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Islam in the Philippines

Islam was the first-recorded monotheistic religion in the Philippines. Islam reached the Philippines in the 14th century[1][2] with the arrival of Muslim traders from the Persian Gulf, southern India, and their followers from several sultanates in the wider Malay Archipelago. The first missionaries then followed in the late 14th and early 15th centuries.[3] They facilitated the formation of sultanates and conquests in mainland Mindanao and Sulu.[4] Those who converted to Islam came to be known as the Moros, with Muslim conquest reaching as far as Tondo that was later supplanted by Bruneian Empire vassal-state of Maynila.[5]

Muslim sultanates had already begun expanding in the central Philippines by the 16th century, when the Spanish fleet led by Ferdinand Magellan arrived.[6] The subsequent Spanish conquest led to Catholic Christianity becoming the predominant religion in most of the modern-day Philippines, with Islam becoming a significant minority religion.[7][8]

In the 21st century, there is some disagreement regarding the size of the Muslim population. The 2000 Census reported that Muslims comprised about five percent of the population and a 2015 report of Philippine Statistics Authority asserted that 4.1% of Filipinos were Muslims.[9] However, it was reported in 2004 that some Muslim groups asserted that the proper number was between eight and twelve percent.[10] As of 2020, the National Commission on Muslim Filipinos (NCMF) estimated a figure of 4-5 percent, attributing the difference to a number of factors.[11]

Most Muslims live in parts of Mindanao, Palawan, and the Sulu Archipelago – an area known as Bangsamoro or the Moro region.[12] Some have migrated into urban and rural areas in different parts of the country. Most Muslim Filipinos practice Sunni Islam according to the Shafi'i school.[13]

History

 
Mosque in Isabela City

In 1380, Makhdum Karim reached the Sulu Archipelago and Jolo in the Philippines and established Islam in the country through trade in several regions of the island. In 1390, Minangkabau Prince Rajah Baguinda and his followers preached Islam on the islands.[14][15] The Sheik Karimol Makhdum Mosque was the first mosque established in the Philippines on Simunul in Mindanao in the 14th century.[15]

Subsequent settlements by Indian Muslim missionaries traveling to Malaysia and Indonesia helped strengthen Islam in the Philippines and each settlement was governed by a datu, rajah and sultan. Islam was introduced by Chinese Muslims, Indian Muslims, and Persians. Islamic provinces founded in the Philippines included the Sultanate of Maguindanao, Sultanate of Sulu, Sultanate of Lanao and other parts of the southern Philippines.

When the Spanish fleet led by Miguel López de Legazpi arrived in the Philippines in 1565, they were met by local datus as they traveled in the islands. Arriving in the Maynila, a vassal-state of the Sultanate of Brunei, in 1570 they were met by the Muslim rajah, Rajah Sulayman.

By the next century conquests had reached the Sulu islands in the southern tip of the Philippines where the population was Buddhist and Hindu and they took up the task of converting the animistic population to Islam with renewed zeal. By the 15th century, half of Luzon (Northern Philippines) and the islands of Mindanao in the south had become subject to the various Muslim sultanates of Borneo and much of the population in the almost of South were converted to Islam. However, the Visayas was largely dominated by Hindu-Buddhist societies led by rajahs and datus who strongly resisted Islam. One reason could be the economic and political disasters preeuropean Muslim pirates from the Mindanao region brought during raids. These frequent attacks gave way to naming present-day Cebu as then-Sugbo or scorched earth which was a defensive technique implemented by the Visayans so the pirates had nothing much to loot.[16][17]

Invasion of Bruneian Sultanate

In the year 1498–99, the Bruneian Empire conducted a series of raids against the natives of the Taytay in Palawan and the island of Mindoro which had been subjugated to the Islamic Bruneian Empire under Sultan Bolkiah. The Muslim conquest reached as far as Tondo, which was supplanted by Brunei's vassal-state of Maynila.[18][19]

 
The extent of the Bruneian Empire and the spread of Islam in Southeast Asia in the 15th century

The Muslim Bruneian Empire under the rule of Sultan Bolkiah, who is an ancestor of the current Sultan of Brunei subjugated the Tondo, which was ruled by Rajah Sukwu during 1500. The aftermath of the battle was the formation of an alliance between the newly established Kingdom of Guihulngan (Selurong) and the Bruneian Empire to crush the power of Tondo and the subsequent installation of the Pro-Islamic Rajah Sulaiman into power. Furthermore, Sultan Bolkiah's victory over Sulu and Seludong (modern day Manila),[20] as well as his marriages to Laila Mecanai the daughter of Sulu Sultan Amir al-Ombra (an uncle of Sharifa Mahandun married to Nakhoda Angging or Maharaja Anddin of Sulu), and to the daughter of Datu Kemin, widened Brunei's influence in the Philippines.[21]

