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Maguindanao people

The Maguindanao people are an Austronesian ethnic group from the Philippines. The Maguindanaon are part of wider political identity of Muslims of Mindanao, Sulu and Palawan known as Moro, who constitute the third largest ethnic group of Mindanao, Sulu and Palawan. The Maguindanaons are constitute the sixth largest Filipino ethnic group and are known for their distinguished in the realm of visual art. Historically, they have been renowned as metalworkers, producing the wavy-bladed keris ceremonial swords and other weapons, as well as gongs. The Maguindanaos historically had an independent Sultanate known as Sultanate of Maguindanao which comprises Maguindanao del Norte, Maguindanao del Sur, Zamboanga Peninsula, Davao Region and Soccsksargen.The name "Maguindanao" itself was corrupted by Spanish sources into "Mindanao", which became the name for the entire island of Mindanao.[2]

Maguindanao people
Maguindanaon / Magindanaun
ماگینداناون
Maguindanaon women at S.K Festival.
Total population
1,456,141 (2010)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Philippines
(Bangsamoro, Soccsksargen, Zamboanga Peninsula, Davao Region, Manila, Cebu)

Worldwide
Languages
Native
Maguindanaon
Also
Filipino • English • Arabic
Religion
Predominantly
Sunni Islam (100%)
Related ethnic groups
Maranao, Iranun, Lumad,
Sama-Bajau, other Moro peoples, Visayans,
other Filipinos, Malay people
other Austronesian peoples

Etymology

The word Maguindanao or Magindanaw means "people of the flood plains", from the word Magi'inged means "people or citizen" and danaw means "lake or marsh".Thus Maguindanao or Magindanaw can also be translated as "people of the lake", identical to their close neighbors, the Maranao and Iranun. These three groups speak related languages belonging to the Danao language family.[3][2]

History

Prehistory

Origins and relationships

Legend of Mamalu and Tabunaway

Before the arrivals of the first Muslim missionaries, the ancestors of both Maguindanaon and Teduray peoples lived as one in the Cotabato lowlands, among them the brothers Mamalu and Tabunaway. When the first missionary, Sharif Kabungsuwan, came to preach Islam, the younger Tabunaway embraced the faith while the elder Mamalu refused, holding to old beliefs. To maintain peace between the conflicting faiths, the brothers formed a pact for Mamalu to settle in the mountains and Tabunaway to remain in the lowlands along the Pulangi, both with their respective followers. Thus, after separating, over time the lowland muslims led by Tabunaway became the Maguindanaon and the highland animists of Mamalu the Tiruray. Both groups have since maintained a largely peaceful relationship through history.[4][5]

Maguindanao Sultanate

 
The flag of the Maguindanao sultanate.

In the early 16th century, Sharif Muhammad Kabungsuan, an Arab-Malay preacher from the Royal House of Malacca, arrived in what is now Malabang, introduced Islamic faith and customs, settled down with a local princess, and founded a Sultanate whose capital was Cotabato. The other center of power in the area, Sultanate of Buayan, which is now modern General Santos City, has an even longer history dating back to early Arab missionaries, who, although not able to implant the Islamic faith, introduced a more sophisticated political system. In Buayan, the transition to Islam took a longer time. Spanish chronicles was told that Buayan, and not Cotabato, was the most important settlement in Mindanao at that time.

Spanish period

 
The Sultan Kudarat monument at Tantawan Park. He is one of the most powerful rulers of the Sultanate of Maguindanao. During his reign, he successfully fought against the Spanish invasions and prevented the spread of Christianity in his controlled territories in Mindanao in the 17th century.

In 1579, an expedition sent by Governor Francisco de Sande failed to conquer the Maguindanao. In 1596, the Spanish government gave Captain Estevan Rodriguez de Figueroa the sole right to colonize Mindanao. He met defeat in Buayan, and later, was killed in an ambush by a Buhahayen named Ubal. His forces retreated to an anchorage near Zamboanga. The rise of the Maguindanao-Cotabato power came after the defeat of Datu Sirongan of Buayan in 1606. From 1607 to 1635, new military alliances were formed, this time with Cotabato. By the 1630s, Cotabato had become a coastal power. In the early 17th century, the largest alliance composed of the Maguindanao, Maranao, Tausug, and other Muslim groups was formed by Sultan Kudarat or Cachel Corralat of Maguindanao, whose domain extended from the Davao Gulf to Dapitan on the Zamboanga Peninsula. Several expeditions sent by the Spanish authorities suffered defeat. In 1635, Captain Juan de Chaves occupied Zamboanga and erected a fort. This led to the defeat of Kudarat's feared admiral, Datu Tagal, who had raided pueblos in the Visayas. In 1637, Governor General Hurtado de Corcuera personally led an expedition against Kudarat, and triumphed over his forces at Lamitan and Ilian. Spanish presence was withdrawn in 1663, providing an opportunity for Kudarat to re consolidate his forces.

 
Approximate extent of the Sultanate of Maguindanao proper in the late 19th century.

From 1663 to 1718, Maguindanao influence extended as far as Zamboanga in the west, Cagayan de Oro in the north, Sarangani in the south, and Davao in the east. In 1719, the Spaniards reestablished control with the building of the strategic Fort Pilar in Zamboanga (Miravite 1976:40; Angeles 1974:28; Darangen 1980:42-45). The 1730s saw the weakening of the Maguindanao sultanate, as it struggled with civil war and internal disunity. Spanish help was sought by the besieged rajah mudah (crown prince), further destroying the prestige of the sultanate. Thus, Cotabato power became increasingly dependent on Spanish support. This deepening compromise with Spain led Cotabato to its downfall. Fearing Buayan's reemerging power, Sultan Kudarat II finally ceded Cotabato to Spain in return for an annual pension of 1,000 pesos for him, and 800 pesos for his son. Buayan, under Datu Uto, had, by the 1860s, become the power of Maguindanao. In 1887, General Emilio Terrero led an expedition against Uto; although, he was able to destroy the kota (forts) in Cotabato, he was unable to enforce Spanish sovereignty (Miravite 1976:42; Ileto 1971:16-29). In 1891, Governor General Valeriano Weyler personally led a campaign against the Maguindanao and Maranao. In the next few months, Weyler erected a fort in Parang-Parang, between Pulangi and the Ilanun coast. This effectively stopped the shipment of arms to Uto, who died a defeated man in 1902.

