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Philippine Daily Inquirer -
June 14, 1998
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| FROM
the 1896 Revolution to the first Philippine Republic, the
Commonwealth period, the EDSA Revolt, and the tiger cub economy,
history marches on. Thankfully, however, some things never
change. Like the classics, things irresistibly Pinoy mark
us for life. They're the indelible stamp of our identity,
the undeniable affinity that binds us like twins. They celebrate
the good in us, the best of our culture and the infinite possibilities
we are all capable of. Some are so self-explanatory you only
need mention them for fellow Pinoys to swoon or drool. Here,
from all over this Centennial-crazed country and in no particular
order, are a hundred of the best things that make us unmistakably
Pinoy. |
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- Merienda
Where else is it normal to eat five times a day?
- Sawsawan
Assorted
sauces that guarantee freedom of choice, enough room for
experimentation and maximum tolerance for diverse tastes.
Favorites: toyo't calamansi, suka at sili, patis.
- Kuwan,
ano.
At a loss for words? Try these and marvel at how Pinoys
understand exactly what you want.
- Pinoy
humor and irreverence
If you're api and you know it, crack a joke. Nothing personal,
really.
- Tingi
Thank goodness for small entrepreneurs. Where else can we
buy cigarettes, soap, condiments and life's essentials in
small affordable amounts?
- Spirituality
Even before the Spaniards came, ethnic tribes had their
own anitos, bathalas and assorted deities, pointing to a
strong relationship with the Creator, who or whatever it
may be.
- Po,
opo, mano po
Speech suffixes that define courtesy, deference, filial
respect--a balm to the spirit in these aggressive times.
- Pasalubong
Our way of sharing the vicarious thrills and delights of
a trip, and a wonderful excuse to shop without the customary
guilt.
- Beaches!
With 7,000 plus islands, we have miles and miles of shoreline
piled high with fine white sand, lapped by warm waters,
and nibbled by exotic tropical fish. From the stormy seas
of Batanes to the emerald isles of Palawan--over here, life
is truly a beach.
- Bagoong
Darkly mysterious, this smelly fish or shrimp paste typifies
the underlying theme of most ethnic foods: disgustingly
unhygienic, unbearably stinky and simply irresistible.
- Bayanihan
Yes, the internationally-renowned dance company, but also
this habit of pitching in still common in small communities.
Just have that cold beer and some pulutan ready for the
troops.
- The
Balikbayan box
Another way of sharing life's bounty, no matter if it seems
like we're fleeing Pol Pot everytime we head home from anywhere
in the globe. The most wonderful part is that, more often
than not, the contents are carted home to be distributed.
- Pilipino
komiks
Not to mention "Hiwaga," "Aliwan," "Tagalog Classics," "Liwayway"
and"Bulaklak" magazines. Pulpy publications that gave us
Darna, Facifica Falayfay, Lagalag, Kulafu, Kenkoy, Dyesebel,
characters of a time both innocent and worldly.
- Folk
songs
They come unbidden and spring, full blown, like a second
language, at the slightest nudge from the too-loud stereo
of a passing jeepney or tricycle.
- Fiesta
Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow is just another day,
shrugs the poor man who, once a year, honors a patron saint
with this sumptuous, no-holds-barred spread. It's a Pinoy
celebration at its pious and riotous best.
- Aswang,
manananggal, kapre
The whole underworld of Filipino lower mythology recalls
our uniquely bizarre childhood, that is, before political
correctness kicked in. Still, their rich adventures pepper
our storytelling.
- Jeepneys
Colorful, fast, reckless, a vehicle of postwar Pinoy ingenuity,
this Everyman's communal cadillac makes for a cheap, interesting
ride. If the driver's a daredevil (as they usually are),
hang on to your seat.
- Dinuguan
Blood stew, a bloodcurdling idea, until you try
it with puto. Best when mined with jalape¤o peppers. Messy
but delicious.
- Santacruzan
More than just a beauty contest, this one has religious
overtones, a tableau of St. Helena's and Constantine's search
for the Cross that seamlessly blends piety, pageantry and
ritual. Plus, it's the perfect excuse to show off the prettiest
ladies--and the most beautiful gowns.
- Balut
Unhatched duck's embryo, another unspeakable ethnic
food to outsiders, but oh, to indulge in guilty pleasures!
Sprinkle some salt and suck out that soup, with gusto.
- Pakidala
A personalized door-to-door remittance and delivery
system for overseas Filipino workers who don't trust the
banking system, and who expect a family update from the
courier, as well.
- Choc-nut
Crumbly peanut chocolate bars that defined childhood
ecstasy before M & M's and Hersheys.
- Kamayan
style
To eat with one's hand and eschew spoon, fork and
table manners--ah, heaven.
- Chicharon.
Pork, fish or chicken crackling. There is in the crunch
a hint of the extravagant, the decadent and the pedestrian.