A new dynasty began under a local Lumad leader who accepted Islam and became Rajah Salalila or Rajah Sulayman I. He also started to established a trading challenge to the already rich House of Rajah Lakandula in Tondo. Islam was further strengthened by the arrival of Muslim traders and from Jolo, Mindanao, Malaysia, and Indonesia.[22]

Rajah Salalila and Rajah Matanda in the south (now the Intramuros district) were installed as Muslim rajas by converted Muslims and the Buddhist-Hindu settlement was under Lakandula in northern Tundun (now Tondo, Manila.)[23]

Influences of Zheng He's voyages

 
Stamp of Indonesia commemorating Zheng He's voyages to secure the maritime routes, usher urbanization and assist in creating a common identity

The Chinese Muslim mariner Zheng He is credited with founding several Chinese Muslim communities in Mandaue and along the shores of Lapu-lapu, the Bohol Peninsula, and the Philippines during China's early Ming dynasty. These Muslims supposedly followed the Badjao school in the Chinese language.[24] This Chinese Muslim community was led by Hajji Yan Ying Yu, who urged his followers to assimilate and take local names.

Spanish encounter

Rajah Sulayman was the Rajah of Maynila, a polity at the mouth of the Pasig River where it meets Manila Bay, at the time the Spanish forces first came to Luzon.[25][26][27]

Sulayman resisted the Spanish forces, and thus, along with Rajah Matanda and Lakan Dula, was one of three Rajahs who played significant roles in what was the Spanish conquest of their polities of the Pasig River delta in the early 1570s.[28]

Moro (derived from the Spanish word meaning Moors) is the appellation inherited from the Spaniards, for Filipino Muslims of Mindanao. The Spanish distinguished the Moro from the Indios, which referred to the Christianised people of Luzon and the Visayas. Islam continued to spread in Mindanao, from centers such as Sulu and Cotabato.[29]

The Muslims seek to establish an independent Islamic province in Mindanao to be named Bangsamoro. The term Bangsamoro is a combination of an Old Malay word meaning nation or state with the Spanish word Moro which means Muslim. A significant Moro Rebellion occurred during the Philippine–American War. Conflicts and rebellion have continued in the Philippines from the pre-colonial period up to the present. Other related issue with the Moro secession is the territorial dispute of eastern Sabah in Malaysia which claimed by the Sultanate of Sulu as their territory.

The Moros have a history of resistance against Spanish, American, and Japanese rule for over 400 years. The violent armed struggle against the Spanish, Americans, Japanese and Filipinos is considered by current Moro (Muslim) leaders as part of the four centuries long "national liberation movement" of the Bangsamoro (Muslim Nation).[30] The 400-year-long resistance against the Japanese, Filipinos, Americans, and Spanish by the Moro/Muslims persisted and morphed into their current war for independence against the Philippine state.[31]

Muslim leaders in Zamboanga petitioned the Ottoman Empire to send a representative to advise them on religious matters. A scholar from the Shaykh al-Islām was sent in response.[32]

Modern age

In 2012, research was conducted on various cultural properties in Islamic areas in Mindanao. The research included the 'Maradika' Qur'an of Bayang, description of the notes found in the Qur'an of Bayang, the Qur'an and Islamic manuscripts of the Sheikh Ahmad Bashir collection, the 'Dibolodan' Qur'an of Bacong in Marantao, the Qur'an and prayer scroll of Guro sa Masiu in Taraka, the 'Story of the Prophet Muhammad' at the Growing Memorial Research Center of the Dansalan College, and the Islamic Manuscript Art of the Philippines. In 2014, the Maradika Qur'an of Bayang was declared as a National Cultural Treasure, the first Islamic manuscript in the Philippines to be declared as such.[33][34]

Bangsa Sug and Bangsa Moro

In 2018, a unification gathering of all the sultans of the Sulu archipelago and representatives from all ethnic communities in the Sulu archipelago commenced in Zamboanga City, declaring themselves as the Bangsa Sug peoples and separating them from the Bangsa Moro peoples of mainland central Mindanao. They cited the complete difference in cultures and customary ways of life as the primary reason for their separation from the Muslims of mainland central Mindanao. They also called the government to establish a separate Philippine state, called Bangsa Sug, from mainland Bangsa Moro or to incorporate the Sulu archipelago to whatever state is formed in the Zamboanga peninsula, if ever federalism in the Philippines is approved in the coming years.[35]

Balik Islam

There is also a growing community of Filipino converts to Islam known popularly as Balik Islam (return or returnees to Islam), often led by former Christian missionary converts.[36][37][38][39]

 
Daru Jambangan (Palace of Flowers) in Maimbung, Sulu before it was destroyed by a typhoon in 1932. It used to be the largest royal palace built in the Philippines. A campaign to faithfully re-establish it in Maimbung town has been ongoing since 1933. A very small replica of the palace was made in a nearby town in the 2010s, but it was noted that the replica does not mean that the campaign to reconstruct the palace in Maimbung has stopped as the replica does not manifest the true essence of a Sulu royal palace. In 2013, Maimbung was officially designated as the royal capital of the Sultanate of Sulu by the remaining members of the Sulu royal family. Almost all Sulu royals who have died since the 19th century up to the present have been buried around the palace grounds.[40][41][42][43]