American era

During the Philippine–American War, the Americans adopted a policy of noninterference in the Muslim areas, as spelled out in the Bates Agreement of 1899 signed by Brig. General John C. Bates and Sultan Jamalul Kiram II of Jolo. The agreement was a mutual non-aggression pact which obligated the Americans to recognize the authority of the Sultan and other chiefs who, in turn, agreed to fight piracy and crimes against Christians. However, the Muslims did not know that the Treaty of Paris, which had ceded the Philippine archipelago to the Americans, included their land as well. After the Philippine–American War, the Americans established direct rule over the newly formed "Moro Province", which then consisted of five district—Zamboanga, Lanao, Cotabato, Davao, and Sulu. Political, social, and economic changes were introduced. These included the creation of provincial and district institutions; the introduction of the public school system and American-inspired judicial system; the imposition of the cedula; the migration of Christians to Muslim lands encouraged by the colonial government; and the abolition of slavery. Datu Ali of Kudarangan, Cotabato refused to comply with the antislavery legislation, and revolted against the Americans. In October 1905, he and his men were killed. The Department of Mindanao and Sulu replaced the Moro province on 15 December 1913. A "policy of attraction" was introduced, ushering in reforms to encourage Muslim integration into Philippine society.

In 1916, after the passage of the Jones Law, which transferred legislative power to a Philippine Senate and House of Representatives, polygamy was made illegal. However, the Muslims were granted time to comply with the new restrictions. "Proxy colonialism" was legalized by the Public Land Act of 1919, invalidating Muslim Pusaka (inherited property) laws. The act also granted the state the right to confer land ownership. It was thought that the Muslims would "learn" from the "more advanced" Christian Filipinos, and would integrate more easily into mainstream Philippine society.

 
Maguindanaon girls dancing in Cotabato City, Mindanao (1913).

In February 1920, the Philippine Senate and House of Representatives passed Act No. 2878, which abolished the Department of Mindanao and Sulu and transferred its responsibilities to the Bureau of Non-Christian Tribes under the Department of the Interior. Muslim dissatisfaction grew as power shifted to the Christianized Filipinos; it was one thing to be administered by the militarily superior Americans, another by their traditional enemies, the Christian Filipinos. Petitions were sent by Muslim leaders in 1921 and 1924 requesting that Mindanao and Sulu be administered directly by the United States. These petitions were not granted. Isolated cases of armed resistance were quickly crushed. In Cotabato, Datu Ambang of Kidapawan attempted to incite a jihad (holy war) against the Americans and the Christian Filipinos. This, however, did not take place when the governor of the province mobilized government forces.

Realizing the futility of armed resistance, some Muslims sought to make the best of the situation. In 1934, Arolas Tulawi of Sulu, Datu Menandang Pang and Datu Blah Sinsuat of Cotabato, and Sultan Alaoya Alonto of Lanao were elected to the 1935 Constitutional Convention. In 1935, only two Muslims were elected into the National Assembly.

The Commonwealth years sought to end the privileges the Muslims had been enjoying under the earlier American administration. Muslim exemptions from some national laws, as expressed in the Administrative Code for Mindanao, and the Muslim right to use their traditional Islamic courts, as expressed in the Moro board, were ended. The Bureau of Non-Christian Tribes was replaced by the Office of the Commissioner for Mindanao and Sulu, whose main objective was to tap the full economic potentials of Mindanao not for the Muslims but for the Commonwealth. These "development" efforts resulted in discontent which found expression in the various armed uprisings, mostly in Lanao, from 1936 to 1941. The Muslims are generally adverse to anything that threatens Islam and their way of life. Che Man (1990:56) believes that they were neither anti-American nor anti-Filipino, but simply against any form of foreign encroachment into their traditional way of life. During World War II, the Muslims in general supported the fight against the Japanese, who were less tolerant and harsher to them than the American Commonwealth government.

Independent Philippines

After independence, efforts to integrate the Muslims into the new political order met with stiff resistance. It was unlikely that the Muslims, who have had longer cultural history as Muslims than the Christian Filipinos as Christian, would surrender their identity. The conflict was exacerberated in 1965 with the "Jabidah Massacre", in which Muslim soldiers were allegedly eliminated because they refused to invade Sabah. This incident contributed to the rise of various separatist movements—the Muslim Independence Movement (MIM), Ansar el-Islam, and Union of Islamic Forces and Organizations. In 1969, the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) was founded on the concept of a Bangsa Moro Republic by a group of educated young Muslims. The leader of this group, Nur Misuari, regarded the earlier movements as feudal and oppressive, and employed a Marxist framework to analyze the Muslim condition and the general Philippine situation. In 1976, negotiations between the Philippine government and the MNLF in Tripoli resulted in the Tripoli Agreement, which provided for an autonomous region in Mindanao. Negotiations resumed in 1977, and the following points were agreed upon: the proclamation of a Presidential Decree creating autonomy in 13 provinces; the creation of a provisional government; and the holding of a referendum in the autonomous areas to determine the administration of the government. Nur Misuari was invited to chair the provisional government, but he refused. The referendum was boycotted by the Muslims themselves. The talks collapsed, and fighting continued (Che Man 1988:146-147).

When Corazon C. Aquino became president, a new constitution, which provided for the creation of autonomous regions in Mindanao and the Cordilleras, was ratified. On 1 August 1989, Republic Act 673 or the Organic Act for Mindanao created the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), which encompasses Maguindanao, Lanao del Sur, Sulu, and Tawi-Tawi.[6]

Language

The Maguindanao language is the native language of the Maguindanaons.[7] Aside from this, most are able to speak Filipino, and English in varying levels of fluency.

Arabic, a Central Semitic language, is spoken by a small minority of the Maguindanaon people, being the liturgical language of Islam. Most Maguindanaons however, are not fluent beyond its religious uses.

