Ati-Atihan festival

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Ati-Atihan festival
A Woman At The Kalibo Ati-Atihan Festival, Philippines.jpg
An Ati-Atihan participant
Official nameAti-Atihan Festival
Also calledAti-Atihan
Observed byKalibo, Aklan
TypeReligious / Cultural
DateThird Sunday of January
Kalibo Ati-Atihan Festival in the Philippines

The Ati-Atihan festival is a Philippine festival held annually in January in honor of the Santo Niño (Holy Child or Infant Jesus) in several towns of the province of Aklan, Panay Island. The biggest celebration is held during the third Sunday of January in the town of Kalibo, the province's capital. The name Ati-Atihan means "to imitate the Ati people".

The festival consists of religious processions and street-parades, showcasing themed floats, dancing groups wearing colorful costumes, marching bands, and people sporting face and body paints. The street parade is known as Sadsad, which is also what the locals call their way of dancing where the foot is momentarily dragged along the ground in tune to the beat played by the marching bands. It has inspired other Philippine Festivals such as Dinagyang of Iloilo and Sinulog of Cebu, thus, it is known as the "Mother of All Philippine Festivals."[1]

History

Ati-Atihan Queen

The original celebration was known as the Fiesta de Santo Niño, which dates back to at least the 17th century. It was part of the Catholic "fiesta system" employed by the Spanish colonial government to reinforce the reducciones policy that aimed to resettle natives on planned settlements built around a local church. In the 1950s, the festival, along with similar fiestas around the country celebrating the Santo Niño (like the Sinulog) increasingly began to resemble the Brazilian Carnival and the New Orleans Mardi Gras, incorporating music, street dancing, and body painting. By the 1960s, the festival became even more commercialized as the Philippine Department of Tourism heavily promoted local festivals to national prominence. The festival now included elaborate exotic costumes (inspired by tribal attire from Papua New Guinea, Africa, and India). It culminated in 1972, when the festival's name was officially changed to Ati-Atihan.[2]

The festivity is claimed to be originally a native animist celebration of the anito (ancestor spirits), to which Spanish missionaries gradually added a Christian meaning. The festival is also linked to the epic Maragtas. The epic claims that a group of 10 Malay chieftains, led by Datu Puti, fled the island of Borneo in the 13th century and landed on the island of Panay. Datu Puti made a trade with the Ati people and purchased the lowlands for a golden salakot, brass basins and bales of cloth. They gave a very long necklace to the wife of the Ati chieftain. Feasting and festivities followed soon after. Some time later, the Ati people were struggling with famine as the result of a bad harvest. They were forced to descend from their mountain village into the settlement below, to seek the generosity of the people who now lived there. The datu obliged and gave them food. In return, the Ati danced and sang for them, grateful for the gifts they had been given.[3]

However, the Maragtas epic is now regarded by modern historians as an early-20th-century hoax, despite being once widely included in school textbooks and associated with the Ati-Atihan Festival. The claim of its origins from the Maragtas or the Ati people is a modern addition, like its name.[4][3]

In 2012, the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and the ICHCAP of UNESCO published Pinagmulan: Enumeration from the Philippine Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage. The first edition of the UNESCO-backed book included the Ati-atihan Festival, signifying its great importance to Philippine intangible cultural heritage. The local government of Aklan, in cooperation with the NCCA, is given the right to nominate the Ati-atihan Festival in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists.[5]

Events

Parade celebration of Santo Niño

The formal opening mass during the first day of the celebration emphasizes the festival's religious event. The mass is followed by a procession accompanied by rhythmic drumbeats and dance parades along the street. The second day begins at dawn with a rosary procession and ends with a community mass and another dance parade. The highlight of the festival occurs on the last day, the third Sunday of January, when groups representing different tribes compete for tourists' attention and prizes. The festival ends with a procession of thousands of people carrying different kinds of images of the Santo Niño.

Celebrations in other places

Other towns in Aklan that celebrate the Ati-Atihan festival are Ibajay, Malinao, Makato, Batan, Altavas, and Malay (Boracay Island). Several nearby towns of Antique and Capiz also hold the Ati-Atihan festival.

Other festivals held in the region with similar themes include the Dinagyang of Iloilo, the Halaran of Capiz, and the Binirayan of Antique.

Controversies

Despite being its namesake, the Ati-Atihan did not originally include the Ati people (commonly misidentified with the Aeta people of Luzon), whom today are a disenfranchised and impoverished minority. The festival is also controversial for the use of blackface.[2][6]

References

  1. ^ Garcia, Patrick (13 January 2019). "The Ati-Atihan: Of Devotion and Free-Flowing Drinks in Kalibo". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b Peterson, William (2011). "The Ati-Atihan Festival: Dancing with the Santo Niño at the "Filipino Mardi Gras"". Asian Theatre Journal. 28 (2): 505–528. JSTOR 41306513.
  3. ^ a b Duka, Cecilio D. (2008). Struggle for Freedom: A Textbook on Philippine History. Manila: Rex Book Store. pp. 21–23. ISBN 978-971-23-5045-0.
  4. ^ Scott, William Henry (1968). Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History. Manila: University of Santo Tomas Press.
  5. ^ Peralta, Jesus T. (ed.). "Pinagmulan: Enumeration from the Philippine Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage". e-Knowledge Center. ICHCAP. Archived from the original on 1 February 2018. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
  6. ^ Asbury, Robin (6 December 2020). "Where are the Ati in the Ati-Atihan?". Mangal Media. Retrieved 16 April 2022.

External links