At the end of 2014, the NCMF estimated that there were 200,000–2,000,000 Filipinos who had converted to Islam since the 1970s.[44][45]

Bangsamoro Region

Most Muslims in the Philippines live on the island of Mindanao, the Sulu Archipelago and Palawan. The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) is the region of the Philippines that is composed of all the Philippines' predominantly Muslim provinces, namely: Basilan (except Isabela City), Lanao del Sur, Maguindanao, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi. It also comprised the cities of Marawi, Lamitan, and Cotabato City and the 63 Barangays in North Cotabato who opted to join the autonomous region. It is the only region that has its own government. The regional capital is at Cotabato City, which is outside the jurisdiction of the former and defunct Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) but is now part of the Bangsamoro region after the majority of the residents voted in favor for their inclusion in the autonomous region in the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law on January 21, 2019.[46]

Other provinces and regions with large Muslim populations as well have a significant history with Moro/Muslims include North Cotabato, Bicol Region, Eastern Visayas, South Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat and the Zamboanga Peninsula. However, these are not part of the Bangsamoro region.

Demographics

The predominantly Muslim ethnolinguistic groups of the Philippines are the Iranun, Jama Mapun, Kalagan, Kalibugan, Maguindanao, Maranaw, Molbog, Sama (including the Badjao, Balanguingui, and various Tawi-Tawi Sama groups), Sangil, Tausūg, and Yakan.[47][48]