English Maguindanaon
What is your name? Ngin i ngala nengka?
My name is Muhammad Ngala ku si Muhammad
How are you? Ngin i betad engka?
I am fine, [too] Mapia aku, [bun]
Where is Ahmad? Endaw si Ahmad?
He is in the house Lu sekanin sa walay
Thank you Sukran
‘I am staying at’ or ‘I live at’ Pegkaleben aku sa
I am here at the house. Sia aku sa walay.
I am Hungry. Kagutem aku.
He is there, at school. San sekanin, sa iskul.
fish seda
leg lisen
hand lima
person tau

Culture

Maguindanaon are known for their distinguished in the realm of visual art. Historically, they have been renowned as metalworkers, producing the wavy-bladed keris ceremonial swords and other weapons, as well as gongs. The Sagayan dance became well-known because of the Maguindanaons, this dance depicted in dramatic fashion the steps of their hero, Prince Bantugan, took upon wearing his armaments, the war he fought in and his subsequent victory afterwards. Performers, depicting fierce warriors would carry shields with shell noisemakers in one hand and double-bladed sword in the other attempting rolling movements to defend their master. They are also known for their great music in kulintang and agung such as Binalig a Mamayog and Sinulog a Bagu.

Literary arts

 
A Maguindanaon dance performed during the T'nalak Festival in Koronadal, South Cotabato.

The literary elements of the Maguindanao include folk speech and folk narratives. The folk speech is expressed in the antuka/pantuka/paakenala (riddles) and bayok (lyric poems), while the narratives may be divided into the Islamic and folk traditions. The Islamic includes the Quran; tarsila or genealogical narratives; the Luwaran, an embodiment of customary laws; hadith or sayings of the Prophet; quiza or religious stories. The folk traditions consist of tudtul, (folktales), and the epics Raja Indarapatra, Darangen, and Raja Madaya.

Riddles

For the Maguindanao, riddles promote friendship in a group. They are also tools for basic pedagogy. The structure of a Maguindanao riddle consists of an image and a subject. There are four types of image: comparative, descriptive, puns or puzzles, and narrative. The Maguindanao believe in a basic unity underlying the various aspects of the environment and this belief is reflected in the use of often conflicting image and subject in the riddles (Notre Dame Journal 1980:17).

Riddling involves a group of people, one of which is the riddler. If one volunteers to be a riddler, he/she has to have a riddle ready or else be subject to dtapulung (ridicule), which is given not as a criticism but as part of the riddling tradition. The Maguindanao consider bad riddlers as those who add to or subtract from the "original" text of the riddler. Riddling can take place anytime and anywhere as long as there is some form of group activity in progress; it can be done during work or recreation or both.

Ambiguities of answers can be settled by an old man or somebody who is respected in the barangay (the basic political unit). In this sense, riddles allow a certain flexibility in their solutions; that is, they point to various logically possible solutions, thus providing some form of basic pedagogy. An example of this would be:

 Sia den, inia den. 
 It is here, it is there. (Wind) 

There are, however, other possible answers: cradle, for example. Riddles also represent the world view of the Maguindanao. For example:

 Cannibal in the forest, that eats only a head. (Hat) 

Although cannibals and hats do not share anything in common, they are reconciled with the use of metaphors such as: "that eats only heads".

Other beliefs involving riddling is that it should not be done at night, so as not to invite the participation of evil spirits. Another belief associated with riddling at night is the avoidance of the word nipai (snake). If the use of the word cannot be avoided, euphemisms are resorted to, e.g., "big worm" (Notre Dame Journal 1980:20-25).

Maguindanao verses are expressed through such forms as ida-ida a rata (children rimes sung in chorus), or through tubud-tubud[check spelling] (short love poem). For instance:

 Pupulayog sa papas ka pumagapas apas Ka tulakin kon ko banog Na diron pukatalakin Ka daon kasakriti. Kanogon si kanogon nakanogon ni ladan ko A pukurasai mamikir a ana palandong a dar Na di akun mapkangud a bologang ko sa gugao Ka Oman akun ipantao na pusulakan a ig O matao kandalia. 
 Flying hard, the swift is Trying to catch up with the hawk But he cannot equal him Because he is far too small Woe, woe unto me Worried from thinking of a loved one And I cannot let my feelings prevail, express my love Because every time I want to reveal it Stops it in its way. 

Composed in metaphorical language, the bayok is resorted to when a cautious and euphemistic expression is required. An example (Wein 1983:35-36):

 Salangkunai a meling A malidu bpagimanen, Ka mulaun sa dibenal Dun-dun ai lumaging A paya pagilemuan Ka mumbus sa hakadulat Na u saken idumanding Sa kaludn pun na is na matag aku 'ngka maneg di ku mawatang galing. 
 Talking Salangkunai T'is hard to trust in you, For untrue leaves could sprout Dun-dun fond of chatting T'is hard believing you For cheating buds may show Once I [start to] fondle From the sea You would just hear from me My darling, close to me. 

Tudtul (folktales)

Tudtul (folktales) are short stories involving simple events. Two examples are presented.

The Lagya Kudarat tells the adventures of the two children of Lagya (rajah) Mampalai of Lum who are blown away after Mampalai laments the lack of viable partners for his children. These two children are Lagya Kudarat and Puteli (princess) Sittie Kumala. Puteli Kumala is blown to a forest where she meets a kabayan (in all Maguindanao stories, this character is associated with an old unmarried woman). The kabayan adopts her, as she earlier did the prince named Sumedsen sa Alungan. Although Kumala and Sumedsen live in the same house, they never speak to each other. Later, because of peeping toms, Kumala leaves and Sumedsen goes with her. They find their way to Lum, where a happy reunion takes place. Sumedsen eventually marries Kumala. Meanwhile, Lagya Kudarat is blown to Kabulawanan. There he meets another kabayan who allows him to live with her. One day while hunting, Kudarat hears the game of sipa (rattan ball kicked with the ankle) being played. He proceeds to the direction of the game and is invited to play. Not knowing how to play, he accidentally causes the sipa to fall in front of the princess who is sitting beside the window. She throws him her ring and handkerchief. The marriage between the princess and Kudarat is then arranged. After the wedding, Kudarat feels homesick; his wife then suggests that they go back to Lum. There is a happy reunion. A week later, Kudarat and his wife returns to Kabulawanan to live with his in-laws (Notre Dame Journal 1980:3-6).

