| Monday,
January 17, 2005
Tourism
secretary lauds Sinulog celebration
Linette C.
Ramos
CEBU CITY -- With spectacular
performances, fireworks and hundreds of tourists attending,
the Sinulog held on to its reputation as the country's festival
of all festivals, Tourism Secretary Joseph Ace Durano said.
Durano lauded the Sinulog Foundation
Inc. and the Cebu City Government for setting an example for
other provinces on what a real festival should be.
"I can see that it's the
only festival that has become an international festival. It's
the festival of all festivals and has become a benchmark for
all festivals in the country," he said Sunday.
Bomb threats that turned out
to be hoaxes kept the police busy, while warring fraternities
Alpha Kappa Rho and Tau Gamma kept the cops on their toes,
but no major disruptions marred the parade.
Elsewhere in the city, however,
three unidentified men were killed, in attacks that echoed
a spate of vigilante-style attacks last December.
Overall, Cebu City Mayor Tomas
Osmeña was impressed not only with the performances
but also with the crowd that helped make the Sinulog's 25th
anniversary celebration peaceful.
For the first time since 1980,
the Department of Tourism (DOT) gave the Sinulog Foundation
P950,000 to cover expenses.
Vice Mayor Michael Rama, Sinulog
Foundation chairman, thanked all those who made the event
successful and peaceful.
"It was very great, especially
since the hitches were very negligible. But I believe we can
still enhance it to make it better next year," he said.
Durano added that because of
its success in the last 25 years, the Sinulog has attracted
thousands of tourists every year and has encouraged other
local government units (LGUs) to invest in their own festivals.
He said the DOT will work to
ensure there will be adequate hotel rooms to accommodate more
tourists next year.
Judging from the huge number
of spectators and participants, the organizers believe Sunday
was the best Sinulog celebration so far.
The organizers estimated the
crowd at the Cebu City Sport Center at 30,000 since the bleachers
were packed and thousands still scrambled for seats in the
grounds.
For the man who started the Sinulog
festival, its silver anniversary was "better than Rio,
better than the Las Vegas shows."
"I'm very proud, I never
thought that what we started 25 years ago will become this
big," said retired customs collector David Odilao, a
wide smile on his face.
His friends from abroad, who
watched the show from the main grandstand, were so amazed
they promised to bring a delegation next year to witness how
the Cebuanos honor the Señor Sto. Niño.
"Let us try to protect the
Sinulog. I'm hoping the police are able to solve this the
fastest way they can," Odilao said, referring to recent
incidents that have marred the celebration, such as the rape
of a domestic tourist in a downtown lodge.
The audience at the sports center
was treated to performances of Cebu's artists, bands, the
Best of Cebu dance troupes and 47 dancing contingents.
A modern Sinulog performance
by the Cebu City Dancesport Team with Councilor Jocelyn Pesquera
capped the festivities, followed by a 10-minute fireworks
display, which cost the City Government P275,000.
While Osmeña wanted all
out-of-town contingents to have maximum use of the "intelligent"
lights, this only worked for a few contingents since the parade
ended earlier than expected.
He added the parade next year
will have to start at noon up to late evening to give all
contingents a chance to take advantage of lighting so their
performance will look better on television.
The sound system and special
lights, used for the first time this year, cost the organizers
P150,000.
Ricky Ballesteros, Sinulog Foundation
executive director, said they even had to stretch the program
and intermission numbers just to have as many contingents
as possible perform at night.
They also vowed to be stricter
in screening the costumes, choreography and number of performers
next year after the costume of the Landonian Tribe drew flak
from organizers.
Ballesteros and Dolores Suzara
of the foundation frowned on the all-male performers' skimpy
costumes, with only patches of cloth covering their private
parts.
Osmeña congratulated Sunday's
crowd for keeping the festivities peaceful, unlike what happened
in Aklan province where seven members of the police were killed.
"What made it really different
from the earlier Sinulog was that the crowd was very manageable,
dili bastos, they were excellent. Even if there was potential
trouble between the frats, it was peaceful and the roads were
safe," he said in an interview after the festivities
at the grandstand.
Osmeña added that the
incident in Aklan, which was also celebrating their Ati-Atihan
Festival, should serve as a warning to Cebuanos to be vigilant
at all times.
To improve the traffic flow in
the city, the mayor will make next year's Sinulog procession
and parade "car-less" days.
The flow of traffic in the city
was so bad that Osmeña decided only motorbikes, vans
and buses carrying passengers will be allowed to enter during
the Sinulog parade.
Osmeña said he will also
provide the out-of-town contingents with more suitable accommodations
to avoid disrupting classes in some public schools where the
contingents are staying. (With RHM)
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Monday,
January 17, 2005
Tangub
wins with ‘carnival’
Rene H. Martel
TANGUB City took back what it
lost, while Barangay Basak-San Nicolas showed off its class
again in yesterday’s Sinulog silver anniversary grand
parade.
Tribu Sinanduloy of Tangub danced its way to the top of 18
Sinulog-based contingents by wowing seven judges with its
superior concept and theme of a pre-war carnival in Cebu.
Its closest rival was Compostela National High School, which
unseated it last year as Sinulog-based grand parade champion.
Compostela settled for second this time around.
Basak-San Nicolas, which carried the name Tribu Mangkokopras
instead of last year’s Lumad Basakanon, romped away
with the top prize for the second straight year in the free
interpretation category.
Unlike in 2004, though, the judges had a long time choosing
the champions because the decision was not unanimous.
“Unlike the past year, when the differences were very
glaring. Even the crowd’s favorites varied (this time),”
said Dr. Larry Gabao, chairman of the board of judges of the
Sinulog-based category.
Gabao is president of the Philippine Folk Dance Society and
presidential assistant for culture and the arts.
He said the nine judges in the free interpretation category
had the same predicament.
And although they make up only 10 percent of the criteria,
“concept and theme” mattered the most in the judges’
decision, since choreography (30 percent) and performance
(30 percent) was more or less even among participants, said
Gabao.
Tangub presented as backdrop the carnival in Cebu during the
1920s to 30s. Its theme: how the devotion to the Sto. Niño
endured despite the influx of foreign influences.
Aside from a trophy, Tangub City and Basak-San Nicolas will
each receive P500,000 while their choreographers will get
P30,000 each.
Tangub also copped the best in musicality award, which emphasized
the use of creative instruments from native materials, and
will take home P50,000.
Basak-San Nicolas’ fast-paced steps and hand movements,
with Yakan-inspired costumes, harked back to its similar first-place
finish last year.
But this time, it used the storyline of coconut gatherers
giving praise after one of them, hit on the head by a falling
coconut, was revived and cured by the Niño.
Star dancer
Its crowd-pleaser from last year, six-year-old Jercom Lemon
Beck, was still among the contingent’s dancers.
Basak-San Nicolas and Compostela will each receive P100,000
for being adjudged best in costume in their respective categories.
Compostela choreographer Dax Barlaan said the off-white costume
was inspired by a production called Alsin del Siglo of cultural
dance researcher Ramon Obusan.
“It was a turn-of-the-century apparel of men in uniform
in the Philippines,” he said.
In the Sinulog-based category, Compostela got P300,000 while
Colawin National High School in Argao town, which took third
place, earned P200,000. Bayawan City, Negros Oriental was
fourth (P100,000) while Hugpong sa Kabataan sa Punta Princesa
was fifth (P50,000)
Prizes
As for the Free Interpretation category, Tribu Iliganon
of Iligan City, with its Maranao-inspired costume and theme
of royalty paying homage to the Sto. Niño, took second
place and earned P300,000.
Bonok-Bonok Marad-jao Karadjao of Surigao City was third (P200,000)
followed by Mambajao, Camiguin (P100,000) and Tribu Muro Ami
placed fifth (P50,000).
Choreographers for second place get P20,000; third, P15,000;
fourth, P10,000; and fifth, P5,000 in both Sinulog-based and
free interpretation categories.
Surigao City likewise won second place (P100,000) in street
dancing, which Yagyag Festival of Barangay Cangmating, Sibulan,
Negros Oriental lorded over, to earn P200,000. Compostela
took the third spot for P50,000.
Ricky Ballesteros, Sinulog Foundation Inc. executive director,
reminded all winning contingents, including those in the special
awards categories, to show up at the Cebu City Sports Center
at 1 p.m. today for the awarding ceremony and repeat performance.
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Sunday, January 16. 2005
6
small vessels run into trouble, but fluvial parade’s
crowd unhurt
Garry Cabotaje
A BANCA keeled over and two
cargo vessels ran aground, in incidents that marred an otherwise
orderly fluvial procession yesterday morning.
Three small boats trying to get closer to the “galleon”
that carried the holy icons of the Señor Sto. Niño
and Our Lady of Guadalupe also ran aground off Pier 7 in Cebu
City.
But the motorboats managed to pull themselves off the shoal,
saving the passengers from danger.
A boat overturned past 8 a.m., but all seven boat passengers
were immediately rescued, said Cebu Coast Guard (CG) Chief
Elson Hermogino.
But Hermogino said he only got a sketchy report of the incident.
He told Sun.Star instead to call up his deputy chief Lemuel
Alquiza, who said the incident was not reported to the CG
headquarters.
What was officially confirmed, Alquiza said, was the running
aground of mv Lady of Divine Grace, a cargo ship of Medallon
Shipping Corp., on Banilad shoal off Pier 7, Cebu City.
All 80 ship passengers, most of them relatives and friends,
were safe, he said.
Alquiza, however, could not confirm if the second cargo vessel
had also run aground in the same site.
Quoting ship owner Maximiano Fulache, Alquiza said they opted
not to maneuver the ship so as not to hit smaller boats.
The CG ordered Capt. Reuben Alejandrino, the ship skipper,
to submit a marine protest.
Hermogino said all participating vessels had been reminded
during the final briefing about the shallow portion of the
Mactan Channel.
“So far it has been very successful, the incidents were
manageable and there was no casualty,” he added.
Although the participating boats, numbering more than 80,
left the Ouano wharf, Mandaue City past 7 a.m., the floating
armada arrived in Cebu City before 9 a.m. (See related story,
A16)
Devotees welcomed the glass-encased Señor Sto. Niño
with firecrackers, balloons and the honking of ships. Three
private planes showered flowers and confetti on the flotilla.
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Saturday, January 15, 2005
A
ritual to connect devotees
Jovy S. Taghoy
HOLDING on to the Child Jesus and being connected to the rest
of the faithful is the true meaning of the “translacion”
or translocation, an annual highlight of the Fiesta Señor.
Msgr. Cris Garcia, archdiocesan commission
on worship chairman, told thousands of devotees this during
the 7 a.m. Misa de Translacion in the Pilgrim Center of the
Basilica Minore del Sto. Niño yesterday.
Prior to the Misa de Translacion, a 4:30
a.m. Penitential Walk with Mary unfolded from Fuente Osmeña
to the basilica. The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe “reunited”
with the image of Señor Sto. Niño.
Thousands of devotees endured the long
walk to hear the Misa de Translacion.
Some joined the motorcade going to Mandaue
City, where both images were brought to the St. Joseph National
Shrine in preparation for today’s fluvial parade.
“Let’s encourage each other
to reject sin and let’s go with Jesus to heaven because
this is the meaning of the translacion. Our rest in God is
our arrival in heaven,” Garcia said.
Returning today
Using a passage from St. Paul, Garcia
said, the central message of the translacion is that “He
snatched us from the power of darkness and led us to the light.”