Traditional art from the Philippines by Muslim groups

See also

References

  1. ^ Angeles, Vivienne S. M. . Oxford Biographies. Archived from the original on October 20, 2013.
  2. ^ "Bearer of the Sword". Military Review. 82 (2): 38. 2002. Islam arrived in the southern Philippines in the 14th century
  3. ^ Linda A. Newson (2009). Conquest and Pestilence in the Early Spanish Philippines. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 31–32. ISBN 978-0-8248-3272-8.
  4. ^ Nicholas Tarling (1998). Nations and States in Southeast Asia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-0-521-62564-7.
  5. ^ *Scott, William Henry (1994). Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-971-550-135-4.
  6. ^ Samuel Eliot Morison (1986). The Great Explorers: The European Discovery of America. Oxford University Press. pp. 638–639. ISBN 978-0-19-504222-1.
  7. ^ Peter G. Gowing (1975), Moros and Khaek: the Position of Muslim Minorities in the Philippines and Thailand, Southeast Asian Affairs, Thomson Publishing (Reprinted in 2004), pp. 27–40
  8. ^ Max L. Gross (2017). A Muslim archipelago: Islam and Politics in Southeast Asia. GPO Press. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-0-16-086920-4.
  9. ^ "Table 1.10; Household Population by Religious Affiliation and by Sex; 2010" (PDF). 2015 Philippine Statistical Yearbook: 1–30. October 2015. ISSN 0118-1564. Retrieved August 15, 2016.
  10. ^ "Philippines". 2004 Report on International Religious Freedom. United States Department of State. Section I. Religious Demography. The 2000 census placed the number of Muslims at 3.9 million, or approximately 5 percent of the population, but some Muslim groups claim that Muslims comprise anywhere from 2 to 5 percent of the population.
  11. ^ "Philippines". 2020 Report on International Religious Freedom: Philippines. United States Department of State. Section I. Religious Demography. The NCMF attributes its higher estimate to a number of factors, including the reluctance of Muslims to officially register with the civil registrar office or to participate in the formal survey; the community's transience due to internal movement for work; and the government's failure to survey Muslim areas and communities thoroughly.
  12. ^ RP closer to becoming observer-state in Organization of Islamic Conference June 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. (May 29, 2009). The Philippine Star. Retrieved 2009-07-10, "Eight million Muslim Filipinos, representing 4 percent of the total Philippine population, ...".
  13. ^ McAmis, Robert Day (2002). Malay Muslims: The History and Challenge of Resurgent Islam in Southeast Asia. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 18–24, 53–61. ISBN 978-0-8028-4945-8. Retrieved January 7, 2010.
  14. ^ [Longing for the Moro people]. TEMPO online (in Indonesian). Majalah Berita Mingguan. June 23, 1990. Archived from the original on May 15, 2011.
  15. ^ a b Hernandez, Jose Rhommel B. (2016). "The Philippines: Everything in place". In Lee Lai To; Zarina Othman (eds.). Regional Community Building in East Asia: Countries in Focus. Taylor & Francis. pp. 142–143. ISBN 9781317265566.
  16. ^ . Celestino C. Macachor. Archived from the original on July 3, 2012. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  17. ^ "The Aginid". Maria Eleanor Elape Valeros. Archived from the original on February 8, 2013. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  18. ^ *Scott, William Henry (1994). Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-971-550-135-4.
  19. ^ del Mundo, Clodualdo (September 20, 1999). . Diwang Kayumanggi. Archived from the original on October 18, 2009. Retrieved September 30, 2008.
  20. ^ History for Brunei Darussalam: Sharing our Past. Curriculum Development Department, Ministry of Education. 2009. p. 41. ISBN 978-99917-2-372-3.
  21. ^ "Brunei". CIA World Factbook. 2011. Retrieved January 13, 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  22. ^ Agoncillo, Teodoro A. (1990). History of the Filipino People (8th ed.). Garotech Publishing. p. 22. ISBN 978-971-8711-06-4.
  23. ^ Teodoro Agoncillo, History of the Filipino People, p 22
  24. ^ Aqsha, Darul (July 13, 2010). . The Brunei Times. Archived from the original on May 9, 2013. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  25. ^ Joaqiun, Nick (1990). Manila, My Manila: A History for the Young. City of Manila: Anvil Publishing, Inc. ISBN 978-971-569-313-4.
  26. ^ Scott, William Henry (1994). Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-971-550-135-4.
  27. ^ Dery, Luis Camara (2001). A History of the Inarticulate. Quezon City: New Day Publishers. ISBN 978-971-10-1069-0.
  28. ^ . National Heroes. Globalpinoy.com. Archived from the original on April 24, 2009. Retrieved February 5, 2008.
  29. ^ Abinales, P. N.; Amoroso, Donna J. (2005). State and Society in the Philippines. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-7425-1024-1.
  30. ^ Rommel C. Banlaoi (2008). Al-Harakatul Al-Islamiyyah: Essays on the Abu Sayyaf Group, Third Edition. p. 24.
  31. ^ Rommel C. Banlaoi (2005). . p. 68. Archived from the original on June 14, 2010.
  32. ^ Midori, Kawashima (February 5, 2020). "The "white man's burden" and the Islamic Movement in the Philippines: the Petition of Zamboanga Muslim Leaders to the Ottoman Empire in 1912". Ottoman-Southeast Asian Relations (2 vols.). Brill. p. 877. ISBN 9789004409996. Retrieved December 3, 2020.
  33. ^ "National Museum showcases Bangsamoro art for Eid'l Adha holiday". GMA News Online.
  34. ^ "The Qur'an and Islamic Mauscripts of Mindanao, Monograph Series No. 10 2012". catalogue.paramadina.ac.id.
  35. ^ Garcia, Bong (May 10, 2018). "Sulu Sultanate, Bangsa Sug push revision of BBL". SunStar.
  36. ^ Eliza Griswold (2011). The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches from the Faultline Between Christianity and Islam. Penguin UK. pp. 258–261. ISBN 9781846144226.
  37. ^ Mathieu Guidère (2012). Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism (illustrated ed.). Scarecrow Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780810878211.
  38. ^ William Larousse (2001). A Local Church Living for Dialogue: Muslim-Christian Relations in Mindanao-Sulu, Philippines : 1965-2000 (illustrated ed.). Gregorian Biblical BookShop. pp. 185, 188–190. ISBN 9788876528798.
  39. ^ Ramona Ruiz (July 9, 2014). "Prominent Filipino Muslim preachers to discuss Islam at Dubai World Trade Centre". The National. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  40. ^ Ramos, Marlon (October 20, 2013). "Before his death, Kiram III tells family to continue fight to re-possess Sabah".
  41. ^ "Sulu Sultan dies from kidney failure – The Manila Times Online". www.manilatimes.net. September 20, 2015.
  42. ^ Whaley, Floyd (September 21, 2015). "Esmail Kiram II, Self-Proclaimed Sultan of Sulu, Dies at 75". The New York Times.
  43. ^ "Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III dies". October 20, 2013.
  44. ^ Acac, Marybeth (2020). "BALIK-ISLAM IN THE PHILIPPINES: REVERSION, SYMBOLIC NEGOTIATION, AND BECOMING THE OTHER". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  45. ^ "In Philippines, watchful eye on converts". Christian Science Monitor. November 28, 2005. Retrieved June 27, 2021.
  46. ^ Bacongco, Keith (January 23, 2019). "Cotabato City now the crowning jewel of BARMM". news.mb.com.ph. Manila Bulletin. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  47. ^ "Moro Muslims". MinorityRights.org. June 19, 2015. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  48. ^ "Philippines: Indigenous Peoples in Mindanao". University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Retrieved April 21, 2021.