Pat-I-Mata narrates the story of two brothers—Pat-I-Mata and Datu sa Pulu. The former rules Kabalukan while the latter reigns over Reina Regente. Pat-I-Mata is so-called because he has four eyes; when his two eyes sleep, his other two are awake. He is also known for his cruelty to women, marrying them when they are beautiful and returning them after they have gone ugly. Because of this, the people of Kabalukan can no longer tolerate Pat-I-Mata's cruelty. They approach his brother and ask for his help. The Datu sa Pulu tries to advise his brother but to no avail. He then decides to kill Pat-I-Mata. So he builds a cage. Seeing the cage, Pat-I-Mata asks what it is for. The Datu replies that it is constructed to protect them from an incoming storm. Being greedy, Pat-I-Mata asks for the cage saying that the Datu can make his own anytime. The Datu pretends to hesitate but later accommodates his brother's wishes. When Pat-I-Mata and his followers enter the cage, the Datu orders the door shut. Realizing that he is tricked, he says before being thrown into the river: "Never mind, my brother. We would always be enemies -- and we will never be reconciled till eternity. I would die but I pray that whenever you go riding on a boat in the river, my spirit will capsize it" (Notre Dame Journal 1980:7-8).

Maguindanao epics are chanted and antedate Islam, the elements of which were later incorporated. The epic Raja Indarapatra deals with various characters, many of whom are imbued with supernatural powers. One portion of the epic tells the story of how two brothers, Raja Indarapatra and Raja Sulayman, save Mindanao from terrible creatures (Gagelonia 1967:288). Another portion deals with the birth of Raja Indarapatra, who is said to come from the union of Sultan Nabi and his cousin. The plot revolves around a trick the cousin, who is well versed in black magic, plays on the Sultan.

Raja Madaya is believed to be an original Maguindanao work since many of its elements—language, metaphor, objects in the tale—are Maguindanao. On the other hand, other elements in the epic point to foreign origins (Wein 1984:12-13). The epic involves various narratives one of which tells about the childless Sultan Ditindegen. In his despair, he prays for a child, promising to give it to a dragon. His wish is granted; but in time, a dragon appears to claim the now grown Princess Intan Tihaya. Hearing about Intan's plight, Raja Madaya comes to the rescue (Wein 1984:14).

Religious

Salsilas or tarsilas are family heirlooms that trace one's line of descent; they are used to ascertain noble lineages that may go back to the days of the Kabungsuan. For example, a tarsila recounts the adventures of Datu Guimba who leads the first group of Maguindanao to Labangan. According to the account, he marries the local princess Bai-alibabai and adopts the title Datu sa Labangan. The next to arrive at Labangan is Datu Buyan Makasosa Kanapia, an adventurer, who marries a Maranao. Together, Datu Guimba and Kanapia rule Labangan. Other datu arrive in time, namely: Datu Maulona Taup Consi and Datu Canao Sultan Maputi (Alfanta 1975:4-5).

The Luwaran is a set of encoded adat laws that deal with murder, theft, and adultery, as well as with inheritance and trade. The laws apply to all regardless of class, and has since become the basis of modern Islamic jurisprudence (Darangen 1980:33).

The Hadith are the sayings and practices of the prophet Muhammad, collected, compiled, and authenticated by Islamic scholars. Hadith constitute one of the sources for Islamic law and jurisprudence. They are also used to explain and clarify certain points in the Quran. The language used is Arabic.

 
The Asik dance performed by a member of the San Francisco-based Parangal Dance Company as part of their Bangsamoro suite of dances at the 14th Annual Fil-Am Friendship Celebration at Serramonte Center in Daly City, California.

Religious quiza are stories written in Arabic, and are used by the imam to teach Islam to children. An example is the "Izra-wal-Miraj", which tells the story of why Muslims pray five times a day. The Prophet Muhammad is awakened one night by the angel Diaba-rail. The Prophet then rides on a burrak and travels to Masjid-el-Agsa in Jerusalem, where he sees a bright light that leads to heaven. Each layer of heaven has a different color. On the seventh layer, he hears the voice of God, and sees heaven and hell. On the way down, he is instructed by Moses to ask God that the number of prayers be reduced from 50 to 5 times daily. His request is granted.

Musical and performing arts

 
A man playing a kutiyapi, the traditional lute

The Maguindanaon have a culture that revolves around kulintang music, a specific type of gong music, found among both Muslim and non-Muslim groups of the Southern Philippines.

Notable Maguindanaons

See also

Maguindanao language

References

  1. ^ "2010 Census of Population and Housing, Report No. 2A: Demographic and Housing Characteristics (Non-Sample Variables) - Philippines" (PDF). Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved May 19, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Campbell, Gwyn (2018). Bondage and the Environment in the Indian Ocean World. Springer. p. 84. ISBN 9783319700281.
  3. ^ Baradas, David B. (1968). (PDF). Asian Studies. 6 (2): 129–168. S2CID 27892222. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 29, 2019.
  4. ^ Saleeby, Najeeb M. (Najeeb Mitry) 1870. Studies in Moro History, Law, and Religion. Project Gutenberg. p. 37. ISBN 1-299-35787-3. OCLC 1339170895.
  5. ^ "The origin of the Tedurays". IAG. Retrieved October 28, 2022.
  6. ^ Dris, Jose Arnaldo. . Archived from the original on November 28, 2006.
  7. ^ "A grammar of the Maguindanao tongue according to the manner of speaking it in the interior and on the south coast of the island of Mindanao". Washington, Govt. print. off. 1906.