Perfect with vinegar, sublime with beer.
- Pinoy
hospitality
Just about everyone gets a hearty "Kain tayo!" invitation
to break bread with whoever has food to share, no matter
how skimpy or austere it is.
- Adobo,
kare-kare, sinigang and other lutong bahay stuff
Home-cooked meals that have the stamp of approval
from several generations, who swear by closely-guarded cooking
secrets and family recipes.
- Lola
Basyang
The voice one heard spinning tales over the radio,
before movies and television curtailed imagination and defined
grown-up tastes.
- Pambahay
Home is where one can let it all hang out, where
clothes do not make a man or woman but rather define their
level of comfort.
- Tricycle
and trisikad
the poor Pinoy's taxicab that delivers you at your
doorstep for as little as PHPesos3.00, with a complimentary
dusting of polluted air.
- Dirty
ice cream
Very Pinoy flavors that make up for the risk: munggo,
langka, ube, mais, keso, macapuno. Plus there's the colorful
cart that recalls jeepney art.
- Yayas
The trusted Filipino nanny who, ironically, has
become a major Philippine export as overseas contract workers.
A good one is almost like a surrogate parent--if you don't
mind the accent and the predilection for afternoon soap
and movie stars.
- Sarsi
Pinoy rootbeer, the enduring taste of childhood.
Our grandfathers had them with an egg beaten in.
- Pinoy
fruits
Atis, guyabano, chesa, mabolo, lanzones, durian,
langka, makopa, dalanghita, siniguelas, suha, chico, papaya,
singkamas--the possibilities!
- Filipino
celebrities
Movie stars, broadcasters, beauty queens, public
officials, all-around controversial figures: Aurora Pijuan,
Cardinal Sin, Carlos P. Romulo, Charito Solis, Cory Aquino,
Emilio Aguinaldo, the Eraserheads, Fidel V. Ramos, Francis
Magalona, Gloria Diaz, Manuel L. Quezon, Margie Moran, Melanie
Marquez, Ninoy Aquino, Nora Aunor, Pitoy Moreno, Ramon Magsysay,
Richard Gomez, San Lorenzo Ruiz, Sharon Cuneta, Gemma Cruz,
Erap, Tiya Dely, Mel and Jay, Gary V.
- World
class Pinoys who put us on the global map
Lea Salonga, Paeng Nepomuceno, Eugene Torre, Luisito
Espinosa, Lydia de Vega-Mercado, Jocelyn Enriquez, Elma
Muros, Onyok Velasco, Efren "Bata" Reyes, Lilia Calderon-Clemente,
Loida Nicolas-Lewis, Josie Natori.
- Pinoy
tastes
A dietitian's nightmare: too sweet, too salty, too
fatty, as in burong talangka, itlog na maalat, crab fat
(aligue), bokayo, kutchinta, sapin-sapin, halo-halo, pastilyas,
palitaw, pulburon, longganisa, tuyo, ensaymada, ube haleya,
sweetened macapuno and garbanzos. Remember, we're the guys
who put sugar (horrors) in our spaghetti sauce. Yum!
- The
sights
Banaue Rice Terraces, Boracay, Bohol's Chocolate
Hills, Corregidor Island, Fort Santiago, the Hundred Islands,
the Las Piņas Bamboo Organ, Rizal Park, Mt. Banahaw, Mayon
Volcano, Taal Volcano. A land of contrasts and ever-changing
landscapes.
- Gayuma,
agimat and anting-anting
Love potions and amulets. How the socially-disadvantaged
Pinoy copes.
- Barangay
Ginebra, Jaworski, PBA, MBA and basketball. How the verticaly-challenged
Pinoy compensates, via a national sports obsession that
reduces fans to tears and fistfights.
- People
Power at EDSA
When everyone became a hero and changed Philippine
history overnight.
- San
Miguel Beer and pulutan
"Isa pa nga!" and the Philippines' most popular,
world-renowned beer goes well with peanuts, corniks, tapa,
chicharon, usa, barbecue, sisig, and all manner of spicy,
crunchy and cholesterol-rich chasers.
- Resiliency
We've survived 400 years of Spanish rule, the US
bases, Marcos, the 1990 earthquake, lahar, lambada, Robin
Padilla, and Tamagochi. We'll survive Erap.
- Yoyo
Truly Filipino in origin, this hunting tool, weapon,
toy and merchandising vehicle remains the best way to "walk
the dog" and "rock the baby," using just a piece of string.
- Pinoy
games
Pabitin, palosebo, basagan ng palayok. A few basic
rules make individual cunning and persistence a premium,
and guarantee a good time for all.
- Ninoy
Aquino
For saying that "the Filipino is worth dying for,''
and proving it.
- Balagtasan
The verbal joust that brings out rhyme, reason and
passion on a public stage.
