Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Our Trip To Canada

     Last week, we embarked on a 4,260-mile round trip that would bring us to Edmonton and Lac La Biche in Alberta, Canada to visit Teng's relatives. It took us more than 3 days and two nights to drive one way, starting from Loma Linda on Monday, July 8 and arriving Edmonton at 2:00 am of Thursday, July 11. We were cruising Interstate 15 all the way except for a brief detour to Yellowstone National Park on the boundary of Montana and Wyoming.

    A month earlier, while considering the trip, I did some research on whether I have some friends residing in those places. True enough, I found a family who used to be my neighbors in Hinaplanon who are now residing in Edmonton. The Quilacios are very close to me because we belong to the same church which only consists of half a dozen families.

    Then I remember that Wengweng Candelasa is also residing somewhere in Canada but I'm not sure which part of the country. Wengweng arrived in MSU when I was the one directing the choir and when I learned that she plays the piano well, she became the pianist right away uncontested. When I went to Manila for a study leave in 1983, she was still there assisting Remrem Ortega who took over the choir leadership.

    When I checked her Facebook page, I found out that she lived in Grand Praire, some 5-hour drive northwest of Edmonton. So I informed her of our planned trip and that I wished to meet her but considering the distance, I would understand if it would not materialize. But she responded that she was willing to drive that far in order to meet me. She also informed me that Evilla "Bebing" Aguilo is in Calgary, which is a 3-hour drive south of Edmonton. When she told Bebing that I'm coming, Bebing also decided to drive that 3-hour distance to meet us.
    
    Those were the highlights on my part of the trip, the rest of our itinerary was meeting and bonding with Teng's uncle, a number of first cousins and lots of nephews and nieces.
On Thursday, Teng's cousin, Alex drove us to Jasper National Park reaching up to the foot of Edith Cavell Glacier which was in time for snow drizzling. It was the first time for Teng's mother to touch snow. We spent the night at a hotel in Jasper City and the following morning we rode the tramway up to the park's Alpine Tundra at an elevation of 1300 meters above sea level overlooking six mountain ranges.

    On the Sabbath, we attended the Edmonton Filipino SDA Church which, as expected, I met Wengweng, the Quilacio family and Bebing. What I did not expect was that Wengweng would drive 5 hours on a huge 4x4 pickup truck with big wheels and elevated chasis. She arrived Edmonton the night before with 3 non-SDA friends who attended church with us. Bebing also drove a SUV from Calgary.
There was one unexpected friend who greeted me in church. It's Julius Betoya who I only knew in MSU as Dodoy, Alandrex's younger brother. Dodoy did not finish in MSU. He transferred to AUP where he would meet his wife. Since Teng worked at AUP during their time, they also recognized Teng and she remembered them.

    After lunch in church, Dodoy invited us to come to his luxurious townhouse at the outskirts of Edmonton. There they offered us cold juice drinks while he was showing to us a video of their exploits in Mindoro as missionaries among the Mangyans for 5 years.
Too bad, time was so short for bonding. After the video, Bebing was already in a hurry to go because she is meeting her son also in Edmonton. We gathered around, sang one familiar song and I offered a short prayer thanking God for the opportunity of meeting old friends who have gone to different directions in life and then meet again at an instant in the same space and time after thirty years.
Since Bebing left her car at the church's parking lot and Wengweng left hers at the hotel they were staying nearby, we drove them back to be reunited with their wheels. I wish such meetings of old friends in unexpected places will become more frequent in the near future.

    Then it was our time to bond with my Hinaplanon neighbors. They were very excited to see me and Teng. I am their first neighbor from the Philippines that they meet here in Canada. They brought us to the Alberta Legislative Park then treated us to a sumptuous dinner at a Royal Buffet. You can see our pictures in my FB pages. The rest of our visit was meeting and bonding with Teng's relatives. Her 97 year old uncle is still strong and active. I could not memorize all the name of her cousins and nephews and nieces and even grandchildren but I enjoyed every moment of it.
    
    On Monday, we drove northeast for almost three hours to visit another cousin who lives in Lac La Biche. At 54.9 degrees north of the equator, this is the place with the highest latitude that I have been to. "Lac La Biche" is a French word which literally means "Lake of the Deer." It's the name given by a French explorer who discovered the place. It was in Lac La Biche where I found total serenity and for a time forgot all the cares of the world. Our most enjoyable experience was  boating on the serene lake on Tuesday.

    On our way home, we had another sleepover in Edmonton and then retraced our route starting Thursday morning. When we reached Utah, our wanderlust was again excited at the prospect of visiting Arches National Park and on the Sabbath, we find ourselves amidst God's creative wonders, awed and mesmerized at those gigantic natural monuments and unusual rock formations sculpted by time. 