In keeping with this year’s theme,
“Oneness in the Santo Niño through his Mother
and the Eucharist,” Garcia said a devotee can keep his
relationship with God by constantly attending the Holy Mass.
Thousands of devotees waved to
the two images as they left the Pilgrim Center for St. Joseph’s
Shrine at past 8 a.m.
The images will be brought
back today to the basilica during the fluvial procession.
The renewal of baptismal vows and the
reenactment of the first wedding will then be staged.
Saturday, January 15, 2005
82
boat owners enlist to escort Niño image in retracing
history
THE number of participating vessels that
have officially registered with the Cebu Coast Guard (CG)
for today’s fluvial parade has reached 82, surpassing
last year’s 60.
CG Chief Elson Hermogino expects the number
of seacraft to reach more than 100 because some unregistered
boats usually join the flotilla during the parade, an annual
activity in honor of the Señor Sto. Niño.
Small motorboats assigned to occupy the
first and second divisions of the fluvial formation will converge
under the old Mactan-
Mandaue Bridge before 6 a.m.
The third division, composed of bigger
seacraft weighing a maximum of 250 gross tons, will group
at the Ouano wharf on the Mandaue City side.
The late registrants and unregistered
boats will occupy the fourth division.
But instead of bigger vessels leading
the flotilla, the small vessels will now take the lead in
the fluvial parade.
Hermogino said all vessels must stop tailing
the lead group upon reaching the Ludo and Luym wharf in Cebu
City to ensure the smooth docking of mv Trinidad, the “galleon”
carrying the Señor Sto. Niño.
The CG will deploy 20 patrol craft and
rubber boats with more than 100 sea marshals, CG auxiliary
members, and rescue teams on board.
Hermogino said that a medical team will
board St. John the Baptist, a vessel owned by Nora Ross.
He reminded the boat passengers not to
blast firecrackers and drink liquor during the two-hour fluvial
procession.
Hermogino called on boat owners to avoid
overloading and equip their vessels instead with enough life
vests and other safety gadgets.
As part of tradition, the images of Sto.
Niño and Our Lady of Guadalupe were brought to the
National Shrine of St. Joseph Parish in Mandaue City yesterday.
The mv Trinidad, the designated
“galleon” owned by the Ouano clan in Mandaue City,
will bring the two icons back to Cebu City via Pier 1 this
morning. (GC)
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Saturday,
January 15, 2005
Focus
on prayers, not props: choreographers
Linette C. Ramos
AFTER months of grueling practice and with preparation costs
amounting to millions, out-of-town contingents are ready to
go back to the roots of the Sinulog and emphasize the prayer-dance
concept tomorrow.
There will still be gigantic props and
colorful costumes but choreographers admit there is a need
to focus more on the spiritual aspect of the Sinulog, especially
on its 25th anniversary.
As in the previous years, dances will
be offered as thanksgiving for a bountiful harvest, protection
from calamities and for the gift of the Holy Child.
For Tangub City contingent choreographer
Emelio Pascual, the silver anniversary celebration of the
Sinulog calls for a stronger devotion to the Infant Jesus
through dance.
“Amid all the pomp, we have to go
back to the prayer-dance concept and bring back the spiritual
element because it’s the very thing that has kept the
Sinulog alive. Our dance will have that religious focus,”
he told Sun.Star after the Sinulog Founation Inc.’s
meeting with the choreographers yesterday.
Silver motif
The Tangub City Government, a consistent
winner in the annual grand parade, spent some P3 million for
props, costumes, travel expenses and food of the performers
during practices.
And since it is the Sinulog’s 25th
year, props will be crucial to some contingents in reliving
its history.
Among them is the use of silver costumes and accessories and
the parade of 25 Sto. Niño images.
Another contingent will also use huge
mirrors to literally and figuratively reflect on the 25-year
history of the Sinulog and their devotion to the Sto. Niño.
Participating for the first time, the
Sibulan, Negros Oriental contingent will offer their dance
for the bountiful harvest of land crabs.
Its Yag-yag Festival, where dancers imitate the crabs’
movements that reflect unity, solidarity and self-sacrifice,
won for Sibulan the grand prize in the “Wow Philippines
Best of the Best Festivals” in 2003.
Thanksgiving
“It’s only our first time
to join, that is why we don’t expect to win. We just
want to thank the Sto. Niño for the rich harvest in
the past year and this thanksgiving and devotion will be clearly
presented in our dance,” said David Ang, the contingent’s
choreographer.
The contingent from Mambajao, Camiguin
Island will also be performing a thanksgiving ritual for Sto.
Niño’s blessings and the bountiful harvest of
lanzones in their province.
Choreographer Val Lozada assured
the public of an entertaining performance, “which will
have a deeper religious meaning.”
Also focusing more on the spiritual aspect of the Sinulog
is the contingent from Tanjay, Negros Oriental, whose performance
will depict the native warriors’ acceptance and veneration
of the Sto. Niño.
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Saturday, January 15, 2005
Out-of-town
dancers take over 2 city schools
CLASSES were cancelled
yesterday in both Cebu City Central School and Abellana National
School (ANS) following the arrival of Sinulog participants,
who are billeted in classrooms.
School officials had no other recourse but to send the students
home because the classrooms are used as quarters and mats and
cots had to be put in place.
When told of this, Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña said
he might convert spaces in the City Sports Complex into dormitories
for Sinulog contingents.
“There is nothing we can do now. Next year, I will find
a way to solve this problem,” he told reporters.
ANS principal Cipriano Balili, in a telephone interview with
Sun.Star, said they already anticipated yesterday’s arrival
of the participants.
He told students as early as Thursday not to come for school
yesterday because their classrooms will be used.
“We prepared the classrooms for the contingents,”
said Balili.
Osmeña said that as much as he wants education to be
prioritized, he could not leave visiting contingents out in
the streets.
Balili said the Cebu City Central School initially held classes
but were stopped when Sinulog participants arrived.
Yesterday, Osmeña
reiterated his stand to “separate” the Department
of Education (DedEd) from the Sinulog festivities so school
officials will be preoccupied solely with educating the students
and not with winning the grand parade.
No holiday
As head of the Cebu City School Board, the mayor cancelled the
Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan and banned Cebu City schools
from joining the Sinulog, after learning of the results of DepEd’s
national achievement test.
Of 2,203 elementary schools in Central Visayas, the best Cebu
City school performer was Pasil, which did not even breach the
75 percent mark.
But students were allowed to join on the condition that they
practice outside school hours and that their barangay or companies,
not their schools, sponsor them.
In another break with tradition, classes will proceed as usual
on Jan. 17, unlike previous years when the Monday after the
grand parade was declared a holiday in the city.
Heads of private schools were left to decide whether to hold
classes or not, as long as they make up for class hours missed
and meet the minimum Department of Education requirement. (RHM)
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Saturday, January 15. 2005
Thieves
have field day with 7 tourists
SEVEN Korean tourists, in town
for the festivities, lost their personal belongings to thieves
last Thursday.
Of the seven, only one was able to recover his lost watch.
Jae Young Yoo, 54, reported that he lost his Longines wristwatch
while he was taking a bath in his hotel room at 9 a.m. yesterday.
Jae reported to the Theft and Robbery Section that while he
was taking a bath, a woman identified only as Maricor and
a male companion were in his room at the St. Moritz Hotel
in Gorordo Ave.
Jae had met them earlier and brought them to his room.
When he got out, he noticed that the wristwatch was no longer
on the table where he left it.
So were his two guests.
Police, in a follow-up operation led by SPO2 Edgardo Gallado,located
Jason Fernandez, 18, in Lahug, who had the watch.
Since Jae refused to file a case against Fernandez, the latter
was released.
At 3 p.m., six other Koreans lost their plane tickets and
passports after one of them lost her bag that contained these.
Kim Jae Hun, 26, Shun Won Sang, 25, Park Jin Sook, 38, Lee
Jung Woo, 11, Lee Seung Woo, seven, and Choi Mi Hye, 23, went
to Bo’s Coffee Club at the ground floor of Robinson’s
Department Store.
As they were arranging the chairs in the coffee shop to accommodate
them, unidentified thieves picked up Choi’s bag, which
was left on one of the tables.
When they went back, the bag was gone.
Aside from plane tickets and passports of the group, Choi
lost her digital camera, her wallet, $40, P600, a gold necklace
and a pair of gold earrings. (MEA)
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Saturday, January 15, 2005
Sinulog
overtime season for DPS cleaners
THE Cebu City Department of
Public Services (DPS) expects the volume of garbage to double
during the Sinulog grand parade.
This means the City’s
garbage trucks, garbage collectors and street cleaners will
be working more hours.
DPS chief Dionisio Gualiza said that since the start of the
Fiesta Señor last Jan. 6, the volume of trash in the
city has increased.
Plastic bags and plastic food
packaging, water bottles and Styrofoam meal packs, which are
non-biodegradable, make up most of the trash.
During normal days, about 500
tons of garbage are produced in Cebu City, said Gualiza.
Dawn patrol
A special collection scheme was implemented at the start of
Sinulog activities, which include sweeping and garbage collection
in Fuente Osmeña at dawn.
Most nighttime Sinulog-related activities are held in Fuente
Osmeña, where food stalls have also been put up since
the start of the Fiesta Señor.
Tomorrow, street sweepers and garbage collectors will begin
cleaning the route of the grand parade starting at 9 p.m.
“Fuente Osmeña would be last because usually
people stay there until dawn,” he said.
DPS personnel will also clean up after the fireworks display
at the Cebu City Sports Complex, Cebu Business Park and Plaza
Independencia.
Incentive
Gualiza said all street cleaners and garbage collectors of
the city, except those who are sick, will be working overnight
after the Sinulog grand parade.
They will not get any salary or extra pay for working at night
and on a Sunday. But last year, Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña
gave each of them a sack of rice.
Despite the absence of a promise for incentive, Gualiza said
street cleaners and garbage collectors have agreed to work.
“This is part of their devotion to the Sto. Niño
and an act of public service,” Gualiza said. (LAP)
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Saturday, January 15, 2005
Water,
power teams ready
THE Visayan Electric Co. (Veco) assured the safety of its
distribution lines and other installations during the Sinulog
grand parade tomorrow.
To help secure the parade route, Veco will deploy 14 teams
who will be in their assigned posts starting 6 a.m. Sunday.
Veco has been assisting preparations for the Sinulog grand
parade since its inception 25 years ago.
Veco teams can be found at the Cebu City Sports Complex, Fuente
Osmeña, Gen. Maxilom Ave. (near Rustan’s), in
front of Colegio dela Inmaculada Concepcion, near University
of San Carlos main campus and on Imus St.
Meanwhile, the Metropolitan Cebu Water District will set up
21 free drinking water stations during the grand parade.
Two stations will be located near the Basilica del Sto. Niño
for devotees.
Some stations will be found along the parade route: at the
corner of P. del Rosario and Junquera Sts., P. del Rosario
and Pedro Cui, in front of the Department of Education building
along Imus St., Lorega and Imus extension, in front of Sacred
Heart School, near Cherry Court on Gen. Maxilom Ave., Fuente
Osmeña and several points along Osmeña Blvd.
(LAP)
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Friday, Jan. 14, 2005
Hundreds
fly home for fiesta
Elias O. Baquero
MORE than Cebu’s busiest
tourism and religious festival, the Sinulog has also become
a time of homecoming.