External links

  • Filipino Muslim August 15, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • Islam and Muslims in the Philippines
  • National Commission on Muslim Filipinos November 19, 2016, at the Wayback Machine is a government agency whose objective is to promote the rights of Muslim Filipinos and to make them active participants in Philippine nation-building.

islam, philippines, this, article, about, religion, muslim, ethnic, group, moro, ethnic, group, islam, first, recorded, monotheistic, religion, philippines, islam, reached, philippines, 14th, century, with, arrival, muslim, traders, from, persian, gulf, southe. This article is about the religion of Islam in the Philippines For the Muslim ethnic group see Moro ethnic group Islam was the first recorded monotheistic religion in the Philippines Islam reached the Philippines in the 14th century 1 2 with the arrival of Muslim traders from the Persian Gulf southern India and their followers from several sultanates in the wider Malay Archipelago The first missionaries then followed in the late 14th and early 15th centuries 3 They facilitated the formation of sultanates and conquests in mainland Mindanao and Sulu 4 Those who converted to Islam came to be known as the Moros with Muslim conquest reaching as far as Tondo that was later supplanted by Bruneian Empire vassal state of Maynila 5 Muslim sultanates had already begun expanding in the central Philippines by the 16th century when the Spanish fleet led by Ferdinand Magellan arrived 6 The subsequent Spanish conquest led to Catholic Christianity becoming the predominant religion in most of the modern day Philippines with Islam becoming a significant minority religion 7 8 In the 21st century there is some disagreement regarding the size of the Muslim population The 2000 Census reported that Muslims comprised about five percent of the population and a 2015 report of Philippine Statistics Authority asserted that 4 1 of Filipinos were Muslims 9 However it was reported in 2004 that some Muslim groups asserted that the proper number was between eight and twelve percent 10 As of 2020 update the National Commission on Muslim Filipinos NCMF estimated a figure of 4 5 percent attributing the difference to a number of factors 11 Most Muslims live in parts of Mindanao Palawan and the Sulu Archipelago an area known as Bangsamoro or the Moro region 12 Some have migrated into urban and rural areas in different parts of the country Most Muslim Filipinos practice Sunni Islam according to the Shafi i school 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Invasion of Bruneian Sultanate 1 2 Influences of Zheng He s voyages 1 3 Spanish encounter 1 4 Modern age 1 4 1 Bangsa Sug and Bangsa Moro 1 4 2 Balik Islam 2 Bangsamoro Region 3 Demographics 4 Traditional art from the Philippines by Muslim groups 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditMain articles History of the Philippines and List of mosques in the Philippines Mosque in Isabela City In 1380 Makhdum Karim reached the Sulu Archipelago and Jolo in the Philippines and established Islam in the country through trade in several regions of the island In 1390 Minangkabau Prince Rajah Baguinda and his followers preached Islam on the islands 14 15 The Sheik Karimol Makhdum Mosque was the first mosque established in the Philippines on Simunul in Mindanao in the 14th century 15 Subsequent settlements by Indian Muslim missionaries traveling to Malaysia and Indonesia helped strengthen Islam in the Philippines and each settlement was governed by a datu rajah and sultan Islam was introduced by Chinese Muslims Indian Muslims and Persians Islamic provinces founded in the Philippines included the Sultanate of Maguindanao Sultanate of Sulu Sultanate of Lanao and other parts of the southern Philippines When the Spanish fleet led by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi arrived in the Philippines in 1565 they were met by local datus as they traveled in the islands Arriving in the Maynila a vassal state of the Sultanate of Brunei in 1570 they were met by the Muslim rajah Rajah Sulayman By the next century conquests had reached the Sulu islands in the southern tip of the Philippines where the population was Buddhist and Hindu and they took up the task of converting the animistic population to Islam with renewed zeal By the 15th century half of Luzon Northern Philippines and the islands of Mindanao in the south had become subject to the various Muslim sultanates of Borneo and much of the population in the almost of South were converted to Islam However the Visayas was largely dominated by Hindu Buddhist societies led by rajahs and datus who strongly resisted Islam One reason could be the economic and political disasters preeuropean Muslim pirates from the Mindanao region brought during raids These frequent attacks gave way to naming present day Cebu as then Sugbo or scorched earth which was a defensive technique implemented by the Visayans so the pirates had nothing much to loot 16 17 Invasion of Bruneian Sultanate Edit In the year 1498 99 the Bruneian Empire conducted a series of raids against the natives of the Taytay in Palawan and the island of Mindoro which had been subjugated to the Islamic Bruneian Empire under Sultan Bolkiah The Muslim conquest reached as far as Tondo which was supplanted by Brunei s vassal