- Tabo
All-powerful, ever-useful, hygienically-triumphant device
to scoop water out of a bucket _ and help the true Pinoy
answer nature's call. Helps maintain our famously stringent
toilet habits.
- Pandesal
Despite its shrinking size, still a good buy. Goes well
with any filling, best when hot.
- Jollibee
Truly Pinoy in taste and sensibility, and a corporate
icon that we can be quite proud of. Do you know that it's
invaded the Middle East, as well?
- The
butanding, the dolphins and other creatures in our blessed
waters
They're Pinoys, too, and they're here to stay. Now
if some folks would just stop turning them into daing.
- Pakikisama
It's what makes people stay longer at parties, have
another drink, join pals in sickness and health. You can
get dead drunk and still make it home.
- Sing-a-long
Filipinos love to sing, and thank God a lot of us
do it well!
- Kayumanggi
Neither pale nor dark, our skin tone is beautifully
healthy, the color of a rich earth or a mahogany tree growing
towards the sun.
- Handwoven
cloth and native weaves
Colorful, environment-friendly alternatives to polyester
that feature skillful workmanship and a rich indigenous
culture behind every thread. From the pinukpok of the north
to the malong of the south, it's the fiber of who we are.
- Movies.
Still the cheapest form of entertainment, especially
if you watch the same movie several times.
- Bahala
na
We cope with uncertainty by embracing it, and are
thus enabled to play life by ear.
- Papaitan
An offal stew flavored with bile, admittedly an acquired
taste, but pointing to our national ability to acquire a
taste for almost anything.
- English.
Whether carabao or Arr-neoww-accented, it doubles
our chances in the global marketplace.
- The
Press
Irresponsible, sensational, often inaccurate, but
still the liveliest in Asia. Otherwise, we'd all be glued
to TV.
- Divisoria.
Smelly, crowded, a pickpocket's paradise, but you
can get anything here, often at rock-bottom prices. The
sensory overload is a bonus.
- Barong
Tagalog
Enables men to look formal and dignified without
having to strangle themselves with a necktie. Worn well,
it makes any ordinary Juan look marvelously makisig.
- Filipinas
They make the best friends, lovers, wives. Too bad
they can't say the same for Filipinos.
- Filipinos.
So maybe they're bolero and macho with an occasional streak
of generic infidelity; they do know how to make a woman
feel like one.
- Catholicism
What fun would sin be without guilt? Jesus Christ is firmly
planted on Philippine soil.
- Dolphy
Our favorite, ultra-durable comedian gives the beleaguered
Pinoy everyman an odd dignity, even in drag.
- Style
Something we often prefer over substance. But every Filipino
claims it as a birthright.
- Bad
taste
Clear plastic covers on the vinyl-upholstered sofa, posters
of poker-playing dogs masquerading as art, overaccessorized
jeepneys and altars--the list is endless, and wealth only
seems to magnify it.
- Mangoes
Crisp and tart, or lusciously ripe, they evoke memories
of family outings and endless sunshine in a heart-shaped
package.Mangoes. Crisp and tart, or lusciously ripe, they
evoke memories of family outings and endless sunshine in
a heart-shaped package.
- Unbridled
optimism
Why we rank so low on the suicide scale.
- Street
food
Barbecue, lugaw, banana-cue, fishballs, IUD (chicken
entrails), adidas (chicken feet), warm taho. Forget hepatitis;
here's cheap, tasty food with gritty ambience.
- The
siesta
Snoozing in the middle of the day is smart, not lazy.
- Honorifics
and courteous titles
Kuya, ate, diko, ditse, ineng, totoy, Ingkong, Aling, Mang,
etc. No exact English translation, but these words connote
respect, deference and the value placed on kinship.
- Heroes
and people who stood up for truth and freedom
Lapu-lapu started it all, and other heroes and revolutionaries
followed: Diego Silang, Macario Sakay, Jose Rizal, Andres
Bonifacio, Apolinario Mabini, Melchora Aquino, Gregorio
del Pilar, Gabriela Silang, Miguel Malvar, Francisco Balagtas,
Juan Luna, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Panday Pira, Emilio Jacinto,
Raha Suliman, Antonio Luna, Gomburza, Emilio Aguinaldo,
the heroes of Bataan and Corregidor, Pepe Diokno, Satur
Ocampo, Dean Armando Malay, Evelio Javier, Ninoy Aquino,
Lola Rosa and other comfort women who spoke up, honest cabbie
Emilio Advincula, Rona Mahilum, the women lawyers who didn't
let Jalosjos get away with rape.
- Flora
and fauna
The sea cow (dugong), the tarsier, calamian deer, bearcat,
Philippine eagle, sampaguita, ilang-ilang, camia, pandan,
the creatures that make our archipelago unique.