After going abroad almost four
years ago, Ferlyn Bacalla Gonzales of Punta Princesa, Cebu
City, came home again, in time for the 25th Sinulog celebration.
Gonzales, a nurse, said she decided
to bring her husband Felix and their 20-month-old daughter
Valerie so they too will know how the Cebuanos celebrate a
fiesta. The couple met in Dallas, Texas in 2001.
“I am bringing my husband
here for him to see how beautiful Cebu is and how hospitable
the Cebuanos are. Perhaps Felix can even give his own testimony
that will help promote Cebu when we get back to Texas,”
Ferlyn said.
The Gonzales family was among
some 300 balikbayans and foreigners who arrived yesterday
to attend the Sinulog’s religious and cultural activities.
A reception jointly organized
by the government and private sector awaited the guests, who
arrived in Mactan at 9:15 a.m. on board Philippine Airlines
flight PR-847 from Los Angeles and Manila.
Showcasing Cebu
While retracing their heritage
and enjoying the festivities, the balikbayans also contribute
greatly to the Cebuano economy, Vice Mayor Michael Rama pointed
out.
Their arrival alone can contribute
to the realization of the government’s target of five
million tourists from 2005 to 2010, said Provincial Board
(PB) Member Agnes Magpale.
“I’m sure that the
balikbayans and foreign visitors will speak about the hospitality
of the Cebuanos when they go back to the United States,”
said Magpale, chairperson of the PB’s committee on tourism.
Foreign Affairs Regional Director
Leon Rodeon Rojas, chairman of the committee on international
visitors and guests of the Sinulog Foundation Inc., said they
are ensuring the safety and comfort of the balikbayans and
tourists while in Cebu.
Those who were welcomed at the
Mactan-Cebu International Airport yesterday were mostly listed
in package tours that included special air are rates, discounted
hotel accommodations and tickets to several shows related
to the Sinulog, said Tetta Baad of Balik Cebu.
General Manager Karl Hudson of
Cebu City Marriott Hotel said they received two-month advance
bookings in connection with the Sinulog.
Among the first things the visitors
saw was an image of the Sto. Niño placed on a bamboo
altar in the airport’s baggage claim area—which
quickly drew tourists who posed for souvenir pictures.
Aside from the batch, more balikbayans
and foreign tourists are expected to arrive, some of whom
may not opt to join package tours, said Alice Queblatin, president
of the Cebu Association of Tour Operators.
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Friday,
Jan. 14, 2005
Quality
not quantity: Tomas on fewer contingents
UNFAZED by the dwindling number
of Sinulog contingents this year, Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña
said he prefers to have fewer entries with better performances
to attract more tourists in the coming years.
Osmeña said having too
many entries for the Sinulog grand parade only makes the event
highly commercialized, giving less priority to the devotion
to the Sto. Niño.
A total of 45 contingents will
compete in the Sinulog-based and free interpretation categories
this year, or five contingents fewer than the total number
of participants last year.
Loss of focus
“It doesn’t matter
if we have fewer contingents because what’s important
is quality, not quantity. Sometimes some entries are getting
to be too ridiculous already that the event gets too highly
commercialized,” he said.
Osmeña recalled seeing
floats promoting a movie or contingents throwing t-shirts
to spectators, with only a miniature-sized Sto. Niño
icon on their floats.
To hold on to the Sinulog’s
reputation as a national event, the City Government will focus
on making the parade look grander on television since it will
be aired live on international channels for eight hours.
All for show
Organizers will spend P500,000
for the flower arrangements on the stage alone to make the
stage look better on TV, said the mayor.
“The emphasis will be for
TV audience to appreciate it better. The ground audience will
not suffer much but the focus will be on the international
audience and out-of-town contingents will be allowed to promote
their places,” Osmeña told a news conference
yesterday.
Encouragement
He added that this will also
encourage other local government units (LGUs) to join the
Sinulog next year, especially since a number of LGUs will
attend this Sunday’s parade as observers.
Since most of the winners in
previous grand parades were out-of-town contingents, organizers
arranged for the said contingents to perform at the later
part of the program for them to have maximum use of stage
lighting.
Osmeña also assured there
will be no hometown decision in the judging of the winners,
since all judges will be coming from Manila.
Reason
Dolores Suzara, project director
of the Sinulog Foundation Inc., earlier attributed the decline
in the number of contingents to the cancellation of the Sinulog
sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan.
But even if the schools perform
better in the achievement tests in the coming school years,
the mayor said he will not revive the Sinulog sa Kabataan
even if it means getting more contingents to join the parade.
(LCR)
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Friday,
January, 14, 2005
Rama
makes no promise on request for extension
SINULOG overall chairman and
Cebu City Vice Mayor Michael Rama promised to help traders
occupying the stalls along Osmeña Blvd., who are asking
that their stay be extended up to the end of February.
“I will discuss that with
the Sinulog Foundation for assessment. We should be able to
know if the extension is warranted,” he said.
The vice mayor said, though,
that any extension will depend on the mayor.
“If the City Government will say enough is enough, that’s
it. But I will do what I can,” Rama added.
Making ends meet
The traders told Sun.Star last
week that their sales are far from brisk.
Unlike last year, when they earned enough profit by the end
of December, they are still trying to gain a substantial sum.
One trader, who peddled ready-to-wear
clothes from nearby Lapu-Lapu City, said she had made only
P90 so far when Sun.Star visited her stall around 3 p.m.
That was always the case these
past few days, she added.
Another was forced to reduce
prices just to entice customers.
Lower rent
The traders are likewise asking
the City Government to reduce the rent per stall so they will
be interested to return next year.
For stalls near the Development
Bank of the Philippines (DBP) building, the City Government
charged P15,000 from Dec. 1, 2004 to the end of the month.
Stalls along Cebu City Central
School were rented out for P25,000 each, while those along
Abellana National School were for P30,000 each. (RHM)
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Friday, January, 15, 2005
Bayan
Tel to set up media center with free Internet access
TO ENSURE smooth and successful
coverage of the 2005 Sinulog Grand Parade and other related
activities, a giant telecommunication firm will put up anew
the Sinulog Media Center tomorrow at the Cebu City Sports
Center.
Bayan Tel, in its second year
of working with the Sinulog Foundation and the Cebu media,
will provide journalists unlimited and free Internet access
through six desktop computers, each with a DSL connection
at 2MBPS, and four telephone lines for unlimited and free
NDD calls.
To accommodate the needs
of the media and to make the center more dynamic, the Sinulog
Foundation will also provide airconditioning inside the center
as well as “nice furniture and fixtures.”
Coverage respite
“We want your coverage
to be a momentous success in bringing the news of the daylong
celebration here and abroad via the Internet,” Rene
delos Santos of Bayan Tel told a news conference yesterday.
Journalists who want to “take
a brief time off from work can rest at the lounging area where
they will enjoy free-flowing coffee and bottomless glasses
of juice, water and snacks.”
Bayan Tel, led by its Vice President
for the Visayas Ferdinand Buot, yesterday entered into and
signed a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with Ricky Ballesteros,
executive director of the Sinulog Foundation Inc. for the
undertaking.
Opening
Facilities at the Sinulog Media
Center will open at 7 a.m. starting tomorrow until Jan. 17,
said Rod Wycoco, sales and marketing manager of Bayan Tel.
Bayan Tel will also provide the media SMS information bulletin
on newsworthy events at the center.
Delos Santos said the company
will also be putting up a Bayan Tel booth at the Century 21
along Mango Ave. where Sinulog revelers can get a Henna tattoo
for free if they purchase Blast cards, internet cards at a
40 percent discount.
Towels will also be given away for every card bought. (GAC)
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Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Cops
pick up 5 suspects, warn vs thieves mingling in fiesta crowds
By Mia E. Abellana
EVEN thieves travel by plane.
On the lookout for visiting criminal groups
who came to strike during the Sinulog festival, the Criminal
Investigation and Intelligence Bureau (CIIB) arrested five
members of an alleged crime group who came from Metro Manila.
Three women and two men arrived on board
a Cebu Pacific plane at 5:30 a.m. last Monday and, as soon
as they reached uptown Cebu City, immediately stole from shoppers
of Ayala Center Cebu that night.
CIIB Chief Pablo Labra II said that aside
from the group, there are those from Davao, Cagayan de Oro
and Ormoc who are reportedly arriving to strike in Cebu.
The CIIB is presently monitoring pension
houses where groups from other provinces are expected to stay
while they prey on tourists and locals in town for the Sinulog
festivities.
Labra said they were 100 percent ready
for the worst-case scenario, tapping all available units for
deployment along the parade route.
He added that he and Vice Mayor Michael
Rama even met with members of the United Muslims Federation
of Cebu headed by lawyer Macaundas Hadjirasul to ask them
to "help secure Cebu" for the Sinulog.
"Our Muslim brothers here have always
been law-abiding citizens. But in case they notice new persons
arriving, we hope they can help us monitor them," Labra
said.
He explained that they did not want the
incident in Quiapo, Metro Manila to happen in Cebu.
Arrested
Last Monday night, security guards of
Ayala Center Cebu arrested Peligrina Arila Abella, Julie Donoso
and Mary Ann Ferrer after two foreigners and a local pointed
to them as the ones who stole their belongings.
At 7:20 p.m., the women stole the Samsung
digital camera of Korean national Lee Eun Bi, 17, who was
dining in a restaurant on the second floor.
Ten minutes later, they victimized Hideyuki
Ino-mata, 26, taking his Fuji digital camera, P6,000 and 37,000
yen while he was using the escalator.
Later, at 7:40 p.m., Mira Tura of Barangay
Luz was dining in one of the fastfood joints when they stole
her Nokia 2100 cell phone when she was not looking.
Caught
After the victims complained to the management
about the losses, two guards caught the three women, who were
identified by the victims.
Their valuables were also recovered from
the three women.
While Tura and Lee expressed their intentions
to file a case against the women, Hideyuki declined and asked
for his belongings back because he was scheduled to leave
Cebu early yesterday morning.
A follow-up operation conducted by the
CIIB led to the arrest of their two male companions in Tonros
Apartelle on Gorordo Ave., where they checked in.
Leonardo Galiendes and Ceferino Ferrer
of Tondo, Manila, were caught in possession of shabu paraphernalia
and were then arrested.
Harmless woman
Labra told reporters yesterday that the
five did not even look suspicious.
He added that Mary Ann was pregnant and
to ordinary people, seemed harmless.
The five admitted to Labra that
after the festivities were over, they were scheduled to return
to Manila. A certain Leo from Villa Bulsita allegedly pays
the bail bond if they get caught.
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Wednesday,
January 12, 2005
Gloria
skips Sinulog, sends Mike instead
PRESIDENT Arroyo decided not to attend the Sinulog festivities
this year, but organizers will still secure the Malacañang
in the South to ensure peace and order in the area.
Cebu City Councilor Sylvan Jakosalem said
yesterday that Arroyo declined the City Government's invitation
to attend this Sunday's grand parade.
"She told me on the phone earlier
that she will not be able to make it because she is working
overtime on tax reform measures, but the other members of
the family will be here," he said.
First Gentleman Mike Arroyo and the President's
children are expected to attend the festivities.
Arroyo also reportedly scheduled a visit
to Cebu in the third week of January.
15 vans less
Because of restrictions imposed by the
Office of the President in the Visayas, there will be fewer
container vans at the Devotees' City to house pilgrims this
year.
