By:
Bennie A. Recebido
SORSOGON CITY, Aug 27 (PIA) – This October, the
province of Sorsogon will again celebrate the Kasanggayahan Festival and for this year, one historical
importance, marking the beginning of Christianization in Southern Bicol will be
given the highlight.
Different from the previous celebrations, this year’s Kasanggayahan Festival will offer local
folks as well as domestic and foreign visitors a candid display of its
distinctiveness as a province, being the birthplace of Christian civilization
in Southern Bicolandia.
Highlights
of the activities for Kasanggayahan
Festival 2013 will be displayed starting from October 17, the date when
Sorsogon obtained official independence from the province of Albay, and will
end on October 23, 2013. However, the usual month-long activities like the
trade fair, art exhibits, nightly shows and the traditional “Pantomina sa Tinampo" will still
be showcased.
The
Provincial Government of Sorsogon under the auspices of Governor Raul R. Lee
spearheads the major activities for this year’s festival in close coordination
with the Kasanggayahan Foundation, Inc. (KFI), the group that officially
oversees the conduct of Kasanggayahan
Festival since its organization in 1995.
It
can be noted that Gov. Lee was persistent in promoting the distinctive nature
of Sorsogon by attracting more tourists to come to the province. He said Sorsogon
has a lot of potentials, be it in tourism, culture and arts, agriculture and
natural resources that should be given outstanding recognitions every time the Kasanggayahan Festival is celebrated.
KFI
President Msgr. Francisco P. Monje said that one week may be too short for a
grandiose celebration of a festival, but the organizers have made it a point to
haul out the distinct mark of Sorsogon “which the province and we, Sorsoganons,
could proudly claim we own: the site of the First Mass in Luzon where
Christianization in Bicol emanated”.
The
first day of the weeklong celebration will be highlighted by the Re-enactment
of the First Mass in Luzon through a progressive street dance presentation from
Magsaysay Street to Rizal Street going to the Provincial Gymnasium where an
“Inculturated Mass” will be offered as a culmination activity.
Mr.
Dan Razo, in charge of the Cultural Affairs and Executive Director of the
Community-Based Theater Group (CBTG) said the re-enactment will start at 3:00
o’clock in the afternoon. Fourteen “Higantes”
will be portraying the role of Spaniards and villagers while a large number of
street dancers will add up to the flavor of the presentation.
A
mini-stage and bleachers will be put up in one strategic location where guests,
visitors and viewers can comfortably position themselves.
“What
will make the mood festive are the hullabaloos of the “Higantes” and the street dancers as well as the participation of
the onlookers. Leaves, banners, and other stuff will be distributed to the
crowd which they can use as they join the street presentation,” Mr. Razo said.
The
traditional pilgrimage and commemorative mass will still be offered in Sitio Gibalon
in Brgy. Siuton, Magallanes. According to the organizers, the mass in Gibalon will
not be scrapped since it is in this place that the original first mass in Luzon
was held. The distinct mark of Sorsogon will be brought to the city so as to heighten
awareness and encourage more participation of the public in promoting Sorsogon,
as explained by the organizers.
The
street presentation will re-enact how the Spanish Conquistador Miguel Lopez de
Legazpi, who was then based in Panay Island, dispatched sometime in 1565 to
this part of the island, an expeditionary group headed by Capitan Luis Enriquez
de Guzman together with their chaplain, Augustinian friar Fray Alonso Jimenez,
to gather additional strength in Panay and, at the same time, evangelize the
villagers they might come upon during their journey.
The
group came upon a small, but thriving fishing village at the mouth of the
Hibal-ong River, now the Ginangra River, in what is now the municipality of
Magallanes.
This
was Hibal-ong, or Gibalong, the very first Christian settlement in the island
of Luzon and where the first Mass in Luzon Island was said to have been
celebrated by Fray Jimenez.
Meanwhile,
based from the accounts translated from the original Spanish by Fr. Francisco
Mallari, S.J., Mariano Goyena del Prado narrates that in 1569, Capitan Luis
Enriques de Guzman went ashore for the first time on Bikol soil in the
continent of Luzon, and for the first time also, Missionary Father Alonso
Jimenez proclaimed the gospel.
Late
poet and historian Rev. Fr. Isidoro D. Dino, in his article, "Sorsogon:
Birthplace of Christian Civilization in Southern Bicolandia," also wrote:
"At the barrio of Hibal-ong, Capt. de Guzman and Fray Jimenez put up a
temporary chapel at the banks of the Ginangra River and held the first Mass on
the island of Luzon”. This provides evidence that the Bicol peninsula had
become a part of Christian civilization even before Manila became Christianized.
Samuel
K. Tan, Ph.D., former National Historical Institute (NHI) chair and executive
director, recounted that after conducting initial research, data seem to imply
that, indeed, Sorsogon was the site of the First Mass in Luzon. (BARecebido, PIA-5/Sorsogon)
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