The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Beyond ABCs: Ancient Philippine­s script revival spells debate

- Ayee Macaraig

With deliberate golden strokes, artist Taipan Lucero proudly brings an ancient script back to life, in the hope of promoting an endangered but contentiou­s part of the Philippine­s’ heritage.

Once confined to history classes, Baybayin, a 17-character indigenous script used before Spanish colonisati­on, is making a comeback among the nation’s millennial­s, young profession­als and diaspora.

Even as technology renders writing by hand outdated, online clips of calligraph­y and digital fonts for the script have gripped the smartphone generation and now Baybayin — last used hundreds of years ago — is appearing on everything from tattoos and t-shirts to mobile apps.

Proponents hail the curvilinea­r text as a crucial part of Philippine identity, but in a country with 131 government-recognised languages — critics say investing in the promotion of one ancient text over others is controvers­ial and impractica­l.

“It’s bitterswee­t. It made me proud knowing our ancestors were literate,” said Lucero, who studied calligraph­y in Japan but returned home to apply his skills to reviving Baybayin.

“What’s sad about this is what’s being propagated in our education system. It’s like our history started with being colonised by Spain,” the 31-yearold added.

Baybayin was the form of writing used before the Spanish arrived in 1521 and missionari­es had to learn it initially to spread Catholicis­m before forcing locals to adopt their Roman alphabet, historians say.

Its resurgence has prompted calls from some for a law declaring Baybayin the national script. But regional scholars say the text is important mainly to Tagalogs — the people historical­ly based in and around the capital — rather than to all Filipinos.

Advocates say reviving Baybayin will provide an antidote for a nation grappling with its colonial past and is a way of celebratin­g indigenous history.

Many are proficient in English because of the American occupation — Spain ceded control to the US in 1898 — and the Philippine­s only became independen­t in 1946.

“It’s a great achievemen­t to invent our own writing system,” Leo Emmanuel Castro, executive director of cultural group Sanghabi, told AFP.

“Our language is genderneut­ral. Profession­s and pronouns have no sex whereas English is very sexist,” he added.

The campaign to bring Baybayin to the mainstream advanced in January when the lower house passed a bill mandating its use in signs and educationa­l materials. It stalled in the Senate but the proposal has been refiled in the new session that started in July.

Holiday hotspot Boracay island has already ordered the use of Baybayin in signage, in a bid to counter the profilerat­ion of Chinese characters for tourists.

However regional cultural advocates say such efforts threaten all of the nation’s indigenous scripts.

Their anger is rooted in a 1937 proclamati­on that Tagalog be the basis of the national spoken language now called Filipino, and they see the revival of the Baybayin text as another blow for the nation’s linguistic diversity.

“The Philippine­s has become a country only for the Tagalogs,” explained Michael Pangilinan, an advocate of the Kulitan script of Pampanga province, who warned local identity would be ‘completely wiped out’ if using Baybayin becomes mandatory.

“The Philippine state makes us ashamed of who we are until the Kapampánga­n people themselves are the ones repressing their own language and culture to become Filipinos (Tagalog),” he said in an e-mail to AFP.

Of the 17 documented Philippine syllabarie­s — systems of consonant and vowel syllables — only four remain in use among indigenous communitie­s today, according to Unesco.

“When it comes to a national discussion, you need to use the dominant language known by the majority,” countered Jay Enage, chairman of Baybayin Buhayin, a group lobbying for the bill.

But the practicali­ties of bringing a historic script into modern use, teaching it in schools, and honing it to fit places of work and 21st century life, may be the biggest challenge.

“It will just be a novelty, for display,” said Joselito Delos Reyes, professor of creative writing and popular culture at Manila’s University of Santo Tomas.

“It won’t be a platform for communicat­ion,” he added, saying lawmakers should instead prioritise improving education infrastruc­ture and teachers’ salaries.

Virgilio Almario, chairman of government commission­s on language and culture, said it was important to walk the line between losing scripts to extinction and being practical about usage.

“We need to balance this carefully. We need Filipino as a bridge language but we should also appreciate the languages of all communitie­s,” he said.

More than division, advocates say Filipinos should see opportunit­y in belonging to a multilingu­al country.

“The heart and soul of a country is its culture. The problem is that we don’t value it due to our colonial mentality,” Filipino-American Baybayin artist Kristian Kabuay told AFP.

Asked if the current Baybayin resurgence is just a fad, calligraph­er Lucero insisted it was vital Filipinos take the time to understand the script’s importance.

He added: “It’s part of our culture and our identity and if we forget about it, we throw away part of ourselves.” — AFP

It’s bitterswee­t. It made me proud knowing our ancestors were literate.

Taipan Lucero

 ??  ?? Lucero doing calligraph­y using the indigenous script known as Baybayin, used before Spanish colonisati­on in 1521, at an event in Manila.
Lucero doing calligraph­y using the indigenous script known as Baybayin, used before Spanish colonisati­on in 1521, at an event in Manila.
 ??  ?? Lucero doing calligraph­y using the Baybayin.
Lucero doing calligraph­y using the Baybayin.
 ??  ?? Castro inscribing indigenous Baybayin script onto a piece of bamboo at his shop in Manila. — AFP photos
Castro inscribing indigenous Baybayin script onto a piece of bamboo at his shop in Manila. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Castro inscribing indigenous Baybayin script onto a piece of bamboo at his shop
Castro inscribing indigenous Baybayin script onto a piece of bamboo at his shop
 ??  ?? Castro teaching students the Baybayin.
Castro teaching students the Baybayin.
 ??  ?? National Museum researcher Leo Batoon pointing to a Baybayin character etched on a glass window at the National Museum in Manila.
National Museum researcher Leo Batoon pointing to a Baybayin character etched on a glass window at the National Museum in Manila.
 ??  ?? Castro holding pieces of bamboo inscribed with indigenous Baybayin.
Castro holding pieces of bamboo inscribed with indigenous Baybayin.

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