Instead of the usual 65 40-foot container
vans, organizers of the Devotees' City will be able to put
up only 50 this Friday to help secure the Malacañang
in the South.
Councilor Jocelyn Pesquera, head of the
project working committee, said Presidential Assistant for
the Visayas Felix Guanzon and the Presidential Security Group
(PSG) asked not to block the roads leading to Malacañang.
"Restrictions were imposed on us
because of our location, so we also have to respect the Office
of the President. The PSG instructed us not to block the roads
in the area so we will put fewer vans," she said.
Even with only 50 vans, Pesquera said
they will try their best to accommodate as much as 1,000 devotees
in the vans provided by the Aboitiz Shipping company.
Last year, a total of 979 devotees slept
in the vans.
Weekend only
Close to 1,000 devotees from other municipalities
and other regions who can't afford to stay in pension houses
avail themselves of the accommodations at Devotees City every
Sinulog.
The facility, which will be put up just
outside the Fort San Pedro, will have bathrooms, washrooms
and portable comfort rooms.
Vendors selling various Sinulog souvenir items and candles
will also be asked to sleep in the vans to keep them off the
streets at night.
In a news conference yesterday, Pesquera
assured that security in the area will be tight.
Registration for those who want to stay
in the Devotees City will start at 2 p.m. on Thursday but
they can only start occupying the vans by Friday morning.
They will be allowed to stay there until
Monday morning, Pesquera said. (LCR)
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Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Police
force takes on street beat
THE safety of the Sinulog
spectators, especially foreign and local tourists, must be the
utmost concern of the PNP.
Newly assumed Police Regional Office (PRO)
7 Chief Eduardo Gador stressed this during his first command
conference with police chiefs in Central Visayas at Camp Sergio
Osmeña last Monday.
Gador ordered all police unit chiefs to
closely monitor criminal elements who might take advantage
of the yearly Sinulog, a highlight of the annual feast in
honor of Señor Sto. Niño.
Supt. Carmelo Valmo-ria, PRO 7 community
relations division chief, said Gador, who assumed last Saturday
yet, is extra busy these days as he wants to ensure that no
untoward incident happens during the Sinulog.
Tourists
"His concern is the safety of the
tourists and spectators. So he ordered to intensify intelligence-gathering
against lawless elements that might take advantage of the
situation," he said.
Gador designated Cebu City Police Office
(CCPO) Acting Director Melvin Gayotin as the Sinulog 2005
ground commander.
Valmoria said that all police units, including mobile group
policemen, will be under the operational supervision and control
of Gayotin.
He added that the 450 neophyte cops who
are still undergoing a one-year PNP field training program
will augment the regular police forces in Cebu City.
Commitment
In the same command conference, Gador
reiterated his personal commitment to fight the proliferation
of illegal drugs in Central Visayas, especially Cebu.
Aside from being the PRO 7 chief,
Gador will also serve as the PNP Visayas area head, covering
Regions 6, 7, and 8.
PNP Chief Edgar Ag-lipay, who graced the assumption at Camp
Sergio Osmeña, called on the local police to intensify
the campaign against illegal drugs.
In his speech, he even hinted the possibility
of another shabu laboratory operating in the Visayas but he
did not elaborate.(GC)
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Tuesday, January 11, 2005
61
images of Holy Child on display in Mall
AN ARRAY of Sto. Niño images grabs the attention of mall-goers,
an attraction that offers a glimpse of how the Holy Child is
valued by Cebuanos from all walks of life.
The exhibit at the second floor at the Ayala Mall displays 61
various images of the Sto. Niño, from one dressed in
tattered clothes and holding a stick to another adorned with
precious stones.
The Sto. Niño exhibit, which carries the theme, “Sto.
Niño celebrating and contemplating the Eucharist with
Mary,” was launched last Jan. 7 and will run until Jan.
18.
The exhibit is part of the 25th anniversary celebration of the
Sinulog.
Among those who agree to have their collections featured in
the exhibit is Fr. Romeo Desuyo, one of the priests assigned
at the St. Catherine Parish in Carcar, Cebu.
Desuyo has so far collected more than 20 images of the Child
Jesus and has five of his favorites displayed in the exhibit.
The Sto. Niño with a Eucharist clothed in a yellow and
white Sotana was Desuyo’s top choice.
“Because I was the one who made the image,” Desuyo,
who sculpts for a hobby, told Sun.Star.
Desuyo’s another favorite collection is an antique image
of the Sto. Niño riding a donkey.
Desuyo said he started collecting images of the Sto. Niño
when he was in the fourth year of his theology studies.
Some of Desuyo’s artwork have attracted buyers. Desuyo
is also into designing clothes for the Holy Child.
Some of the interesting images in the exhibit are the Sleeping
Sto. Niño in the Vineyard of Msgr. Cris Garcia and Col.Zosimo
Angan.
The exhibit also features a Sto. Niño as physician, carpenter,
shepherd, a centennial image of the child Jesus, and other images
depicting lives of people.
Other images in the exhibit are owned by Jaime Amatong, Tita
Zosa, Val Sandiego, Loring Victorino, Mr. Richielieu Colina,
Bobby Oppus, Susing Arcenal, Glen Albutra, Dr. Jovenita Ceniza
and William Medici. (JST)
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Tuesday, January 11, 2005
8T
volunteers to secure Sinulog
SOME 8,000 volunteers will help secure Sinulog’s 25th
anniversary celebration, as Cebu City Vice Mayor Michael Rama
appealed to vigilante groups and criminal elements to spare
the event.
As early as yesterday, Rama identified the Fuente area, McArthur
Blvd. and Plaza Independencia as areas to have maximum security,
since criminals are more likely to stay here.
Rama, chairman of the Cebu City Police Advisory and Coordinating
Council, fears that killings during the Sinulog might discourage
tourists from coming back to Cebu.
Hospitable
“We should let them (vigilantes and criminals) know
that we will have visitors and we have to make them feel safe
so they can enjoy the festivities. Let’s all be hospitable
to them,” he said.
Every year, thousands of domestic and foreign tourists flock
to Cebu to honor the Sto. Niño, including contingents
to the grand parade.
Rama also directed the police to ensure peace and order during
the celebrations.
Even if they have already finalized all security measures,
Rama said they will still anticipate the worst especially
during the grand parade, since they cannot be too strict on
the spectators.
Ricky Ballesteros, executive director of the Sinulog Foundation
Inc., said 7,000 volunteers will monitor activities at the
parade route while 600 communicators from all over Central
Visayas will help relay problems to the organizers.
On alert
There will also be hundreds of medical volunteers, doctors
and members of the Cebu Medical Society who will man the more
than 20 medical stations along the route.
All hospitals will be on alert for emergency cases during
the grand parade.
Since not all out-of-town contingents that have confirmed
their participation to the parade were able to meet the deadline
for registration yesterday, Ballesteros said they will extend
the deadline up to Wednesday.
As of yesterday, only 38 contingents have registered for the
Sinulog-based and free interpretation categories.
A total of 50 contingents participated last year.
“Except for the registration, everything is already
set for the grand parade, including security and crowd control.
We have to finalize the list of contingents so we can also
work on the assembly points for the parade,” Ballesteros
said yesterday. (LCR)
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Tuesday,
January 11, 2005
Smaller
vessels to lead formation of fluvial parade
TO ENSURE a smooth flow of this
year’s fluvial procession, the Cebu Coast Guard (CG)
has modified the formation of participating vessels.
Instead of bigger vessels leading the flotilla, their smaller
counterparts will now take the lead in the fluvial parade,
an annual activity in honor of the Señor Sto. Niño,
on Saturday.
This as Cebu CG Commodore Alejandro Flora, Task Force Sinulog
2005 commander, yesterday called on boat owners wanting to
participate in the fluvial procession to register at the CG
office at Pier 3, Arellano Blvd., Cebu City.
The CG will only have until Friday to accept registrants.
“In previous years, we observed that big vessels can
cause waves, which, in turn, affect the arrangement of the
smaller ones. And we don’t want that to happen again
this year,” said Cebu CG Deputy Chief Lemuel Alquiza.
Old setup
In previous fluvial processions, big conventional seacraft,
such as passenger and cargo vessels, would usually occupy
the first section of the parade, leaving those with lesser
tonnage in the rear.
But this year, outrigger motorboats weighing three gross tons
and below will now occupy both the first two divisions of
the formation.
The first division will converge under the old Mactan-Mandaue
Bridge, while the second division will follow with blue and
yellow color markers, respectively.
Alquiza said the third division, composed of bigger seacraft
weighing a maximum of 250 gross tons, will group at the Ouano
wharf on the Mandaue City side with a green marker.
He pointed out that all unregistered vessels will be barred
from joining the formation. They will instead be placed at
the tail end of the procession.
As of yesterday, only 21 motorboats had registered at the
Cebu CG office.
Registration
For his part, Cebu CG Chief Elson Hermogino advised boat owners
to register their watercraft early and bring copies of their
vessels’ documents, such as the Marina registration,
the certificate of inspection and licenses of boat captain
and crew.
The CG vowed to strictly impose the passenger capacity of
participating boats and prevent participants from blasting
firecrackers and drinking liquor while at sea.
As a tradition, the images of Sto. Niño and Our Lady
of Guadalupe will be brought to the National Shrine of St.
Joseph Parish in Mandaue City on Friday and stay there overnight.
Mv Trinidad, the designated “galleon” owned by
the Ouano clan, will bring the two icons back to Cebu City
via Pier 1.
The CG will deploy sea marshals, who will board patrol and
rubber boats, to maintain order during the two-hour fluvial
parade.
The Mactan Channel will be closed to all incoming and outgoing
vessels from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. (GC)
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Tuesday, January 11, 2005
City
police briefed on Sinulog security
A
DAY after he was ordered to prioritize the security of tourists,
Police Regional Office (PRO) 7 Director Eduardo Gador yesterday
met with officers of the Cebu City Police Office (CCPO) to ensure
that the preparations for the Sinulog Grand Parade are in order.
“I just came here to make
sure nothing happens on that day. The reputation of the police
and the local governments is at stake,” he told reporters
after the meeting.
The Sinulog festival is expected
to draw tourists to the province and after the tsunami hit
major Asian destinations, the number of tourists is expected
to increase.
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Tourist
windfall
PNP Chief Edgardo Aglipay ordered Gador
last Sunday to make sure tourists will feel safe, especially
in Cebu, which he called the country’s top tourist
destination.
“We are expecting a lot of tourists
this week and if anything happens, we might as well
kiss those tourists goodbye,” he said.
After hearing the
plans made in coordination with the City Government,
Gador said he would like to believe that they are ready
for the Sinulog festival.
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He has not received information
of any group out to create havoc in Cebu, but said their preparations
will hopefully prevent the entry of criminal elements.
No need for revamp
Meanwhile, Gador said he sees
no reason to conduct a police revamp any time soon.
“I would like to work with
the men and women in the PRO 7. In fact, I did not even bring
too many people with me. Just my aide-de-camp and two non-commissioned
officers,” he said.
After his visit to the CCPO,
he also told the rest of the police offices in the region
to expect a visit from him soon.
He added that he might even make
surprise visits to the smaller police stations on the way.
“I hope they will not prepare
just because I might pass by. They should be prepared anytime,”
he said. (MEA)
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Monday,
January 10, 2005
Traders
pitch fiesta bargains
By Rene H. Martel
BUSINESS is where the crowd is,
so traders from Luzon to Mindanao continue to flock in droves
to Cebu City for the annual Sinulog celebration.