Sunday, April 28, 2013

How My Uncle Leon Brought Home A Wife


(With apologies to Manuel E. Arguilla)

The farming village of Masondong is situated on the lower midwestern slope of Mount Hilong-hilong in the island of Mindanao. Almost all of the people living here are my mother’s relatives in varying degrees of affinity and consanguinity. As a kid, I have visited this place countless times together with my parents and every visit was always looked forward to with anticipation, eager to meet and play with my cousins.

 Masondong is a geopolitical sub-unit of barrio Calamba, which, in turn is a political sub-unit of the municipality of Cabadbaran. The village has no decent road for motorized vehicles to reach it. The road network of Mindanao ends at the barrio proper of Calamba and the village is connected to the barrio through a circuitous 7-kilometer footpath which is also used by the farmers’ carabaos pulling the sledge.

I say “circuitous” because although both the village and the barrio proper lie on the same side of the Calibunan River, a direct route is not possible because of a steep, forested mountain that separates them up to the river’s waterline. The end of the mountain facing the river is a vertical wall of barren rock and some loose topsoil constantly eroded by the water current beneath it. The other side of the river is a wide plain having been leveled through years or centuries of seasonal flooding.

This geographical barrier dictates that the route to Masondong crosses the river at a point nearest to the barrio, then follow the river upstream on the other side, then crosses the river again once they pass by the rock wall. I have to emphasize here that there is no bridge. So to cross the river is to literally wade in the water which is knee-deep on some predetermined locations.

Life in Masondong is relatively comfortable except during rainy season when the river swells up to 3 or 4 times its usual size, making it doubly unpassable, isolating the village from the rest of the world. But as long as every family has enough supply of salt and kerosene, these temporary isolations are livable since they are self-sufficient in food that they themselves produced.

But remote as it is, the village has a rich cultural life. It was the home of a well-known musical group called the Dagohoy String Band. All the musicians handling the different instruments are my uncles and cousins. Tatay Lucing, my mother’s eldest brother seemed to be the leader of the group being the oldest. His favorite instrument was the tenor banjo. There was also the banjo, guitar, bass guitar, violin and cello. (They even had a makeshift bass instrument consisting of a metal container as a base with a long wooden arm protruding upward. A small rope made of abaca is fixed at the base and wound at the top of the wooden arm that when strummed produces a soothing sound with a very low frequency akin to that of a bass drum.) Neighboring barrios invite them to play especially during fiesta celebrations.

Then came Uncle Leon. I don’t know where he came from, probably from some Cebuano-speaking islands in the Visayas like Leyte. Actually, he is not related to us and I only started calling him Uncle Leon after he married Yaya Barsing, my mother’s first cousin. But that’s going ahead of the story.

Their romance was a typical story of a stranger who falls in love with a local lass. The courtship and the rituals which, usually involve the whole clan are quite elaborate but I will not dwell on those. I would rather fast forward to the time when their wedding was scheduled to be held in our small chapel in Calamba.

Just like any other barrio, we do not have a resident priest. A priest from Cabadbaran only comes one Sunday in a month to say mass. At other Sundays, we only hold a novena led by the chapel patriarch named Esteban. He was a nice, likeable fellow but as kids, we were afraid to come near him. He even looked like a priest. We heard that Esteban was a pensionado of the American government. We were told that during the war he enlisted in the US Navy and was assigned as a cook in one of the American warships. After his retirement, he bought a big piece of land in our barrio, settled down comfortably and serving religiously in our chapel in the absence of a priest.

Their wedding was a grand event in our barrio. Our small chapel was jampacked with worshippers. Even the courtyard was filled with friends and relatives eager to witness the ceremony.  The priest from the town was there in his immaculately white priestly robe. And of course, the Dagohoy String Band was there accompanying the congregation in the singing.

Meanwhile, back at the bride’s parents’ house in Masondong, the bride’s family and her immediate relatives were busy preparing the food for the wedding banquet. The bride’s family had already anticipated that the whole village and the many friends and relatives in the barrio proper were coming to share a meal with the newly wed. No invitation was necessary. Since I was just a kid at the time, I was not privy to the food preparation but in retrospect, I could estimate that at least one carabao, and a couple of pigs and goats were butchered to feed the community of well-wishers

After the ceremony, everyone, young and old were getting ready to invade the bride’s house for the wedding feast. The seven-kilometer procession started at the chapel’s courtyard led by the bride and groom followed by the string band followed by the crowd. Uncle Leon was holding his bride while the bride was partially lifting her long white skirt to prevent it from touching the ground. That was the scene that left a lasting imprint in my memory. I was part of the crowd and I was very near the string band. As we continued walking the band continued playing familiar songs which synched with our every footstep so that we did not feel tired.

 


 

My Father: Some Poignant Recollections

After I completed elementary grades, my father left farming and worked at a timber company in Bayugan, some 60 kilometers south of Cabadbara...