state of Maynila 18 19 The extent of the Bruneian Empire and the spread of Islam in Southeast Asia in the 15th century The Muslim Bruneian Empire under the rule of Sultan Bolkiah who is an ancestor of the current Sultan of Brunei subjugated the Tondo which was ruled by Rajah Sukwu during 1500 The aftermath of the battle was the formation of an alliance between the newly established Kingdom of Guihulngan Selurong and the Bruneian Empire to crush the power of Tondo and the subsequent installation of the Pro Islamic Rajah Sulaiman into power Furthermore Sultan Bolkiah s victory over Sulu and Seludong modern day Manila 20 as well as his marriages to Laila Mecanai the daughter of Sulu Sultan Amir al Ombra an uncle of Sharifa Mahandun married to Nakhoda Angging or Maharaja Anddin of Sulu and to the daughter of Datu Kemin widened Brunei s influence in the Philippines 21 A new dynasty began under a local Lumad leader who accepted Islam and became Rajah Salalila or Rajah Sulayman I He also started to established a trading challenge to the already rich House of Rajah Lakandula in Tondo Islam was further strengthened by the arrival of Muslim traders and from Jolo Mindanao Malaysia and Indonesia 22 Rajah Salalila and Rajah Matanda in the south now the Intramuros district were installed as Muslim rajas by converted Muslims and the Buddhist Hindu settlement was under Lakandula in northern Tundun now Tondo Manila 23 Influences of Zheng He s voyages Edit Stamp of Indonesia commemorating Zheng He s voyages to secure the maritime routes usher urbanization and assist in creating a common identity The Chinese Muslim mariner Zheng He is credited with founding several Chinese Muslim communities in Mandaue and along the shores of Lapu lapu the Bohol Peninsula and the Philippines during China s early Ming dynasty These Muslims supposedly followed the Badjao school in the Chinese language 24 This Chinese Muslim community was led by Hajji Yan Ying Yu who urged his followers to assimilate and take local names Spanish encounter Edit Rajah Sulayman was the Rajah of Maynila a polity at the mouth of the Pasig River where it meets Manila Bay at the time the Spanish forces first came to Luzon 25 26 27 Sulayman resisted the Spanish forces and thus along with Rajah Matanda and Lakan Dula was one of three Rajahs who played significant roles in what was the Spanish conquest of their polities of the Pasig River delta in the early 1570s 28 Moro derived from the Spanish word meaning Moors is the appellation inherited from the Spaniards for Filipino Muslims of Mindanao The Spanish distinguished the Moro from the Indios which referred to the Christianised people of Luzon and the Visayas Islam continued to spread in Mindanao from centers such as Sulu and Cotabato 29 The Muslims seek to establish an independent Islamic province in Mindanao to be named Bangsamoro The term Bangsamoro is a combination of an Old Malay word meaning nation or state with the Spanish word Moro which means Muslim A significant Moro Rebellion occurred during the Philippine American War Conflicts and rebellion have continued in the Philippines from the pre colonial period up to the present Other related issue with the Moro secession is the territorial dispute of eastern Sabah in Malaysia which claimed by the Sultanate of Sulu as their territory The Moros have a history of resistance against Spanish American and Japanese rule for over 400 years The violent armed struggle against the Spanish Americans Japanese and Filipinos is considered by current Moro Muslim leaders as part of the four centuries long national liberation movement of the Bangsamoro Muslim Nation 30 The 400 year long resistance against the Japanese Filipinos Americans and Spanish by the Moro Muslims persisted and morphed into their current war for independence against the Philippine state 31 Muslim leaders in Zamboanga petitioned the Ottoman Empire to send a representative to advise them on religious matters A scholar from the Shaykh al Islam was sent in response 32 Modern age Edit In 2012 research was conducted on various cultural properties in Islamic areas in Mindanao The research included the Maradika Qur an of Bayang description of the notes found in the Qur an of Bayang the Qur an and Islamic manuscripts of the Sheikh Ahmad Bashir collection the Dibolodan Qur an of Bacong in Marantao the Qur an and prayer scroll of Guro sa Masiu in Taraka the Story of the Prophet Muhammad at the Growing Memorial Research Center of the Dansalan College and the Islamic Manuscript Art of the Philippines In 2014 the Maradika Qur an of Bayang was declared as a National Cultural Treasure the first Islamic manuscript in the Philippines to be declared as such 33 34 Bangsa Sug and Bangsa Moro Edit In 2018 a unification gathering of all the sultans of the Sulu archipelago and representatives from all ethnic communities in the Sulu archipelago commenced in Zamboanga City declaring themselves as the Bangsa Sug peoples and separating them from the Bangsa Moro peoples of mainland central Mindanao They cited the complete difference in cultures and customary ways of life as the primary reason for their separation from the Muslims of mainland central Mindanao They also called the government to establish a separate Philippine state called Bangsa Sug from mainland Bangsa Moro or to incorporate the Sulu