But this year, the traders were dismayed by the low sales,
with others already thinking of putting off selling wares
here for next year’s festivity.
They were one in appealing for the Cebu City Government to
allow them to extend their stay up to end of February, and
lower next year’s rental of the stalls lined along Osmeña
Blvd.
“A lot of people come here but they don’t buy
at all,” said Dante Naynes, 26, who came all the way
from Luzon to sell Baguio City products like carved wood figures.
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This is the
fourth time he has been selling goods in Cebu City, and
never has he felt a slump like this year’s.
Badria Sultan from Zamboanga City, who has been selling
batik cloth during the Sinulog for eight years now, feels
the same way.
“My husband doesn’t want (to sell) anymore
because of the low returns. Around this time last year,
we already earned so much,” she said.
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Making the rent
She is renting two stalls at
P30,000 each and is still hard pressed to earn a desirable
profit margin since December.
Aside from hiring another
person for P6,000 to help keep watch, she and husband Yusof
also have to rent space in a boarding house because they could
not sleep inside their stalls.
The City Government rented out the stalls in front of Abellana
National School and City Central School for P25,000 to P30,000.
Those lining Osmeña Blvd. near the Development Bank
of the Philippines building are being rented at P15,000 each.
Sultan added that they only earned half of what they used
to during the previous years; they were even forced to reduce
prices just to entice customers.
Annalyn Daclis, who sells ornamental and fruit-bearing plants
from Tagum City, Davao del Norte, hopes the City will consider
their plight and extend their stay up to the end of February.
That way, they would get a chance to earn more, especially
during Valentine’s Day.
She attributed the lack of buyers to the financial crisis
that made Cebuanos and tourists alike scrimp and forgo the
luxuries.
“Wala pa gyud ko kabawi sa abang. Pero dili man ingon
nga lugi na gyud (I still have to make enough for rent, but
I don’t think of this is a losing proposition),”
she said.
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Monday,
January 10, 2005
Don’t
let fads replace Sinulog, judge suggests
PERFORMANCES have evolved to
“a higher level” but there is a need for performers
not to lose the basic movements of the Sinulog.
So says Dr. Larry Gabao, chairman of the board of judges in
last Saturday’s Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Lalawigan, who
is looking forward to choreography that emphasizes quality
of movements.
“The presentations are now on a higher level and dwell
not only on the development of a religious people,”
he said shortly after last Saturday’s contest.
He cited the introduction of other themes and their fusion
with the Sinulog message, as an example.
Gabao is president of the Philippine Folk Dance Society and
presidential assistant for culture and the arts of the Philippine
Normal University.
Bobbing
He said at least two workshops by the Sinulog Foundation for
choreographers greatly helped in terms of conceptualization
and execution of the right movements.
He cited in particular the predominance of the stomping and
bobbing step that was never a part of the five to seven basic
steps of the Sinulog.
“Those dancers from Mindanao, like the Tangub City contingent,
introduced that to the Sinulog,” he said, adding that
the steps have become a staple in most performances.
But after the workshops, he said those who will witness this
Sunday’s grand parade will notice that such a step has
been toned down.
Rethink props
Also, he said that the Sinulog is “not the fast beat”
and criticized performances that feature fast foot movements
to hurried drumbeats.
“Parang jet plane, masyadong mabilis. That is why I
think it is important that we do not lose the Sinulog-based
movements,” he added.
He likewise cautioned on the use of overwhelming props like
the ones employed by Compostela National High School that
were not really used as part of the choreography.
He said that props are supposed to aid in the flow of the
concept, instead of just being embellishments.
Compostela copped first place for the third straight time
in last Saturday’s Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan.(RHM)
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Monday,
January 10, 2005
‘Sinulog
is supposed to be an offering’
By Linette C. Ramos
FORTY-FIVE years of experience
as a choreographer and 22 years of participating in the Sinulog
taught Melchiades Gonzales Jr. to value simplicity and faith
over extravagance.
Gonzales, 71, was one of the pioneer choreographers of the
Sinulog in 1980, when dan-ces offered as thanksgiving were
just simple movements of graceful dancers in decent costumes.
Twenty-five years later, he laments the loss of the Sinulog’s
true meaning, citing misplaced priorities and too much commercialism
during the feast of the Infant Jesus.
“There is destructive competition now. Everybody wants
to win by being outrageous and spending millions, without
minding those who suffer burns or get run over in the parade.
They forget that their dance is supposed to be an offering,
a sacrifice,” said Gonzales.
After helping Southwestern University (SWU) win nine grand
prize awards and 11 wins as runner-up, Gonzales prefers to
just be a devotee and a spectator this time.
He prays to the Sto. Niño to spare Cebu from calamities
and tragedies, while seeking for the restoration of the faith
and true meaning of the Sinulog that he and other pioneers
so dearly hold.
The Sinulog organizers
remember you as the one who started the basic Sinulog steps.
How did it start?
I did not create the two steps forward, one step backward
movement. No one created the steps. All choreographers cannot
claim that they created it because they were steps danced
by the old folks, the candle vendors at the basilica. Nobody
can claim that as theirs because we just followed it.
Why then were the steps
attributed to you?
It may have been so because as official choreographer of the
first Sinulog, we brought it out so everybody thinks I was
the one who started it.
When did you start to
dance the Sinulog movements?
As soon as I learned to stand, I was already dancing. When
the family sang prayers during the war, I would stomp my feet
and dance to the tune even if there was total blackout.
How and when did your
devotion to the Sto. Niño start?
It was before the war ended. I was nine years old. From Sibonga,
we went to Leyte and while running away from the Japanese
soldiers in the mountains there, we lost our youngest brother
to the soldiers. For one week we prayed to the Sto. Niño
and days later they just left him on the shore. For us it
was a miracle and since then I’ve been going to the
basilica.
As a choreographer, how
do you think were you able to help in the growth of the Sinulog?
It took Director (David) Boy Odilao Jr. to introduce Sinulog
to the Cebuanos. On my part, I am so happy that what we started
as a small activity has become world-renown. It was better
then because our steps and formations were much simpler. Simpleng
Sinulog gyud. Walay daghang istorya, walay daghang kyaw-kyaw,
sayaw lang gyud.
What can you say about
the progress of the Sinulog in the last 25 years?
I am sorry to say that I have misgivings with the Sinulog
organizers. It has become too commercialized that the simplicity
and the real Sinulog is lost. There’s too much glitter
and there is the issue of power and wealth, money has to come
in always. One day soon, I hope not soon, mawala ang Sinulog
because the real essence of the Sinulog is lost.
How can we make it grand
without commercializing the event?
By dancing the real Sinulog. My Sinulog has always been traditional,
the only thing I change every year is the formation and movements
but the steps and essence of the Sinulog is still there.
Anything you wish the
organizers would improve?
The Sinulog is for God but now all you see is pleasure, color.
I pray na mubalik unta ang simplicity, although it is also
good to blend with the modern trend. What I am sad about is
the religiosity of the Sinulog is no longer there. It is pomp
and pleasure. That is one of the reasons I shied away from
it in the past years.
As one of the pioneer
choreographers, what do you think of the new steps and formation
introduced every year?
I feel crushed every time the dancers pass by. I pity the
dancers because they are dancing without knowing what they
are doing. Sinulog is for God but they just play with it.
Some wear costumes that are too revealing.
Dancers have to be graceful. Karon ilabyog na man lang ang
imahen. Kinahang-lan gakson na, agakon ug ihatag sa mga tawo
as if inviting them to worship. If only the Sto. Niño
could talk now, he would say “Hunong na diha, nalipong
na ko, nata-gak na ko diri!” Sometimes it’s like
a circus already.
What would you ask of
the organizers for the 25th anniversary celebration?
To temper the expenses, the outrageous steps and costumes
and to restore the faith because it seems the religious aspect
of the grand parade celebration is lost.
Any lesson you want to
impart to new choreographers?
There is no sense of propriety among some choreographers now.
They don’t mind spending as long as they get the prestige
of winning because when you win, your name is a byword. But
they should also study the real essence of the Sinulog, understand
the concept, where it originated. Choreography is not teaching.
When you are a dance teacher, you are a teacher but you are
not a choreographer. Choreography entails a lot of conceptualizing,
planning and developing that concept. They have to nurture
the concept and spread the splendor.
How do you feel being
one of the recipients of the Sinulog Foundation’s special
awards?
To continue the simple Sinulog that we have started and to
keep the religious aspect of the celebration is the best way
of saying thank you. I am happy that they valued our contributions.
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Monday,
January 10, 2004
Sinulog
pays tribute to founder, maestro
FOR winning nine grand prize awards
and the most number of wins in the Sinulog, Southwestern University
(SWU) will be given a special award this year, along with the
two great minds behind the festival.
Considered the “Father of the Sinulog”, David Odilao
Jr. and pioneer choreographer Melquiades “Mych”
Gonzales Jr. will also receive special citations for their contributions
to the growth of the Sinulog.
For the first time in 25 years, the Sinulog Foundation Inc.
will give out the three special awards to institutions and individuals
who supported the Sinulog activities.
“These awardees have been very supportive of the Sinulog
and have greatly contributed to its 25-year history. We want
to honor them for it,” said Dolores Suzara, Sinulog Foundation
Inc. project director.
Although SWU bagged the grand prize award for nine times already
and won 11 times as runner-up in different categories since
1982, it has not received yet the Hall of Fame award.
The Sinulog Foundation also has yet to give the Hall of Fame
to the first contingent who can win the grand prize in the same
category for five consecutive years.
Since Gonzales retired as SWU physical education department
director and choreographer in 2001, the school has declined
from joining the annual Sinulog grand parade as a dancing contingent.
This year, SWU will be competing in the float category as it
did in the last three years.
“Mr.
Gonzales has already retired after introducing many of the
steps and formation in the Sinulog. He was the one who made
us win the nine grand champions and it will be quite hard
to replace him,” said Pierre Infante, SWU director for
student affairs.
The school won first place in 1982, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1992,
1993, 1995, 1998 and 1999.
Gonzales will be given a special citation for his “exemplary
efforts in uplifting the standards of choreography in the
Sinulog,” Suzara said. The three special awardees will
receive their trophies during the Sinulog 2005 awarding ceremony
on Jan. 16 at the Cebu City Sports Center. (LCR)
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Monday, January 10, 2004
Beyond
goods, stalls offer lessons in good PR, haggling
MALL freaks can take a break
from their usual haunts, at least for now, and say hello to
the Sinulog street fair.
Cebuano shopping enthusiasts will find, from various merchants,
a variety of goods like ready-to-wear sarongs and batik products;
native and modern fashion accessories; men’s and ladies’
shoes and bags; famous crafts and food from Baguio City; leather;
and kitchenware.
There are even cell phones and accessories and, of course,
souvenirs.
These business owners come from different spots in the archipelago,
including Baguio, Davao, Marawi, Zamboanga. Cebu City has
become a rendezvous for them in recent years.
Although the bazaar is a Sinulog highlight, some of the stalls
started doing business in time for the Christmas rush.
But what sets this fair apart from all the usual shopping
haunts?
First, the prices of all the products here are negotiable.
You can save, say, P30 less than the asking price, depending
on how well you converse with sellers. Negotiation is the
name of the game.