maguindanao, people, austronesian, ethnic, group, from, philippines, maguindanaon, part, wider, political, identity, muslims, mindanao, sulu, palawan, known, moro, constitute, third, largest, ethnic, group, mindanao, sulu, palawan, maguindanaons, constitute, s. The Maguindanao people are an Austronesian ethnic group from the Philippines The Maguindanaon are part of wider political identity of Muslims of Mindanao Sulu and Palawan known as Moro who constitute the third largest ethnic group of Mindanao Sulu and Palawan The Maguindanaons are constitute the sixth largest Filipino ethnic group and are known for their distinguished in the realm of visual art Historically they have been renowned as metalworkers producing the wavy bladed keris ceremonial swords and other weapons as well as gongs The Maguindanaos historically had an independent Sultanate known as Sultanate of Maguindanao which comprises Maguindanao del Norte Maguindanao del Sur Zamboanga Peninsula Davao Region and Soccsksargen The name Maguindanao itself was corrupted by Spanish sources into Mindanao which became the name for the entire island of Mindanao 2 Maguindanao peopleMaguindanaon MagindanaunماگینداناونMaguindanaon women at S K Festival Total population1 456 141 2010 1 Regions with significant populations Philippines Bangsamoro Soccsksargen Zamboanga Peninsula Davao Region Manila Cebu WorldwideLanguagesNativeMaguindanaonAlsoFilipino English ArabicReligionPredominantly Sunni Islam 100 Related ethnic groupsMaranao Iranun Lumad Sama Bajau other Moro peoples Visayans other Filipinos Malay people other Austronesian peoples Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Origins and relationships 2 2 1 Legend of Mamalu and Tabunaway 2 3 Maguindanao Sultanate 2 3 1 Spanish period 2 4 American era 2 5 Independent Philippines 3 Language 4 Culture 4 1 Literary arts 4 1 1 Riddles 4 1 2 Tudtul folktales 4 1 3 Religious 4 2 Musical and performing arts 5 Notable Maguindanaons 6 See also 7 ReferencesEtymology EditThe word Maguindanao or Magindanaw means people of the flood plains from the word Magi inged means people or citizen and danaw means lake or marsh Thus Maguindanao or Magindanaw can also be translated as people of the lake identical to their close neighbors the Maranao and Iranun These three groups speak related languages belonging to the Danao language family 3 2 History EditPrehistory Edit Origins and relationships Edit Legend of Mamalu and Tabunaway Edit Before the arrivals of the first Muslim missionaries the ancestors of both Maguindanaon and Teduray peoples lived as one in the Cotabato lowlands among them the brothers Mamalu and Tabunaway When the first missionary Sharif Kabungsuwan came to preach Islam the younger Tabunaway embraced the faith while the elder Mamalu refused holding to old beliefs To maintain peace between the conflicting faiths the brothers formed a pact for Mamalu to settle in the mountains and Tabunaway to remain in the lowlands along the Pulangi both with their respective followers Thus after separating over time the lowland muslims led by Tabunaway became the Maguindanaon and the highland animists of Mamalu the Tiruray Both groups have since maintained a largely peaceful relationship through history 4 5 Maguindanao Sultanate Edit Further information Sultanate of Maguindanao The flag of the Maguindanao sultanate In the early 16th century Sharif Muhammad Kabungsuan an Arab Malay preacher from the Royal House of Malacca arrived in what is now Malabang introduced Islamic faith and customs settled down with a local princess and founded a Sultanate whose capital was Cotabato The other center of power in the area Sultanate of Buayan which is now modern General Santos City has an even longer history dating back to early Arab missionaries who although not able to implant the Islamic faith introduced a more sophisticated political system In Buayan the transition to Islam took a longer time Spanish chronicles was told that Buayan and not Cotabato was the most important settlement in Mindanao at that time Spanish period Edit The Sultan Kudarat monument at Tantawan Park He is one of the most powerful rulers of the Sultanate of Maguindanao During his reign he successfully fought against the Spanish invasions and prevented the spread of Christianity in his controlled territories in Mindanao in the 17th century In 1579 an expedition sent by Governor Francisco de Sande failed to conquer the Maguindanao In 1596 the Spanish government gave Captain Estevan Rodriguez de Figueroa the sole right to colonize Mindanao He met defeat in Buayan and later was killed in an ambush by a Buhahayen named Ubal His forces retreated to an anchorage near Zamboanga The rise of the Maguindanao Cotabato power came after the defeat of Datu Sirongan of Buayan in 1606 From 1607 to 1635 new military alliances were formed this time with Cotabato By the 1630s Cotabato had become a coastal power In the early 17th century the largest alliance composed of the Maguindanao Maranao Tausug and other Muslim groups was formed by Sultan Kudarat or Cachel Corralat of Maguindanao whose domain extended from the Davao Gulf to Dapitan on the Zamboanga Peninsula Several expeditions sent by the Spanish authorities suffered defeat In 1635 Captain Juan de Chaves occupied Zamboanga and erected a fort This led to the defeat of Kudarat s feared admiral Datu Tagal who had raided pueblos in the Visayas In 1637 Governor General Hurtado de Corcuera personally led an expedition against Kudarat and triumphed over his forces at Lamitan and Ilian Spanish presence was withdrawn in 1663 providing an opportunity for Kudarat to re consolidate his forces Approximate extent of the Sultanate of Maguindanao proper in the late 19th century From 1663 to 1718 Maguindanao influence extended as far as Zamboanga in the west Cagayan de Oro in the north Sarangani in the south and Davao in the east In 1719 the Spaniards reestablished control with the building of the strategic Fort Pilar in Zamboanga Miravite 1976 40 Angeles 1974 28 Darangen 1980 42 45 The 1730s saw the weakening of the Maguindanao sultanate as it struggled with civil war and internal disunity Spanish help was sought by the besieged rajah mudah crown prince further destroying the prestige of the sultanate Thus Cotabato power became increasingly dependent on Spanish support This deepening compromise with Spain led Cotabato to its downfall Fearing Buayan s reemerging power Sultan Kudarat II finally ceded Cotabato to Spain in return for an annual pension of 1 000 pesos for him and 800 pesos for his son Buayan under Datu Uto had by the 1860s become the power of Maguindanao In 1887 General Emilio Terrero led an expedition against Uto although he was able to destroy the kota forts in Cotabato he was unable to enforce Spanish sovereignty Miravite 1976 42 Ileto 1971 16 29 In 1891 Governor General Valeriano Weyler personally led a campaign against the Maguindanao and Maranao In the next few months Weyler erected a fort in Parang Parang between Pulangi and the Ilanun coast This effectively stopped the shipment of arms to Uto who died a defeated man in 1902 American era Edit During the Philippine American War the Americans adopted a policy of