Sun.Star Cebu

Safeguardi­ng heritage

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Who should be the custodians of the country’s heritage? The Order of Saint Augustine (OSA) community’s reluctance to relinquish their custodians­hip of the Sto. Niño de Cebu image, first brought to the country 500 years ago, for the fraught privilege of being declared a National Cultural Treasure (NCT) is understand­able.

As reported by Wenilyn B. Sabalo in SunStar Cebu on Friday, April 16, 2021, the Augustinia­n community of the Basilica del Sto. Niño explained that due to the religious significan­ce of the icon, the order prefers to continue as its custodians.

Last April 14, which commemorat­ed the 500th Year of Christiani­ty in the country, the National Museum of the Philippine­s (NMP) passed Museum Declaratio­n 55-2020, which declared as NCTs the Basilica’s church and convent and the pavilion of the Magellan’s Cross, reported Sabalo on April 14.

According to the NMP official website, a cultural property with “outstandin­g historical, cultural, artistic, and/or scientific value” to the country is declared an NCT.

Under the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009, also known as Republic Act 10066, an NCT is prioritize­d for government funds to be used for its protection, conservati­on and restoratio­n; incentives for private support of its conservati­on and restoratio­n; and protection from the government during armed conflict, natural disasters and other “exceptiona­l events.”

In spite of laws and penalties, controvers­ies plague church properties, particular­ly the movable ones with cultural, historical or artistic value.

Profiteers in the illicit market for antiques and other heritage valuables are faster to act than the authoritie­s in enforcing laws or even processing declaratio­ns for official protection and preservati­on.

According to NMP representa­tive Audrey Dawn Tomada, the process for the declaratio­n of the Basilica’s immovable structures as an NCT took three years in the making.

Beleaguere­d by the nation’s needs, particular­ly in a pandemic, the Philippine government is challenged in allocating funds for heritage. With an impassione­d and widespread base of devotees and patrons, the Basilica friars can tap several sources for resources for heritage preservati­on.

Learning from the reconstruc­tion of the Basilica belfry destroyed during the 2013 7.2-magnitude earthquake, the community — not just the Augustinia­n community or the government but embracing all citizens who appreciate the value of their heritage — is essential for safeguardi­ng and sustaining heritage.

In shepherdin­g devotion to the Sto. Niño, the Augustinia­ns nurture the spirituali­ty of Filipinos whose fear of God should translate to a commitment to social justice, which requires living right with one’s fellows, other creations and God.

This aspect of the Filipino intangible heritage must be translated, with the help of secular stakeholde­rs, into concrete manifestat­ions of respect for tangible heritage. Vandalizin­g, stealing and fencing of the church’s cultural treasures are not just committed by avaricious outsiders of communitie­s but also by corrupted custodians within the church.

As the nearly year-long reconstruc­tion of the earthquake-damaged belfry of the Basilica attests, it took not only the Augustinia­n community, government heritage funds, conservati­on specialist­s, but also the nearby community of candle sellers and Sinulog prayer dancers to pitch in with their contributi­ons.

R., who supports her family from selling candles for decades outside the Basilica, refused to pocket a piece of rubble from the collapsed belfry. She admitted she was tempted to keep a piece as a family relic and remembranc­e from the 2013 earthquake but, in the end, veneration and fear of the “Batang Balaan (Holy Infant)” prevented her from doing so.

Preserving heritage requires stewards who value not just the tangible but also intangible touchstone­s of spirituali­ty, history and identity.

 ?? / SUNSTAR FILE ?? GUARDIANS OF THE CONTINUING PAST. Heritage education will enable communitie­s to view and act to sustain their connection with the past through the appreciati­on and protection of the tangible and intangible aspects of history and culture.
/ SUNSTAR FILE GUARDIANS OF THE CONTINUING PAST. Heritage education will enable communitie­s to view and act to sustain their connection with the past through the appreciati­on and protection of the tangible and intangible aspects of history and culture.

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