But even if you’re not buying, these stalls offer valuable
lessons in good public relations. Observe how the sellers
call out to each passerby or potential customer. They manage
to persuade, even if they are not native Visayan speakers.
What they lack in shopping convenience, like air-conditioning
or piped-in music, they make up for in variety. These stalls
have many of the things you may be looking for.
Think of the whole deal as a way of redefining your shopping
experience, a change from the tempo to which you’ve
grown accustomed.
There’s a breeze to soothe those tried muscles after
you’ve walked from one end to the other. And if you’re
craving for food, refreshment stands offer banana cue and
other snack items to satisfy your hunger. If you know somebody
who deserves a belated Christmas, or a Fiesta Señor
gift, you know where to go for a different shopping experience
that fits your budget. (Louie Kyamko, UC intern)
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Sunday, January 9, 2004
‘Keep
Cebu safe from disaster’
By Jovy S. Taghoy
“ Bisan na lang sa
fiesta we forget our problems, our division, and we remember
that we all are brothers. If we show our love everyday and
not just during the Sinulog, we will grow spiritually”
—Bishop
John Du, after the 5-hour grand procession last Jan. 17, 2004
SPARE Cebu and the rest of the
country from any more calamities.
This is Cebu Archbishop Ricardo
Cardinal Vidal’s special prayer for this year’s
feast of the Señor Sto. Niño, after the storms
that hit communities in Luzon and the tsunamis that killed
some 150,000 in neighboring Asian countries and Africa.
“I pray for Señor
Santo Niño to protect us from disasters here in the
Philippines, especially Cebu. That we will be spared, even
if we don’t deserve it perhaps,” Vidal said in
an interview with reporters yesterday.
Even if “we too have committed
sins against Him,” still, Cardinal Vidal said the faithful
should pray for God’s protection and serve Him, for
peace and prosperity.
The archbishop earlier expressed
his sympathy to the calamity victims and urged all the faithful
in Cebu to extend their assistance.
Also yesterday, the cardinal
announced that he will not be able to join the grand solemn
foot procession on Saturday, Jan. 15, on account of his health.
“I have to be honest. I
am still weak. I can only walk several meters and my knees
would give way. I cannot make it (the procession),”
Vidal said.
The cardinal was advised by his
physicians not to engage in strenuous activity after undergoing
a heart operation last November. He was also advised not to
stay too long in crowded areas.
At present, Cardinal Vidal has
a pacemaker, a gadget that monitors his heartbeat.
Vidal, however, said he will
still be at the Basilica del Sto. Niño to lift the
image of the Sto. Niño from the altar to the carriage.
The 6 p.m. pontifical mass that
will follow the procession will be celebrated by Auxiliary
Bishop John Du.
On Jan. 16, though, Cardinal
Vidal will lead the 6 a.m. solemn pontifical mass at the Basilica,
to mark the grand fiesta of Señor Sto. Niño.
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Sunday, January 9, 2005
Compostela,
Jugan lead youth’s Sinulog contest
A THREE-PEAT and an upset marked
yesterday’s Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Lalawigan 2005, where
five elementary and eight high schools vied for the P200,000
top prize.
Compostela Naional High School
(NHS) and Jugan Elementary School in Consolacion topped their
respective categories after the judges, all veteran choreographers,
gave their verdict.
For Compostela, the feat was
the school’s third straight first-place finish under
the choreographer Dax Barlaan.
Mandaue City Science High School
placed second, while Luray NHS from Toledo City placed third.
Colawin NHS from Argao, which
was second to Compostela last year, was fourth this year,
followed by Buanoy, Balamban NHS.
Jugan, Consolacion students,
on the other hand, frustrated Cordova Central School’s
attempt for a repeat of its first-place finish last year in
the elementary category.
Like last year, Cordova depicted
itself as a fishing community that owed its harvest to the
Sto. Niño.
Larry Gabao, chairman of the
board of judges, said Jugan won because of better execution
and performance of the presentation’s concept.
Cordova settled for second place,
followed by Pajo Elementary School, Lapu-Lapu City, which
won third place last year.
In fourth was Cansantic, Sibonga
Elementary School, tailed by Danao City Central School at
fifth.
Aside from plaques, Compostela
and Jugan received P200,000 while their choreographers each
got P30,000.
Second placers got P150,000;
third, P100,000; fourth, P50,000; and fifth, P30,000.
Choreographers for second placers
received P20,000; P15,000 for third; P10,000 for fourth; and
P5,000 for fifth.
Best in costume was Pajo and
Buanoy; each received P40,000.
Barlaan, in an interview after
receiving the reward, said he did not expect Compostela to
win because the costumes were not finished in time for yesterday’s
performance.
He said what the women wore as
tapis were actually their unfinished skirts while the boys,
who wore off-white vests, were supposed to wear tuxedos.
“Natulala gani ko didto
tungod sa among costume. Maong wala ko magdahum,” he
said amid cheers, from the Compostela students who gathered
around him.
Compostela presented a Philippine
Folk Dance from Zamboanguita, Negros Oriental called Rigodon
Royal, which rich landlords danced in lavish parties during
the Spanish era.
Like the previous year, it showcased
giant props. This time, Barlaan drew inspiration from the
stairs of the Sto. Niño Pilgrim Center, hence the giant
steps.
Jugan choreographer Edgar Abay,
on the other hand, said they simply wanted to thank the Sto.
Niño through the use of flowers, which was the motif
for their presentation.
Colorful costumes and flowers
were so creatively presented that they wowed the crowd. Their
presentation was punctuated by party poppers, which aptly
served as a celebration of their win. (RHM)
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Sunday,
January 9, 2005
Dancing
great, higher grades better: Tomas
AFTER banning Cebu City schools
from joining the Sinulog, Mayor Tomas Osmeña yesterday
showed up in the Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Lalawigan and said
he actually enjoyed the presentations.
But he also quipped that the
performances get better each year, “which is why the
students’ grades are also getting lower each year.”
So while he liked what he saw,
he stood pat on his decision to keep Cebu City schools out
of the grand parade next Sunday.
As mayor, he has to set priorities,
and good education for the poor is paramount compared to joining
the Sinulog, he added.
Ironically, before the competition,
Department of Education (DepEd) officials explained that the
students’ participation is their way of thanking the
Señor Sto. Niño for Cebu’s blessings.
“We have committed to perform
in the Sinulog as a fitting tribute to the Sto. Niño
for all the help He has extended to us,” said DepEd
7 Director Carolino Mordeno.
“It is a celebration of
thanksgiving for the protective mantle He has provided us,”
he added.
He specifically cited the fact
that Cebu was spared from typhoons similar to the four that
struck Luzon one after the other, late last year.
“We believe our participation,
the participation of the children, is our way of worshipping,
of praising our God Almighty, our way of thanking our Sto.
Niño for the bountiful blessings,” added DepEd
Cebu Provincial Schools Superintendent Recaredo Borgonia.
The mayor, though, was not yet
around when the DepEd officials uttered these words.
Osmeña banned Cebu City
schools from the Sinulog after learning that they did not
fare well in the recently-concluded National Achievement Test.
Among 2,203 elementary schools
in Central Visayas, the best achiever among Cebu City’s
schools was Pasil, which ranked 44th and got an average of
77.10 percent in English, 61.39 percent in science and 82.32
percent in math.
Worst-off was Tagbao, which placed
2,203th, and only scored 12.67 percent in English, 12.96 percent
in science and 17.17 percent in Math.
Because of Osmeña’s
decision, no Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan will be presented
today.
To offset the absence of Cebu
City schools, all participants in yesterday’s Sinulog
sa Kabataan sa Lalawigan were given the chance to join the
grand parade next Sunday.
Before, only the top five winners
in the high school and elementary categories were allowed
to take part in the grand parade. (RHM)
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Saturday, January 8, 2004
SILVER SINULOG FESTIVAL KICKS OFF
‘Don’t
let crisis dampen faith’
Allan I. Varquez
AS THE crowd chanted “Pit Senyor”
three times, balloons and doves were released into the air.
To the beating of drums in the Pilgrim Center of Basilica
Minore del Sto. Niño, Cebu’s Sinulog Festival
officially began yesterday.
“This is our Sinulog, a gift from
Sto. Niño, and we should cherish it,” foundation
chairman and Cebu City Vice Mayor Michael Rama told reporters.
This is the 25th year of the annual festival,
Cebu’s top tourist attraction.
A 2:30 p.m. mass preceded the launching
of the festival.
Fr. Andy Rivera, the officiating priest,
defended in his homily the religious value of the festival,
amid uncertainty about the country’s future and the
tsunamis that recently killed over 150,000 in neighboring
countries.
“Pagpakita kini sa ubang nasud nga
bisan ug nagkagidlay kita dinhi, apan lig-on lang gihapon
kita sa atong pagtuo (This can be our way of showing other
nations that no matter how difficult the times may get, we
remain steadfast in our faith),” Rivera said.
Preview
He said the street dancing was a way of
expressing the people’s love and devotion to God, “Who
has the cure to every man’s suffering.”
After the mass, Rivera called Vice Mayor
Rama onto the altar to officially announce the start of the
festival.
After naming his colleagues in the foundation,
Rama announced: “We declare the Sinulog open,”
and the crowd at the Pilgrim Center cheered.
Dance troupes from 14 universities in
the city held in thrall the crowds that lined both sides of
Osmeña Blvd., stretching from the corner of D. Jakosalem
St. to the Cebu City Sports Center.
The dance parade began at 3:40 p.m. and
ended at 5:10 p.m.
As a preview of sorts for the
Jan. 16 parade, the crowd was treated to performances from
each of 14 contingents at the Cebu City Sports Center, where
a huge stage was built in front of the grandstand.
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Saturday, January 8, 2004
Pop
Music ‘left out’ but show will go on
THE Sinulog Foundation, Inc. released
its official souvenir programs last Wednesday, but excluded
the Cebu Popular Music Festival from the list of activities.
Still, organizers of the Cebu Pop Music
Festival yesterday clarified they are not complaining.
The music festival is held every Friday
before the grand parade, which is on the third Sunday of January.
But Philogene Florita, Cebu Pop Music
Festival project director, called for a news conference after
a television report insinuated that the exclusion is a result
of the conflict between Cebu City Mayor Tomas Osmeña
and Rep. Eduardo Gullas over the South Reclamation Project
(SRP).
Gullas is the founding chairman of the
annual Cebu Pop Music Festival, which will also celebrate
its 25th anniversary, like the Sinulog Festival.
Florita said they have no problem over
the matter, as the audience of the competition already knows
it is held every Friday before the Sinulog grand parade.
Offering
“Since the Fiesta Señor is
on Jan. 16, then the competition will be on Jan. 14. Wala
mi moreklamo. Wala mi makiglalis. This is just our offering
to the Sto. Niño,” he added.
In a news conference last Wednesday, Ricky
Ballesteros, Sinulog Foundation executive director, said there
was “no political color in the non-inclusion of the
Pop Music Festival.”
Ballesteros explained there was no time
to wait for the schedule and venue of the music competition,
as the printer of the souvenir program had wanted it to be
ready for the news conference and launching activities.
He said that when the Pop Music organizers
reported the change of venue from the Cebu Waterfront Hotel
to the New Cebu Coliseum, the program was already printed.
Osmeña, for his part, told a news
conference yesterday noon that he has no hand in the preparations
of the Sinulog program and on why the music competition was
not in the list.