noninterference in the Muslim areas as spelled out in the Bates Agreement of 1899 signed by Brig General John C Bates and Sultan Jamalul Kiram II of Jolo The agreement was a mutual non aggression pact which obligated the Americans to recognize the authority of the Sultan and other chiefs who in turn agreed to fight piracy and crimes against Christians However the Muslims did not know that the Treaty of Paris which had ceded the Philippine archipelago to the Americans included their land as well After the Philippine American War the Americans established direct rule over the newly formed Moro Province which then consisted of five district Zamboanga Lanao Cotabato Davao and Sulu Political social and economic changes were introduced These included the creation of provincial and district institutions the introduction of the public school system and American inspired judicial system the imposition of the cedula the migration of Christians to Muslim lands encouraged by the colonial government and the abolition of slavery Datu Ali of Kudarangan Cotabato refused to comply with the antislavery legislation and revolted against the Americans In October 1905 he and his men were killed The Department of Mindanao and Sulu replaced the Moro province on 15 December 1913 A policy of attraction was introduced ushering in reforms to encourage Muslim integration into Philippine society In 1916 after the passage of the Jones Law which transferred legislative power to a Philippine Senate and House of Representatives polygamy was made illegal However the Muslims were granted time to comply with the new restrictions Proxy colonialism was legalized by the Public Land Act of 1919 invalidating Muslim Pusaka inherited property laws The act also granted the state the right to confer land ownership It was thought that the Muslims would learn from the more advanced Christian Filipinos and would integrate more easily into mainstream Philippine society Maguindanaon girls dancing in Cotabato City Mindanao 1913 In February 1920 the Philippine Senate and House of Representatives passed Act No 2878 which abolished the Department of Mindanao and Sulu and transferred its responsibilities to the Bureau of Non Christian Tribes under the Department of the Interior Muslim dissatisfaction grew as power shifted to the Christianized Filipinos it was one thing to be administered by the militarily superior Americans another by their traditional enemies the Christian Filipinos Petitions were sent by Muslim leaders in 1921 and 1924 requesting that Mindanao and Sulu be administered directly by the United States These petitions were not granted Isolated cases of armed resistance were quickly crushed In Cotabato Datu Ambang of Kidapawan attempted to incite a jihad holy war against the Americans and the Christian Filipinos This however did not take place when the governor of the province mobilized government forces Realizing the futility of armed resistance some Muslims sought to make the best of the situation In 1934 Arolas Tulawi of Sulu Datu Menandang Pang and Datu Blah Sinsuat of Cotabato and Sultan Alaoya Alonto of Lanao were elected to the 1935 Constitutional Convention In 1935 only two Muslims were elected into the National Assembly The Commonwealth years sought to end the privileges the Muslims had been enjoying under the earlier American administration Muslim exemptions from some national laws as expressed in the Administrative Code for Mindanao and the Muslim right to use their traditional Islamic courts as expressed in the Moro board were ended The Bureau of Non Christian Tribes was replaced by the Office of the Commissioner for Mindanao and Sulu whose main objective was to tap the full economic potentials of Mindanao not for the Muslims but for the Commonwealth These development efforts resulted in discontent which found expression in the various armed uprisings mostly in Lanao from 1936 to 1941 The Muslims are generally adverse to anything that threatens Islam and their way of life Che Man 1990 56 believes that they were neither anti American nor anti Filipino but simply against any form of foreign encroachment into their traditional way of life During World War II the Muslims in general supported the fight against the Japanese who were less tolerant and harsher to them than the American Commonwealth government Independent Philippines Edit After independence efforts to integrate the Muslims into the new political order met with stiff resistance It was unlikely that the Muslims who have had longer cultural history as Muslims than the Christian Filipinos as Christian would surrender their identity The conflict was exacerberated in 1965 with the Jabidah Massacre in which Muslim soldiers were allegedly eliminated because they refused to invade Sabah This incident contributed to the rise of various separatist movements the Muslim Independence Movement MIM Ansar el Islam and Union of Islamic Forces and Organizations In 1969 the Moro National Liberation Front MNLF was founded on the concept of a Bangsa Moro Republic by a group of educated young Muslims The leader of this group Nur Misuari regarded the earlier movements as feudal and oppressive and employed a Marxist framework to analyze the Muslim condition and the general Philippine situation In 1976 negotiations between the Philippine government and the MNLF in Tripoli resulted in the Tripoli Agreement which provided for an autonomous region in Mindanao Negotiations resumed in 1977 and the following points were agreed upon the proclamation of a Presidential Decree creating autonomy in 13 provinces the creation of a provisional government and the holding of a referendum in the autonomous areas to determine the administration of the government Nur Misuari was invited to chair the provisional government but he refused The referendum was boycotted by the Muslims themselves The talks collapsed and fighting continued Che Man 1988 146 147 When Corazon C Aquino became president a new constitution which provided for the creation of autonomous regions in Mindanao and the Cordilleras was ratified On 1 August 1989 Republic Act 673 or the Organic Act for Mindanao created the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ARMM which encompasses Maguindanao Lanao del Sur Sulu and Tawi Tawi 6 Language EditThe Maguindanao language is the native language of the Maguindanaons 7 Aside from this most are able to speak Filipino and English in varying levels of fluency Arabic a Central Semitic language is spoken by a small minority of the Maguindanaon people being the liturgical language of Islam Most Maguindanaons however are not fluent beyond its religious uses English MaguindanaonWhat is your name Ngin i ngala nengka My name is Muhammad Ngala ku si MuhammadHow are you Ngin i betad engka I am fine too Mapia aku bun Where is Ahmad Endaw si Ahmad He is in the house Lu sekanin sa walayThank you Sukran I am staying at or I live at Pegkaleben aku saI am here at the house Sia aku sa walay I am Hungry Kagutem aku He is there at school San sekanin sa iskul fish sedaleg lisenhand limaperson tauCulture EditMaguindanaon are known for their distinguished in the realm of visual art Historically they have been renowned