any events is an opportunity for reflection. It may perhaps be better to reflect on how things are said than what are said. In the Fort Pilar Shrine, it is the pilgrims’ practical spirituality as praxis that would serve as food for thought, which in turn would be challenged by consequent spiritual practices. This process, I am inclined to believe, emansipates pilgrims who are faithful to what they do.

For roughly 300 years, Protestants considered additional enthusiasm for Mary a form of “Mariolatry.” However, Protestants are now-restoring Mariology (Van Biema 2005, 40), perhaps because of the undeniable force of reflection over human spiritual experiences. It may be a new way of interpreting Mariology. Not merely as texts in the Bible, but also as Mary’s event. In the same way, the recent concern of many religious denominations to Marian reinterpretations is, for me, a result of the reflective response to the forceful call of popular Marian spirituality in the grassroots level. Taking this as praxis may indeed challenge previous doctrines and theologies. In the end, only when theologies are reflected from spiritual experiences can we spiritually grow and put substance to a profound adage: “Life is a pilgrimage.”

Zurich trained Jungian analyst and clinical psychologist Thomas Patrick Lavin (1988, 32-47) theorizes that there is such a thing as Christianity’s Mary Complex, which in history has been repressed by the patriarchal foundations of Christian theologies. This repression has resulted tot he denigration of the female identity through the years and the hindrance of discovering the “divine aspect of the feminine and/or the feminine aspect of the divine as symbolized Mary, “Borrowing Carl Gustav Jung’s neutrality of complexes and there potentiality for human wholeness, Lavin, in a forceful way, suggests the balancing of the Mary’s images become a source of deep religions experience and discovery of God. In this way Lavin believes that the Mary Complex will heal a suffering culture.

In the contemporary period, as Lavin implies, there is an increasing Marian attention both in the Church and in popular piety. Marian devotion is central in the Fort Pilar. This, however, does not automatically imply a full participation in Lavin’s exhoration on Mary because the Fort Pilar Pilgrimage is more of a practical spirituality than a reflective one. Pilgrims there manifest Marian Spirituality, but much of the actual Marian images and symbols are not yet quite clear and reflectively processed in their consciousness. Hence, I propose that only in habitual spiritual reflection can the pilgrims of Fort Pilar actively participate in what Lavin suggests and find emancipatory grown in spirituality.