Pop winners’ retrospective
A reporter asked if it has something to
do with his quarrel with Gullas.
“It’s not the plan. I’ve
never been active in it sukad-sukad (ever since). I never
attended it and I’m not against it. But since you have
mentioned it, that’s a good idea. I might cancel it,”
the mayor said.
“They’re trying to get our
SRP and they’re trying to get our cooperation. I’m
not shy to say that. That’s a good idea,” he added.
Florita, however, explained that the operating
expenses and prizes for the music competition are being funded
by the donations from “the friends of Gullas, as well
as his personal money.”
The festival’s silver anniversary
presentation will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 14 at the New
Cebu Coliseum.
Twelve finalists will compete in the festival,
which will feature Filipino artists and composers who are
products of the Cebu Pop in the last 25 years, said Florita.
Expected to attend the competition are
Chad Borja, Eva Santos, Elmer Cabahug, Celen Deguilmo, Bobby
Jamiro, Baby Condeno, Gil Maningo, Cheryl Commendador, Edwin
Dilao, Leah Mae Casiñas, Jan Michael Banaynal, Jamjam
Albino, Zenith Rivera, Maricel Suaring, Dr. Raul Enad, Dante
Pagapulaan, Sakdap and Raki Vega.
Vega recently won in a competition aired
over ABS-CBN. Sheryn Regis, another product of the Cebu Pop
and now a recording star, reportedly told the organizers that
“she will not promise to attend the festival this year.”
As to Vina Morales, known as
Sharon Magdayao when she won the competition in the 1980s,
Florita said her father asked for “a not-so-affordable
talent fee.” (GAC)
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Friday,
January 7, 2005
Hundreds turn up for novena:
'Be
child-like for the Child'
IF YOU want to
live fully as a Christian, be child-like.
Rev. Fr. Andy Satura conveyed
this message to the faithful who braved the dawn chill yesterday
to attend the 5:30 a.m. mass that opened the novena masses
for the Feast of Señor Sto. Niño.
Before the mass, hundreds of
devotees marched from Fuente Osmeña to the Basilica
Minore del Sto. Niño, in a penitential procession that
started at 4:30 a.m.
Fr. Satura, in his homily, compared
a child's attitudes to five terms normally associated with
a cellular phone: SIM (simplicity), battery (being dependent),
user-friendly features (friendliness), Smart (for how a child
appreciates life) and Globe (for the child's being the center
of unity in a family).
By being simple and friendly,
a child, like a true Christian, appreciates life with amazement
and without any pretension, he said.
And like a child who depends
on his parents for his daily needs, Satura hopes the faithful
will strengthen their faith in the Lord and never be allured
by earthly trappings, especially money.
"For we cannot bring the
money with us when we die. It is our faith that can help us
go to heaven. We should nurture our relationship with God,"
Satura said.
"We should bring our Sto.
Niño devotion with us when we go home so that we will
be able to convince the members of our family who no longer
hear masses or do not hear masses at all to go back to the
Lord," Satura said.
Satura also appealed to the devotees
to set aside the "me first" attitude and to continue
serving the Lord.
"Oneness in the Santo Niño
through his Mother and the Eucharist," is this year's
theme for the feast.
The theme coincides with the
archdiocesan pastoral thrust, "evangelized and eucharistic
communities called to contemplate with Mary."(JST)
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Friday,
January 7, 2005
Mayor
lifts ban on GMA's crew
CEBU City Mayor Tomas Osmeña
will no longer ban GMA 7 reporters from the Cebu City Sports
Center for the Sinulog 2005 coverage, but they will not be
allowed to use the center's facilities.
Osmeña said he will not
extend to GMA 7 officials, reporters and crew the same courtesy
and accommodations the City will give to other members of
the media who will cover the 25th anniversary of the Sinulog.
In his press conference yesterday,
the mayor also warned he will not hesitate to embarrass GMA
anchor Pablito "Bobby" Nalzaro at the sports center.
"He can enter the sports
center but if I see any reason or any misbehavior by him,
then I'll throw him out myself. Let him try to make siga there,
watch out, I'll embarrass him in front of everybody,"
said the mayor.
Osmeña resented Nalzaro's
refusal to accept any paid advertisement from the City Government,
prompting him to ban GMA 7 reporters from covering the 25th
Sinulog inside the sports center.
But yesterday, when a GMA 7 TV
reporter clarified the mayor's stand on the matter, the mayor
already changed his mind.
"You guys can walk in with
your camera but you can't connect your cables to ours and
you're not going to use any facility within the sports center.
Others can use, fine, but GMA, no. You just buy plenty of
Eveready batteries outside so you can cover," Osmeña
said.
This is not the first time the
mayor expressed his dislike for reporters during Sinulog coverages.
Osmeña said he also berated
ABS-CBN anchor Leo Lastimosa in a previous Sinulog celebration
when the latter approached the stage.
The mayor waged war with Nalzaro
last year when the latter refused to accept the advertisements
of the City because of its unpaid airtime, which was incurred
during the administration of Alvin Garcia.
He accused Nalzaro of coercing
the present administration to pay for the unpaid advertisements.(LCR)
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Friday, January 7, 2005
Villages,
firms save students from dance ban
By Linette C. Ramos
WITHOUT
the support of the Department of Education (DepEd), public schools
turned to barangays and private companies to "adopt"
them so their students can still join Sinulog 2005.
The costumes and efforts of several Cebu
City public school students will not go to waste, after all,
since some barangays and companies already pledged to pay
for these.
Among the schools that will be sponsored
by the barangays and private establishments are Ramon Duterte
National High School, Camp Lapu-Lapu National High Schol,
Kamputhaw Elementary School and Pardo Elementary School.
City Schools Superintendent Leonilo Oliva
warned principals and teachers to follow the guidelines set
by Mayor Tomas Osmeña, so the students' participation
in the Sinulog grand parade on Jan. 16 can push through.
Osmeña said earlier that students
will be able to participate provided that school officials
will not be involved, practices will be held only on Saturdays
and Sundays, and contingents will not bring the name of the
school.
Pardo Elementary School District Coordinator
Merceditas Calo is thankful to Barangay Pardo and Galvasteel
Corp. for sponsoring the students' participation in the Sinulog
grand parade.
"Nahinayak na man gud mi ug apil
mao nga gipadayon na lang sa barangay aron na lang sad makasayaw
ang mga bata kay nahimo na man gyud ni nga panaad sa uban.
Ang eskwelahan dili na lang gyud mupalabot (We have committed
to join that's why the barangay pushed for our participation,
so the students can perform. The school will not get involved),"
she told Sun.Star.
Kamputhaw Elementary School will be sponsored
by their barangay, while Ramon Duterte National High School
and Camp Lapu-Lapu National High School will be sponsored
by Energizer Philippines and Suzuki Motors Corp., respectively.
Talamban Elementary School will also be
sponsored by their own barangay.
Councilor Eugenio Faelnar, Association
of Barangay Councils president, said other barangays pledged
to shoulder the food of the students and other members of
the barangay's contingent.
Some public school officials feared some
P2.3 million worth of costumes and props will go to waste
after the mayor cancelled the Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan.
Still, students of Cebu City Central School,
a consistent winner in the Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan,
will not be joining the festivities this year.
As for the other consistent winners like
the Abellana National High School, Banilad Elementary School
and Don Sergio Osmeña Memorial National High School,
its officials are uncertain yet if their students will be
able to participate since no one has volunteered to sponsor
them yet.
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Thursday,
January 6, 2005
Sinulog
to have better crowd control
BETTER
crowd control can be expected in the Sinulog 2005 celebration,
after organizers created seven sectoral committees that will
ensure order in the grand parade.
The committees,
composed of police officers, crowd control volunteers and
members of security, medical and communication teams, will
man the 4.3-kilometer carousel route, Vice Mayor Michael Rama
said yesterday.
When last
year the committees failed in terms of coordinating among
themselves and with the organizers, this year, they are expected
to ensure order after they attended a workshop on crowd control.
“The
committees were not maximized last year because they did not
even know who their co-members were and they did not know
whom they were supposed to coordinate with. Now that they
know what to do and there is harmony among them, we have a
better chance of making the event successful,” Rama
told Sun.Star.
Rama,
overall chairman of the Sinulog Foundation Inc., also said
they will be prepared to tighten security should President
Arroyo decide to attend the festivities.
He already
learned from presidential daughter Evangeline Lourdes “Luli”
Arroyo that the family is interested to attend but the City
Government has yet to receive confirmation from Malacañang.
Fewer
problems
Ricky
Ballesteros, executive director of the foundation, expects
fewer problems in the parade route on Jan. 16.
It will
also be easier for them to address problems since they will
only have to communicate through a radio communication system
with the police officers, who were appointed as heads of the
committees.
The seven
sectoral committees will be assigned at the side entrance
of the Cebu City Sports Center, P. del Rosario-Imus Road area,
Carreta-Gen. Maxilom Ave., Colegio dela Inmaculada-Iglesia
ni Cristo area, Foodarama to Fuente-Osmeña Blvd. and
at the sports center. (LCR)
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Thursday,
January 6, 2005
Schools
encouraged to let barangays use costumes, props
THERE
seems to be no chance anymore for Cebu City public school
students to be able to perform in next year’s Sinulog.
Schools
Superintendent Leonilo Oliva said that even if the contingent
is barangay-based, students and teachers in Cebu City will
not be allowed to join the grand parade.
Oliva added that instead of worrying about costumes that have
gone to waste, the schools should just let their barangays
use these.
He also encouraged the barangays to send a contingent that
will take the place of the schools in the grand parade on
Jan. 16.
“It’s okay if the ba-rangay will send a contingent
as long as it will not involve our teachers and students.
Otherwise, it’s the same story because we prohibited
them from joining so they can focus on their studies,”
said Oliva.
Mayor Tomas Osmeña decided with finality last Wednesday
that public schools in the city will not be allowed to participate
in the festivities, because of their poor performance in the
last National Achievement Test (NAT).
Not immediately
Councilor Jocelyn Pesquera, chairman of the City Council’s
committee on education, said she understands the point of
the mayor but that the change should not have been implemented
immediately.
Pesquera will visit the schools that have bought their costumes
already and see the extent of their preparations.
“After I have gathered the facts, I will go to the mayor
to ask for reconsideration because P2.3 million worth of costumes
is a lot, not to mention the efforts of the teachers, students
and parents that will go to waste,” she said.
Sudden decision
Pesquera also raised the possibility that other local government
units (LGUs) will not be encouraged to join the Sinulog sa
Kaba-taan sa Lalawigan since Cebu City itself will not be
participating.
“The decision of the mayor is so sudden, the people
were not able to prepare. Besides, how can we ask other LGUs
to join when atong mga bata mismo dili nato paapilon (our
own children can’t even participate)?” Pesquera
continued.
More worries
Eleven Cebu City public schools reported that they have already
bought costumes and props worth P2.29 million.
Sinulog Foundation Inc. executive director Ricky Ballesteros
said some schools that were sponsored by their barangays are
also worried that the barangays’ expenses will be disallowed
by the Commission on Audit (COA) since the costumes will no
longer be used.
But Pesquera assured that as long as the receipts are liquidated
and all costumes are accounted for, there will be no violations
of COA rules.
Oliva also said the costumes can be used next year, if schools
perform better in the next NAT and the mayor allows them to
join the Sinulog. (LCR)
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Tuesday,
January 4, 2005
600
runners so far sign up for Sinulog 10K marathon
IT LOOKS
like the year of the rooster is a good year for runners as the
Sinulog 10K Marathon has attracted more participants than the
usual.