as metalworkers producing the wavy bladed keris ceremonial swords and other weapons as well as gongs The Sagayan dance became well known because of the Maguindanaons this dance depicted in dramatic fashion the steps of their hero Prince Bantugan took upon wearing his armaments the war he fought in and his subsequent victory afterwards Performers depicting fierce warriors would carry shields with shell noisemakers in one hand and double bladed sword in the other attempting rolling movements to defend their master They are also known for their great music in kulintang and agung such as Binalig a Mamayog and Sinulog a Bagu Two Maguindanaon dancers performing the Sagayan Pastil a traditional Maguindanaon food Guinakit a Maguindanaon boat transportation used by royals and tribal chieftains around the inland waters of Mindanao Literary arts Edit A Maguindanaon dance performed during the T nalak Festival in Koronadal South Cotabato The literary elements of the Maguindanao include folk speech and folk narratives The folk speech is expressed in the antuka pantuka paakenala riddles and bayok lyric poems while the narratives may be divided into the Islamic and folk traditions The Islamic includes the Quran tarsila or genealogical narratives the Luwaran an embodiment of customary laws hadith or sayings of the Prophet quiza or religious stories The folk traditions consist of tudtul folktales and the epics Raja Indarapatra Darangen and Raja Madaya Riddles Edit For the Maguindanao riddles promote friendship in a group They are also tools for basic pedagogy The structure of a Maguindanao riddle consists of an image and a subject There are four types of image comparative descriptive puns or puzzles and narrative The Maguindanao believe in a basic unity underlying the various aspects of the environment and this belief is reflected in the use of often conflicting image and subject in the riddles Notre Dame Journal 1980 17 Riddling involves a group of people one of which is the riddler If one volunteers to be a riddler he she has to have a riddle ready or else be subject to dtapulung ridicule which is given not as a criticism but as part of the riddling tradition The Maguindanao consider bad riddlers as those who add to or subtract from the original text of the riddler Riddling can take place anytime and anywhere as long as there is some form of group activity in progress it can be done during work or recreation or both Ambiguities of answers can be settled by an old man or somebody who is respected in the barangay the basic political unit In this sense riddles allow a certain flexibility in their solutions that is they point to various logically possible solutions thus providing some form of basic pedagogy An example of this would be Sia den inia den It is here it is there Wind There are however other possible answers cradle for example Riddles also represent the world view of the Maguindanao For example Cannibal in the forest that eats only a head Hat Although cannibals and hats do not share anything in common they are reconciled with the use of metaphors such as that eats only heads Other beliefs involving riddling is that it should not be done at night so as not to invite the participation of evil spirits Another belief associated with riddling at night is the avoidance of the word nipai snake If the use of the word cannot be avoided euphemisms are resorted to e g big worm Notre Dame Journal 1980 20 25 Maguindanao verses are expressed through such forms as ida ida a rata children rimes sung in chorus or through tubud tubud check spelling short love poem For instance Pupulayog sa papas ka pumagapas apas Ka tulakin kon ko banog Na diron pukatalakin Ka daon kasakriti Kanogon si kanogon nakanogon ni ladan ko A pukurasai mamikir a ana palandong a dar Na di akun mapkangud a bologang ko sa gugao Ka Oman akun ipantao na pusulakan a ig O matao kandalia Flying hard the swift is Trying to catch up with the hawk But he cannot equal him Because he is far too small Woe woe unto me Worried from thinking of a loved one And I cannot let my feelings prevail express my love Because every time I want to reveal it Stops it in its way Composed in metaphorical language the bayok is resorted to when a cautious and euphemistic expression is required An example Wein 1983 35 36 Salangkunai a meling A malidu bpagimanen Ka mulaun sa dibenal Dun dun ai lumaging A paya pagilemuan Ka mumbus sa hakadulat Na u saken idumanding Sa kaludn pun na is na matag aku ngka maneg di ku mawatang galing Talking Salangkunai T is hard to trust in you For untrue leaves could sprout Dun dun fond of chatting T is hard believing you For cheating buds may show Once I start to fondle From the sea You would just hear from me My darling close to me Tudtul folktales Edit Tudtul folktales are short stories involving simple events Two examples are presented The Lagya Kudarat tells the adventures of the two children of Lagya rajah Mampalai of Lum who are blown away after Mampalai laments the lack of viable partners for his children These two children are Lagya Kudarat and Puteli princess Sittie Kumala Puteli Kumala is blown to a forest where she meets a kabayan in all Maguindanao stories this character is associated with an old unmarried woman The kabayan adopts her as she earlier did the prince named Sumedsen sa Alungan Although Kumala and Sumedsen live in the same house they never speak to each other Later because of peeping toms Kumala leaves and Sumedsen goes with her They find their way to Lum where a happy reunion takes place Sumedsen eventually marries Kumala Meanwhile Lagya Kudarat is blown to Kabulawanan There he meets another kabayan who allows him to live with her One day while hunting Kudarat hears the game of sipa rattan ball kicked with the ankle being played He proceeds to the direction of the game and is invited to play Not knowing how to play he accidentally causes the sipa to fall in front of the princess who is sitting beside the window She throws him her ring and handkerchief The marriage between the princess and Kudarat is then arranged After the wedding Kudarat feels homesick his wife then suggests that they go back to Lum There is a happy reunion A week later Kudarat and his wife returns to Kabulawanan to live with his in laws Notre Dame Journal 1980 3 6 Pat I Mata narrates the story of two brothers Pat I Mata and Datu sa Pulu The former rules Kabalukan while the latter reigns over Reina Regente Pat I Mata is so called because he has four eyes when his two eyes sleep his other two are awake He is also known for his cruelty to women marrying them when they are beautiful and returning them after they have gone ugly Because of this the people of Kabalukan can no longer tolerate Pat I Mata s cruelty They approach his brother and ask for his help The Datu sa Pulu tries to advise his brother but to no avail He then decides to kill Pat I Mata So he builds a cage Seeing the cage Pat I Mata asks what it is for The Datu replies that it is constructed to protect them from an incoming storm Being greedy Pat I Mata asks for the cage saying that the Datu can make his own anytime The Datu pretends to hesitate but later accommodates his brother s wishes When