archipelago to whatever state is formed in the Zamboanga peninsula if ever federalism in the Philippines is approved in the coming years 35 Balik Islam Edit There is also a growing community of Filipino converts to Islam known popularly as Balik Islam return or returnees to Islam often led by former Christian missionary converts 36 37 38 39 Daru Jambangan Palace of Flowers in Maimbung Sulu before it was destroyed by a typhoon in 1932 It used to be the largest royal palace built in the Philippines A campaign to faithfully re establish it in Maimbung town has been ongoing since 1933 A very small replica of the palace was made in a nearby town in the 2010s but it was noted that the replica does not mean that the campaign to reconstruct the palace in Maimbung has stopped as the replica does not manifest the true essence of a Sulu royal palace In 2013 Maimbung was officially designated as the royal capital of the Sultanate of Sulu by the remaining members of the Sulu royal family Almost all Sulu royals who have died since the 19th century up to the present have been buried around the palace grounds 40 41 42 43 At the end of 2014 the NCMF estimated that there were 200 000 2 000 000 Filipinos who had converted to Islam since the 1970s 44 45 Bangsamoro Region EditMain article Bangsamoro Most Muslims in the Philippines live on the island of Mindanao the Sulu Archipelago and Palawan The Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao BARMM is the region of the Philippines that is composed of all the Philippines predominantly Muslim provinces namely Basilan except Isabela City Lanao del Sur Maguindanao Sulu and Tawi Tawi It also comprised the cities of Marawi Lamitan and Cotabato City and the 63 Barangays in North Cotabato who opted to join the autonomous region It is the only region that has its own government The regional capital is at Cotabato City which is outside the jurisdiction of the former and defunct Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ARMM but is now part of the Bangsamoro region after the majority of the residents voted in favor for their inclusion in the autonomous region in the ratification of the Bangsamoro Organic Law on January 21 2019 46 Other provinces and regions with large Muslim populations as well have a significant history with Moro Muslims include North Cotabato Bicol Region Eastern Visayas South Cotabato Sultan Kudarat and the Zamboanga Peninsula However these are not part of the Bangsamoro region Demographics EditMain articles Moro people and Ethnic groups in the Philippines The predominantly Muslim ethnolinguistic groups of the Philippines are the Iranun Jama Mapun Kalagan Kalibugan Maguindanao Maranaw Molbog Sama including the Badjao Balanguingui and various Tawi Tawi Sama groups Sangil Tausug and Yakan 47 48 Traditional art from the Philippines by Muslim groups Edit An Indigenous tribal food jar known as gadur well known for its brass with silver inlay A chest made of wood and bone inlay Kutiyapi the native boat shaped lute of the archipelago Saddle panel wood with shell inlay Saddle panel wood with shell inlay Kubing native jaw harp handle horn with brass studs Agung large bass nipple gongs native to the Philippines and other parts of Maritime Southeast AsiaSee also EditList of mosques in the Philippines Religion in the PhilippinesReferences Edit Angeles Vivienne S M Islam in the Philippines Oxford Biographies Archived from the original on October 20 2013 Bearer of the Sword Military Review 82 2 38 2002 Islam arrived in the southern Philippines in the 14th century Linda A Newson 2009 Conquest and Pestilence in the Early Spanish Philippines University of Hawaii Press pp 31 32 ISBN 978 0 8248 3272 8 Nicholas Tarling 1998 Nations and States in Southeast Asia Cambridge University Press pp 21 22 ISBN 978 0 521 62564 7 Scott William Henry 1994 Barangay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 135 4 Samuel Eliot Morison 1986 The Great Explorers The European Discovery of America Oxford University Press pp 638 639 ISBN 978 0 19 504222 1 Peter G Gowing 1975 Moros and Khaek the Position of Muslim Minorities in the Philippines and Thailand Southeast Asian Affairs Thomson Publishing Reprinted in 2004 pp 27 40 Max L Gross 2017 A Muslim archipelago Islam and Politics in Southeast Asia GPO Press pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0 16 086920 4 Table 1 10 Household Population by Religious Affiliation and by Sex 2010 PDF 2015 Philippine Statistical Yearbook 1 30 October 2015 ISSN 0118 1564 Retrieved August 15 2016 Philippines 2004 Report on International Religious Freedom United States Department of State Section I Religious Demography The 2000 census placed the number of Muslims at 3 9 million or approximately 5 percent of the population but some Muslim groups claim that Muslims comprise anywhere from 2 to 5 percent of the population Philippines 2020 Report on International Religious Freedom Philippines United States Department of State Section I Religious Demography The NCMF attributes its higher estimate to a number of factors including the reluctance of Muslims to officially register with the civil registrar office or to participate in the formal survey the community s transience due to internal movement for work and the government s failure to survey Muslim areas and communities thoroughly RP closer to becoming observer