The Philippine Star

Our hidden stories

- VERONICA PEDROSA

There is a round wooden shield in the British Museum, acquired in 1894, and probably made earlier in the same century. Its story and secrets have become part of a much bigger hunt for things made by Filipinos in centuries past that could help us Filipinos in the 21st century know much more about who we are. It is a piece in a much larger and, to my mind at least, profoundly significan­t effort by a team of women who want to know the truth about who we really are.

“The museum records only give the Philippine­s as provenance; hence its specific ethnolingu­istic origin will remain uncertain. It is however definitely from a nineteenth century Muslim community in a part of Mindanao that may or may not have been part of the political entity las Islas Filipinas (but now is part of the Philippine­s),” writes art critic and curator, Marian Pastor Roces, who first saw it a quarter of a century ago and was fascinated by it.

The inner part of the shield, which the warrior who wielded it would have held closest to his body, is carved with inscriptio­ns that have never been properly read. Comparing this specimen with several others in different European museums, it is clear that they are prayers.

After she posted a picture of the shield on social media, people started to get in touch, translatin­g the inscriptio­ns. First, Abdulhamid Alawi Jr, the Chief Administra­tive Officer of the Office of the Regional Governor Cotabato in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao in Cotabato City, gave his reading of the Arabic words of Islamic prayer proclaimin­g the only god Allah and his prophet Muhammed. Others refer to the Azriel, the archangel of death, Mikhail/Michael, the archangel of mercy and Jibreel/Gabriel the archangel of revelation. There are also seemingly random letters and numbers, some in a grid, that others suggested were numbers from early Sanskrit. A young colleague of Pastor’s in Muslim Mindanao, who recently converted to Islam, told her the grid with inscriptio­ns looked exactly like his Christian father’s amulet.

It is an object that seems to deny the idea that Christian and Muslim traditions were separate and hostile. Could it be that the warrior who used it drew on more complex traditions about a spiritual world in the imaginatio­ns of people who interacted in fluid coexistenc­e?

Pastor told this story last week at the launch of a digital humanities project “Mapping Philippine Material Culture.” It is a fascinatin­g initiative to research the historical reality of the Philippine­s, free of colonial narratives, political myth-making and fanciful nostalgia.

There are very few objects like the shield actually in the Philippine­s. Pastor suggests a full 90 percent of objects, generated by people in Philippine society through the ages that might provide clues for us to understand past and present societies, are elsewhere.

It’s the result of the near total destructio­n of the National Museum in the apocalypti­c bombing of Manila at the end of the Second World War, and the assiduous collecting habit of colonial travellers and scientists.

So, where is this stuff? There are thousands and thousands of artefacts, including textiles, paintings, writings, books, clothes and weapons, scattered around the world. From St Petersburg, to Vienna, Stockholm and New York, in museum vaults and archives as well as private collection­s, they have sat gathering dust. Until now.

This new mapping project is a visual inventory of these Philippine objects in holdings of museums and private collection­s outside of the Philippine­s. It is an extraordin­ary collaborat­ive concept: an open access online inventory that gathers photograph­ic and other informatio­n about these objects and gather the data in an easytonavi­gate, all-in-one sortable portal. Take a look if you can at https://philippine­studies.uk/mapping/

“It’s not purely academic for me,” said Dr Cristina Martinez-Juan, the project’s lead researcher, editor, coordinato­r and chief liaison. She is the project head for Philippine Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. “There is a kind of the joy of finding out these things that are there and like making them accessible to people.”

There is no specific funding for the project, there’s just a small team of researcher­s helping out. The sheer volume of stuff, and the way it’s ended up in unexpected places has surprised Jessica Manuel, an art history student who was born in the Philippine­s but grew up in London. She leads the group and told me how exciting it is for her to be dealing with such objects that provide a direct line to Philippine history and to be working with Pastor and Juan. “There is this sense of discovery about the past in a very sort of substantia­l way. I mean, it’s real,” she told me.

As far as Pastor is concerned it is essential and urgent work. “I think that policy in the Philippine­s, should be crafted with a clear understand­ing of what the data says about us. Unless we do that, we analyze ourselves wrongly.” The first step is to know what’s out there. Much more will follow.

One of the objects she highlights is an exceptiona­lly finely embroidere­d Talaandig headcloth that is physically at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. It has been there for the past hundred years, probably unknown to Talaandig today. “There have been endless livelihood projects for the last century. They all look like Oxfam, they end up with trash and it ends dreadfully for the people, because they end up with no skills whatsoever and they are degraded – (with) a degraded capacity for aesthetics. If they don’t see what was done by their own grandparen­ts, they have no clue of such quality, such joy in making.”

It is not just about the objects themselves, but what they teach us about ourselves, Filipinos. They do not speak of kingdoms, but of villages where “absolutely exquisite” artefacts - small things – were imagined and provided the environmen­t for them to be made.

Pastor thinks what is learnt from the mapping project should have consequenc­es “across the board from political policy to governance.” “Like how do you govern a people who didn’t have a supra-village organizati­ons, it’s village-centric – how do you plan for that? How do you create a democracy for that? How do you create livelihood projects for that? So for me, it is essential to do this tedious work, it’s full of joy, it’s full of possibilit­y of understand­ing ourselves in a better way with actual data points.”

“Instead of hypothesiz­ng about Philippine culture, there’s evidence of what it was. One of the things that I do not wish for this project is a nostalgia trip. We can’t afford nostalgia. We need to understand ourselves better.”

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