This early,
some 600 runners have already registered for the event, including
a huge delegation from Timex Running and some runners from
Mindanao and other parts of the Visayas.
Opening
salvo
“This
is the opening salvo of the Sports Commission for 2005. We
hope to attract 1,000 runners and set a good trend for marathon
this year. We are hoping to stage six or more marathons for
this year,” said Cebu City Sports Commission chairman
Jonathan Guardo.
Guardo
said that they’ve decided to raise the number of jerseys
to be given away from 300 to 500 because of the substantial
turnout for the Jan. 16 race.
Registration
is ongoing at room 23 of the Cebu City Sports Center. Entry
fee is at P100. For details, runners may call Raul Manawatao
at 255-6985 or 0916-4155244.
The footrace,
which will start and end at the Cebu City Hall, will pass
through the City’s major streets, including Manalili,
Colon and Sanciangko.
The Sinulog
10K Run, organized in cooperation with the Cebu Executive
Runners Club, will have six categories, including the Men’s
Open, Women’s Open, Masters A and B, and Executives
A and B.
The CCSC
and City Government has appropriated P200,000 for the race’s
cash prizes, jerseys, trophies, medals and other operational
expenses.
Cash
prizes
The champions
in the Men and Women’s Open will both get P5,000, while
the three runners-up get P4,000, P3,000 and P2,000, respectively.
The fifth placers pocket P1,000, while the sixth to 10th finishers
receive P500 each.
The champions
in both Masters A and B will nab P2,000, while second to fourth
clinch P1,500, P1,000 and P800, respectively. The fifth placers
bag P500 while the sixth to 10th finishers take P250 each.
The winners
in the Executive A and B categories, meantime, will be awarded
with trophies and medals.
The race
is also supported by Seiko, Waterfresh, Eruf, BFP-7, Citom,
and Safe, which will handle the officiating. (ML)
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Tuesday,
January 4, 2005
Sibulan
hesitant to join Cebu's Sinulog in January
By Maricar Aranas
SIBULAN Mayor
Antonio Renacia is hesitant to send his municipality's Yagyag
festival to compete in Cebu City's Sinulog Festival in January,
next year.
Yagyag
won last year's Sinulog Festival and subsequently the national
festival in Metro Manila.
Mayor
Renacia said he was surprised to learn that Sibulan was included
among those invited to join the Cebu festival since the Provincial
Government has not confirmed its participation.
The mayor
said the Sinulog committee of Cebu invited his municipality,
but that the municipality might not be able to send its contingent
because it has not yet set aside a counterpart to the budget
that would come from the Provincial Government.
Moreover,
he said, the contingent lacked enough time for practice.
Also invited
to the Sinulog were Tanjay City's Saulog and Dauin's Kinaiyahan,
which won this year's Buglasan Festival of Festivals of Negro
Oriental.
Governor
George Arnaiz pledged to give part of the costs of sending
the contingent to the Sinulog.
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December
29, 2004
More
out-of-town dancers in Sinulog
By Linette C. Ramos
CEBU --
SINULOG 2005 organizers expect a livelier celebration with
the participation of more out-of-town contingents compared
with this year’s grand parade.
For the
first time since the Sinulog started 25 years ago, a contingent
from Luzon will join some 40 contingents from Cebu Province
and 17 other provinces in Visayas and Mindanao.
But the
organizers encountered a hitch in their preparations yesterday,
after choreographers of Cebu City public schools appealed
that they be allowed to join the Sinulog sa Kabataan.
The choreographers
wanted the organizers to come up with a final and official
statement on whether public schools in the city will be allowed
to join.
Because
of their poor performance in the National Achievement Test
(NAT), Mayor Tomas Osmeña decided to ban the city’s
public schools from joining the Sinulog sa Kabataan sa Dakbayan
2005.
Compromise
Ricky
Ballesteros, executive director of the Sinulog Foundation,
said they will try to come up with a compromise agreement
when they meet with the choreographers today.
He added
that they will bring up the matter with Osmeña.
There
are also some school contingents that are sponsored by private
companies and no longer need to raise funds for their costumes.
“Gisayangan
sila because they have already finalized their costumes, props
and choreography. If the mayor will really disallow them to
join, they want to know now so they will not continue practicing,”
he told Sun.Star.
At the
Sinulog Foundation office, organizers already received confirmation
from 17 out-of-town contingents that will participate in the
grand parade.
Nationwide
More contingents
from other provinces will join next year compared with this
year, when only 10 participated.
Ballesteros
attributed the increase to the grander celebration the City
Government is preparing for the 25th anniversary of the Sinulog.
He added
that the P100,000 cash incentive the City will give to five
out-of-town contingents that have consistently won may have
also lessened the financial burdens of participants.
Also,
invitations were sent to different local government units
earlier compared to the last Sinulog.
The contingents
that already confirmed their participation include Sibulan,
Dauin, Tanjay and Bayawan City in Negros Oriental; Tubigon
and Panglao in Bohol; Surigao City; Placer in Surigao del
Sur; Pintaflores; Ozamiz; Tanawan in Leyte; Tangub City, Iligan
and Iloilo.
San Simon,
Pampanga will also join the grand parade, the first contingent
from Luzon to join the Sinulog festivities.
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Saturday,
January 09, 2005
Does
the brush tickle to the bone?
By Aurelia L. Castro
Turning the body into a work
of beauty.
It never goes out of style. Since tribal
times, smearing the body with colorful substances continues
to be functional, both as fashion and form of expression.
“Our ancestors were said to paint
their bodies with clay when they went hunting. It served as
their camouflage to make them invisible to animals in the
wilderness,” explains Neo-Tribe founder Leopoldo Aguilar.
For many aboriginal communities
thousands of years ago, body painting reflected social mores,
laws and religion. In dances, for instance, designs were done
to change the surface of the body in the service of telling
a story.
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The
color of inner compulsion
According to Aguilar, whose
group paints bodies apart from mounting the usual art
exhibits in their studio at Do’ Nest Grill (beside
White Gold House, Reclamation Area), body art--- one
of the most temporary of all art forms--- help people
modify, change, and adorn their bodies to communicate
something.
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So agrees Neo-Tribe artist Japamala
Arnaldo who vouches for body painting’s capacity to
appease her through self-expression. Her choices of color,
texture, and tone of her work reveal what’s going on
with her inner self, she explains.
Showing it skin
deep
Today, “body painting
is a matter of fashion,” enthuses Rhea Victoria
Climaco, a 4th year Fine Arts student of the University
of San Carlos. Of course, aesthetic considerations are
perennial in communicating feelings and ideas on the
body used as canvas.
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Climaco usually gets inspiration
from random thoughts, as practiced in Surrealism where subconscious
imagery represents life’s experiences and emotional
states. Finding body painting a challenge as well as an outlet
for enjoying freedom and thrill in trying different colors
and style, she stresses: “In painting, you should not
fear to try new colors in painting different shapes and images.”
Spontaneity is also a must, she adds.
Is
it safe or harmful?
Painting one’s skin
with latex, henna, poster color, or any medium should
be done with care. Rhea advises, “Don’t
use oil-based paints because aside from being expensive,
they could be very toxic to our skin. Especially for
kids with sensitive skin, cosmetic paints would be better
and safer choices.”
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Yet even with water-based body
paints believed to be safe, it is always recommended that
one should test the product first on a small area of the skin
and wait several minutes to see if there is any type of reaction
before painting on a model’s body. Of
business and pleasure
Is there money in body
painting?
“Occasionally, yes. Private
parties and big festivals like this coming Sinulog would always
be an opportunity for us to earn because a lot of people want
body paint for a reasonable price,” says Leopoldo, who
among with fellow artists do body painting jobs. “It’s
both business and pleasure,” says Japamala. But when
there’s no money involved, the body artists agree the
fun in body painting is already worth it.
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Friday,
January 16, 2004
The Little
Boy Saint Comes in Many Forms
By Charmaine Y. Rodriguez
WHETHER you are a devotee or
simply an art lover, the Sto. Niño images on exhibit
at Ayala Center Cebu are a feast to the eyes.
Msgr. Cris Garcia is also on
hand to reveal many fascinating details about the icons on
display, especially his favorites among his more than 40 collections
that are on display.
The Sleeping Sto. Niño
of the Vineyard is his top choice. What he likes most about
the plaster icon is the vines that decorate the stone where
the Child Jesus lays his head.
The icon, dressed in mint green
cloth, was given to him by his father Jose when he was only
eight years old.
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Garcia,
now 53, started collecting Sto. Niño images when
he was only five.
It reminds me of
how my father thought of me. It also speaks of the Bible
verse found in John 15, where Jesus said: I am
the vine, you are the branches. (The Society of
the Angels of Peace) chapel in Cansojong (Talisay) carries
the same theme, the monsignor says.
The late national artist
Fidel Araneta used the image, which is from the Rhine
area of Germany, as a model when he created his own
version in 1965. His work is now in the National Museum
in Manila.
Garcias other favorite
is the Sto. Niño of the Society of the Angels
of Peace, which he heads.
The icon is dressed in
a white robe and a brown apron. It is only a little
over a foot tall but the icon has a belt with a rosary
tucked in its side and a small cross in the chest.
This version of the Sto.
Niño also wears an Immaculate Heart of Mary medallion. |
| A
work of artist Dondon Awa, this wood carving depicts the
Sto. Niño as a carpenter. The boy carries a toolbox. |
The
dressing up of the Child Jesus in a religious garb dates
back to the Theresa of Avila. It is in honor of the
incarnation of Jesus since the Sto. Niño is a
symbol of incarnation, the monsignor explains.
Garcia also takes pride
of an image sent to him from the United States by an
unknown person.
He found and left the image
in a dumpster in Orange County, California, only to
get it through the mail years later in Cebu. It arrived
with the words The more you will honor me, the
more I will bless you, written on its stand.
However, his most precious
possession is an icon with diamonds and pearls given
to him by a woman from Barangay Pasil.
Its not part of the
exhibit since he doesnt want it damaged.
His special attachment
to the Sto. Niño, as a Cebuano, made him want
to collect images although some of his collections were
abandoned so he made an attempt to rescue
them. |

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| An
image of the Sto. Niño de Prague on exhibit. |
Aside from evangelization, organizers
of the exhibit want the public to realize that we have
a duty to our artists, the monsignor says.
They
remind us of our culture. If I had a choice, I will
never bless a molded statue since its devoid of
spirit. Just look at the different images of the Sleeping
Sto. Niño, each one has its own expression,
he points out.
Aside from the monsignor,
Cebu Gov. Pablo Garcia and his wife Esperanza and Zosimo
Angan also lent their Sleeping Sto. Niños for
the exhibit.
Artist Dondon Awa also
has two wooden Sto. Niños on display on the malls
2nd level. So are collections of Val Sandiego, Tita
Zosa, Susing Arsenal, Fr. Desuyo, William Medici, Dr.
Jovita Ceniza, Jaime Amatong, Loreto Victorino and Richelieu
Colina.
Unfortunately, when the
monsignor visited the mall Wednesday evening, the gold
cross on the globe held by the Sto. Niño de Leyte
was gone. |

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| A
favorite of Msgr. Cris Garcia, this Sto. Niño is
in religious garb and is also a work of Dondon Awa. |
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