state in Organization of Islamic Conference Archived June 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine May 29 2009 The Philippine Star Retrieved 2009 07 10 Eight million Muslim Filipinos representing 4 percent of the total Philippine population McAmis Robert Day 2002 Malay Muslims The History and Challenge of Resurgent Islam in Southeast Asia Wm B Eerdmans Publishing pp 18 24 53 61 ISBN 978 0 8028 4945 8 Retrieved January 7 2010 Kerinduan orang orang moro Longing for the Moro people TEMPO online in Indonesian Majalah Berita Mingguan June 23 1990 Archived from the original on May 15 2011 a b Hernandez Jose Rhommel B 2016 The Philippines Everything in place In Lee Lai To Zarina Othman eds Regional Community Building in East Asia Countries in Focus Taylor amp Francis pp 142 143 ISBN 9781317265566 A Rapid Journal Article Volume 10 No 2 Celestino C Macachor Archived from the original on July 3 2012 Retrieved August 11 2012 The Aginid Maria Eleanor Elape Valeros Archived from the original on February 8 2013 Retrieved August 11 2012 Scott William Henry 1994 Barangay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 135 4 del Mundo Clodualdo September 20 1999 Ako y Si Ragam I am Ragam Diwang Kayumanggi Archived from the original on October 18 2009 Retrieved September 30 2008 History for Brunei Darussalam Sharing our Past Curriculum Development Department Ministry of Education 2009 p 41 ISBN 978 99917 2 372 3 Brunei CIA World Factbook 2011 Retrieved January 13 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Agoncillo Teodoro A 1990 History of the Filipino People 8th ed Garotech Publishing p 22 ISBN 978 971 8711 06 4 Teodoro Agoncillo History of the Filipino People p 22 Aqsha Darul July 13 2010 Zheng He and Islam in Southeast Asia The Brunei Times Archived from the original on May 9 2013 Retrieved September 28 2012 Joaqiun Nick 1990 Manila My Manila A History for the Young City of Manila Anvil Publishing Inc ISBN 978 971 569 313 4 Scott William Henry 1994 Barangay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 135 4 Dery Luis Camara 2001 A History of the Inarticulate Quezon City New Day Publishers ISBN 978 971 10 1069 0 Rajah Soliman National Heroes Globalpinoy com Archived from the original on April 24 2009 Retrieved February 5 2008 Abinales P N Amoroso Donna J 2005 State and Society in the Philippines Rowman amp Littlefield p 52 ISBN 978 0 7425 1024 1 Rommel C Banlaoi 2008 Al Harakatul Al Islamiyyah Essays on the Abu Sayyaf Group Third Edition p 24 Rommel C Banlaoi 2005 MARITIME TERRORISM IN SOUTHEAST ASIA The Abu Sayyaf Threat p 68 Archived from the original on June 14 2010 Midori Kawashima February 5 2020 The white man s burden and the Islamic Movement in the Philippines the Petition of Zamboanga Muslim Leaders to the Ottoman Empire in 1912 Ottoman Southeast Asian Relations 2 vols Brill p 877 ISBN 9789004409996 Retrieved December 3 2020 National Museum showcases Bangsamoro art for Eid l Adha holiday GMA News Online The Qur an and Islamic Mauscripts of Mindanao Monograph Series No 10 2012 catalogue paramadina ac id Garcia Bong May 10 2018 Sulu Sultanate Bangsa Sug push revision of BBL SunStar Eliza Griswold 2011 The Tenth Parallel Dispatches from the Faultline Between Christianity and Islam Penguin UK pp 258 261 ISBN 9781846144226 Mathieu Guidere 2012 Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism illustrated ed Scarecrow Press p 50 ISBN 9780810878211 William Larousse 2001 A Local Church Living for Dialogue Muslim Christian Relations in Mindanao Sulu Philippines 1965 2000 illustrated ed Gregorian Biblical BookShop pp 185 188 190 ISBN 9788876528798 Ramona Ruiz July 9 2014 Prominent Filipino Muslim preachers to discuss Islam at Dubai World Trade Centre The National Retrieved February 17 2016 Ramos Marlon October 20 2013 Before his death Kiram III tells family to continue fight to re possess Sabah Sulu Sultan dies from kidney failure The Manila Times Online www manilatimes net September 20 2015 Whaley Floyd September 21 2015 Esmail Kiram II Self Proclaimed Sultan of Sulu Dies at 75 The New York Times Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III dies October 20 2013 Acac Marybeth 2020 BALIK ISLAM IN THE PHILIPPINES REVERSION SYMBOLIC NEGOTIATION AND BECOMING THE OTHER a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help In Philippines watchful eye on converts Christian Science Monitor November 28 2005 Retrieved June 27 2021 Bacongco Keith January 23 2019 Cotabato City now the crowning jewel of BARMM news mb com ph Manila Bulletin Retrieved June 2 2020 Moro Muslims MinorityRights org June 19 2015 Retrieved April 21 2021 Philippines Indigenous Peoples in Mindanao University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa Retrieved April 21 2021 External links EditBangsamoro Filipino Muslim Archived August 15 2020 at the Wayback Machine Fil Mus Foundation Islam and Muslims in the Philippines National Commission on Muslim Filipinos Archived November 19 2016 at the Wayback Machine is a government agency whose objective is to promote the rights of Muslim Filipinos and to make them active participants in Philippine nation building Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islam in the Philippines amp oldid 1145464249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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