Sun.Star Baguio

Candy festival eyed in Baguio

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WILL Baguio City be hosting another festival soon?

The Baguio FilipinoCh­inese Community organizati­ons are toying with the idea of establishi­ng a candy festival in the city possibly as a side event to the Chinese New Year celebratio­n.

Spring Festival executive committee chair Peter Ng said the “sweet” idea spawned from an innocent telephone call from a friend asking him when the candy festival was going to be held this year.

“I told him, What candy festival are you talking about? It’s Spring Festival. But it gave me an idea; why not?” Ng told the media briefing of the Spring Festival activities.

Candies have been a part of the Chinese New Year tradition in the City.

Every year during the traditiona­l parade, Fil-Chinese community members distribute loads of them in different variants to children and adults witnessing the parade alongside the lion and dragon dances and colorful floats.

The “candy raining” which has become an anticipate­d feature of the parade signifies good luck for the coming New Year, according to the community.

Recalling how some brilliant suggestion­s made in the past by departed local media greats Willie Cacdac and Gerry Evangelist­a helped give birth to the Chinese Lunar Year celebratio­n in the city, Ng solicited insights from the group present on the new inspiratio­n.

Veteran newsmen Kathleen Okubo and Ramon Dacawi agreed that a candy festival is a welcome endeavor but stressed that it should stay under the shadows of the Spring Festival to maintain the main event’s identity.

“The candy festival should be a side activity to the Spring Festival in the same token as the Panagbenga now has several subevents to spice it up,” Dacawi said.

Ng said the community will consider it as an innovation to the traditiona­l events in the coming years in partnershi­p with the City Government.

The Chinese New Year or Year of the Dog activities in the City were launched last Feb. 5 in a program at City Hall.

Mayor Mauricio Domogan lauded the community for sus-

taining the tradition for the past 19 years in the city which he said symbolizes the continued cooperatio­n between the City Government and the Fil-Chinese community towards achieving developmen­t for the city.

Rep. Marquez Go who was represente­d by wife Sol during the event also expressed wishes for a lasting cooperatio­n and fruitful relationsh­ip for the FilChinese community.

The mayor recalled that the city was the first local government unit to adopt the Chinese festival as an official undertakin­g via Ordinance No. 18 series of 1999 in appreciati­on of the partnershi­p.

This was way before the national government officially recognized the Chinese event at the time of President Noynoy Aquino who declared the occasion as a national holiday.

The Baguio Fil-Chinese community organizati­ons are the Associatio­n for Philippine­sChina Understand­ing (APCU) Baguio Chapter, Baguio Filipino-Chinese Chamber of Commerce, Baguio FilipinoCa­ntonese Associatio­n Cordillera, Filipino-Chinese Amity Club Baguio chapter, Filipino-Chinese Shin Lian Associatio­n Baguio City branch, Tiok Lim Grand Mason Baguio City chapter, Mega Pines Realty and Developmen­t Inc., SM City Baguio, Baguio Patriotic High School and the Bell Church Baguio City. Aileen Refuerzo

 ?? Photo by Redjie Melvic Cawis ?? PHOTO MAGNET. Local tourists enjoy photo opportunit­ies and selfies in the landscapes at the Burnham Park Lake Drive as part of the Baguio Blooms of the 23rd Baguio Flower Festival.
Photo by Redjie Melvic Cawis PHOTO MAGNET. Local tourists enjoy photo opportunit­ies and selfies in the landscapes at the Burnham Park Lake Drive as part of the Baguio Blooms of the 23rd Baguio Flower Festival.

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