- Pilipino
songs, OPM and composers
"Ama Namin," "Lupang Hinirang," "Gaano Ko Ikaw Kamahal,"
"Ngayon at Kailanman," "Anak," "Handog,""Hindi Kita Malilimutan,"
"Ang Pasko ay Sumapit"; Ryan Cayabyab, George Canseco, Restie
Umali, Levi Celerio, Manuel Francisco, Freddie Aguilar,
and Florante--living examples of our musical gift.
- Metro
Aides
They started out as Imelda Marcos' groupies, but have gallantly
proven their worth. Against all odds, they continuously
prove that cleanliness is next to godliness--especially
now that those darned candidates' posters have to be scraped
off the face of Manila!
- Sari-sari
store
There's one in every corner, offering everything from bananas
and floor wax to Band-Aid and bakya.
- Philippine
National Red Cross. PAWS. Caritas. Fund drives
They help us help each other.
- Favorite
TV shows through the years
"Tawag ng Tanghalan," "John and Marsha," "Champoy," "Ryan,
Ryan Musikahan," "Kuwarta o Kahon," "Public Forum/Lives,"
"Student Canteen," "Eat Bulaga." In the age of inane variety
shows, they have redeemed Philippine television.
- Quirks
of language that can drive crazy any tourist listening in
"Bababa ba?" "Bababa!"
- "Sayang!"
"Naman!" "Kadiri!" "Ano ba!?" "pala"
Expressions that defy translation but wring out feelings
genuinely Pinoy.
- Cockfighting.
Filipino men love it more than their wives (sometimes).
- Dr.
Jose Rizal
A category in himself. Hero, medicine man, genius, athlete,
sculptor, fictionist, poet, essayist, husband, lover, samaritan,
martyr. Truly someone to emulate and be proud of, anytime,
anywhere.
- Nora
Aunor
Short, dark and homely-looking, she redefined our rigid
concept of how leading ladies should look.
- Noranian
or Vilmanian
Defines the friendly rivalry between Ate Guy Aunor and Ate
Vi Santos and for many years, the only way to be for many
Filipino fans.
- Filipino
Christmas
The world's longest holiday season. A perfect excuse to
mix our love for feasting, gift-giving and music and wrap
it up with a touch of religion.
- Relatives
and kababayan abroad
The best refuge against loneliness, discrimination and confusion
in a foreign place. Distant relatives and fellow Pinoys
readily roll out the welcome mat even on the basis of a
phone introduction or referral.
- Festivals:
Sinulog, Ati-atihan, Moriones. Sounds, colors, pagan frenzy
and Christian overtones.
- Folk
dances
Tinikling, pandanggo sa ilaw, kariņosa, kuratsa, itik-itik,
alitaptap, rigodon. All the right moves and a distinct rhythm.
- Native
wear and costumes
Baro't saya, tapis, terno, saya, salakot, bakya. Lovely
form and ingenious function in the way we dress.
- Sunday
family gatherings
Or, close family ties that never get severed. You don't
have to win the lotto or be a president to have 10,000 relatives.
Everyone's family tree extends all over the archipelago,
and it's at its best in times of crisis; notice how food,
hostesses, money, and moral support materialize during a
wake?
- Calesa
and karitela
The colorful and leisurely way to negotiate narrow streets
when loaded down with a year's provisions.
- Quality
of life.
Where else can an ordinary employee afford a stay-in helper,
a yaya, unlimited movies, eat-all-you-can buffets, the latest
fashion (Baclaran nga lang), even Viagra in the black market?
- All
Saints' Day
In honoring our dead, we also prove that we know how to
live.
- Handicrafts.
Shellcraft, rattancraft, abaca novelties, woodcarvings,
banig placemats and bags, bamboo windchimes, etc. Portable
memories of home. Hindi lang pang-turista, pang-balikbayan
pa!
- Pinoy
greens
Sitaw. Okra. Ampalaya. Gabi. Munggo. Dahon ng Sili. Kangkong.
Luya. Talong. Sigarillas. Bataw. Patani. Lutong bahay will
never be the same without them.
- OCWs.
The lengths (and miles) we'd go for a better life for our
family, as proven by these modern-day heroes of the economy.
- The
Filipino artist
From Luna's magnificent "Spoliarium" and Amorsolo's sun-kissed
ricefields, to Ang Kiukok's jarring abstractions and Borlongan's
haunting ghosts, and everybody else in between. Hang a Filipino
painting on your wall, and you're hanging one of Asia's
best.
- Tagalog
soap operas
From "Gulong ng Palad" and "Flor de Luna" to today's incarnations
like "Mula sa Puso"--they're the story of our lives, and
we feel strongly for them, MariMar notwithstanding.
- Midnight
madness, weekends sales, bangketas and baratillos
It's retail therapy at its best, with Filipinos braving
traffic, crowds, and human deluge to find a bargain.
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