THE MANOBO
WEDDING CEREMONY
by Myna Consolacion
Buta
Lawatano Mission
School
February, 1997
We were so excited for the long
awaited wedding. My partner and I were
for the first time going to witness a Manobo wedding. At last, on February 17, 1997, about 1:00
p.m. the groom and his relatives arrived at Lawatano from Dao. Dao is a nearby village taking only four
hours to hike to Lawatano. The bride was
from Lawatano where I was assigned as a student missionary. She was the daughter of Datu Samuel, one of
the datus of the village.
When the grooms party arrived, they
occupied the two school rooms to prepare themselves for the wedding. Someone shaved the eyebrows of the groom and
painted around his eyes with white rice powder which they call in the Manobo language,
“antis”. Everybody was busy preparing,
putting finishing touches on their faces with lipstick and make-up and eye
shadow. They adorned themselves with
their beautiful and colorful “baliog” or necklaces.
Then at about 3:00, the bride and
groom met in a house newly built by the father of the bride. One of the datus got a chicken for what they
called “gaamuadas” or by killing the chicken, they rid the house of evil
spirits and any bad omens before the groom entered the house of the bride.
The house where the bride was
staying was crowded with the village folks and we had a difficult time getting
a place to take good pictures because of the crowd. The groom and bride were each covered with a
blanket. The ceremony finally started
and all the village people were happy.
Laughter filled the air. The
bride’s relatives gave her to the groom’s relatives and then the groom’s
relatives gave him to the bride’s relatives.
The official solemnizing the
wedding was a woman called a “Bai” or chief.
She commanded the two of them to sit down facing each other. The Bai held in her hand some cooked rice
wrapped in a banana leaf. In the Manobo
language it is called “linupot”. The Bai
unwrapped the cooked rice and slowly got some of it and formed it into balls
using her bare hands. She gave some to
the groom and the bride. The relatives
all sat around watching the couple eat their share of the rice first. Then the relatives devoured the remains. After all had eaten, the Bai told the couple
to hug each other. Laughter broke out as
this was done.
Under the house, some of the
village folks were cooking food and the smoke came up through the floor but
none of us minded even though the smoke irritated our noses and eyes. It was quite hot. We were all there to witness the happenings
of the wedding in spite of all the pushing and shoving of the people.
The couple were then seated in a
special seat while the datus and other high ranking members of the village sat
around in the center of the house. The
father of the bride, Datu Samuel, had a handful of “aguloy” or corn seeds. Datu Banog of Dao, who is a Seventh-day
Adventist, also had a handful of corn seeds.
The corn seed was a symbol of the value of a carabao. In terms of money, that is about P1,000. They were counting up the expenses of the
wedding. Each of the datus counting
anything from the beginning of the proposal until the time of the wedding by
using the corn seeds. The groom’s family
and relatives gave a dowry to the bride of money, two horses and a carabao.
Even though it was a rainy day, we
enjoyed the day. It was a very memorable
day for everyone.
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