Pat I Mata and his followers enter the cage the Datu orders the door shut Realizing that he is tricked he says before being thrown into the river Never mind my brother We would always be enemies and we will never be reconciled till eternity I would die but I pray that whenever you go riding on a boat in the river my spirit will capsize it Notre Dame Journal 1980 7 8 Maguindanao epics are chanted and antedate Islam the elements of which were later incorporated The epic Raja Indarapatra deals with various characters many of whom are imbued with supernatural powers One portion of the epic tells the story of how two brothers Raja Indarapatra and Raja Sulayman save Mindanao from terrible creatures Gagelonia 1967 288 Another portion deals with the birth of Raja Indarapatra who is said to come from the union of Sultan Nabi and his cousin The plot revolves around a trick the cousin who is well versed in black magic plays on the Sultan Raja Madaya is believed to be an original Maguindanao work since many of its elements language metaphor objects in the tale are Maguindanao On the other hand other elements in the epic point to foreign origins Wein 1984 12 13 The epic involves various narratives one of which tells about the childless Sultan Ditindegen In his despair he prays for a child promising to give it to a dragon His wish is granted but in time a dragon appears to claim the now grown Princess Intan Tihaya Hearing about Intan s plight Raja Madaya comes to the rescue Wein 1984 14 Religious Edit Salsilas or tarsilas are family heirlooms that trace one s line of descent they are used to ascertain noble lineages that may go back to the days of the Kabungsuan For example a tarsila recounts the adventures of Datu Guimba who leads the first group of Maguindanao to Labangan According to the account he marries the local princess Bai alibabai and adopts the title Datu sa Labangan The next to arrive at Labangan is Datu Buyan Makasosa Kanapia an adventurer who marries a Maranao Together Datu Guimba and Kanapia rule Labangan Other datu arrive in time namely Datu Maulona Taup Consi and Datu Canao Sultan Maputi Alfanta 1975 4 5 The Luwaran is a set of encoded adat laws that deal with murder theft and adultery as well as with inheritance and trade The laws apply to all regardless of class and has since become the basis of modern Islamic jurisprudence Darangen 1980 33 The Hadith are the sayings and practices of the prophet Muhammad collected compiled and authenticated by Islamic scholars Hadith constitute one of the sources for Islamic law and jurisprudence They are also used to explain and clarify certain points in the Quran The language used is Arabic The Asik dance performed by a member of the San Francisco based Parangal Dance Company as part of their Bangsamoro suite of dances at the 14th Annual Fil Am Friendship Celebration at Serramonte Center in Daly City California Religious quiza are stories written in Arabic and are used by the imam to teach Islam to children An example is the Izra wal Miraj which tells the story of why Muslims pray five times a day The Prophet Muhammad is awakened one night by the angel Diaba rail The Prophet then rides on a burrak and travels to Masjid el Agsa in Jerusalem where he sees a bright light that leads to heaven Each layer of heaven has a different color On the seventh layer he hears the voice of God and sees heaven and hell On the way down he is instructed by Moses to ask God that the number of prayers be reduced from 50 to 5 times daily His request is granted Musical and performing arts Edit Main article Kulintang A man playing a kutiyapi the traditional lute The Maguindanaon have a culture that revolves around kulintang music a specific type of gong music found among both Muslim and non Muslim groups of the Southern Philippines Notable Maguindanaons EditSalipada Pendatun a Filipino lawyer military officer and politician being the first Filipino Muslim in history to hold these offices Murad Ebrahim first and interim Chief Minister of the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Datu Piang founder of the royal House of Piang Hashim Salamat founder of Moro Islamic Liberation Front Muslimin Sema former Mayor of Cotabato City and a member of the Moro National Liberation Front Mohagher Iqbal the nom de guerre of the member of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front Pax Mangudadatu former provincial governor of Sultan Kudarat and former Representative of the 1st district of Sultan Kudarat with Tacurong Sharifa Akeel Filipino model and titleholder of Mutya ng Pilipinas 2018 and Miss Asia Pacific International 2018 Khalifa Nando the Wa li of Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Esmael Mangudadatu former governor of Maguindanao province and now serving as the representative of Maguindanao s 2nd district Naguib Sinarimbo a Filipino lawyer and politician who serves as the Ministry of the Interior and Local Government Bangsamoro Mona Sulaiman a Filipino sprinter who competed at the 1962 Asian Games and the Summer Olympics Zaldy Ampatuan fifth Governor of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Andal Ampatuan Jr Former mayor of Datu Unsay Maguindanao Gumbay Piang a son of the Maguindanao leader Datu Piang Samaon Sulaiman a Filipino musician who is a recipient of the National Living Treasures Award Philippines Zacaria Candao a Filipino politician who served as the first governor of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao Zamzamin Ampatuan a Filipino career bureaucrat Datu Amir Baraguir twenty fifth Sultan of Sultanate of Maguindanao Jong Madaliday The Clash season 1 contestant Melanio Ulama a Filipino politician ancestral leader and peace advocate who serves as the Ministry of Indigenous Peoples Affairs Bangsamoro and a member of the Bangsamoro Transition Authority Parliament Bai Mariam Mangudadatu a Filipina politician from the province of Maguindanao Ina Ambolodto a 2016 Philippine general election senatorial candidate running under the banner of the Liberal Party Philippines See also EditMaguindanao languageReferences Edit 2010 Census of Population and Housing Report No 2A Demographic and Housing Characteristics Non Sample Variables Philippines PDF Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved May 19 2020 a b Campbell Gwyn 2018 Bondage and the Environment in the Indian Ocean World Springer p 84 ISBN 9783319700281 Baradas David B 1968 Some Implications of the Okir Motif in Lanao and Sulu Art PDF Asian Studies 6 2 129 168 S2CID 27892222 Archived from the original PDF on January 29 2019 Saleeby Najeeb M Najeeb Mitry 1870 Studies in Moro History Law and Religion Project Gutenberg p 37 ISBN 1 299 35787 3 OCLC 1339170895 The origin of the Tedurays IAG Retrieved October 28 2022 Dris Jose Arnaldo Maguindanao Archived from the original on November 28 2006 A grammar of the Maguindanao tongue according to the manner of speaking it in the interior and on the south coast of the island of Mindanao Washington Govt print off 1906 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maguindanao people amp oldid 1129678837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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