Press "Enter" to skip to content

Rough Cuts | ‘Lumad’ as players of their development

Many candidates for local positions during the May 13, 2019 elections talked about empowerment of the indigenous peoples (IPs or Lumad) as long-term solution to their sordid plight in their upland communities.

Indeed the solution conceived is long-term because it attempts to change what has been the tradition among Lumad who inhabited the Davao Region and other parts of the country long before the Spanish conquistadors came in 1521. That is, on the relatively fair notion that they will remain in their present social standing because they have preferred to be subjugated by lowland “invaders” out to destroy their places of domicile; that the early inhabitants recoiled, retreated, and still continue to retreat to the fastness of what remains of the once vast jungles when the colonialists, both foreign and fellow Filipinos, came, intimidated them and took advantage of their ignorance to deprive them of their lands and other possessions.

Today, most of the Lumad who have stuck it out with their way of life are already out there in the farthest of Davao Region’s last frontiers. And who are these present-day “invaders?” They are the lowlanders out to acquire low-cost farm lands; the businessmen speculating for raw materials or those undertaking land banking for their future use.

They even include fellow Lumad who have assimilated the culture of mainstream society by fighting off intimidation and opted to remain in the lowlands and acquired education. The latter are those who found their new status a convenient way to use their fellow natives for their own selfish personal interest.

But no matter how some people see the condition of the indigenous peoples out there, and how they justify such view, we fully agree with the politicians and the aspiring ones that there is a long-standing need to improve the lot of the Lumad and their communities. And we fully commit to support, in our own little way, any efforts of those who made the said commitment and are now in their previously aspired positions or were reelected. Now, more than ever, is the time for them to pass measures intended to empower the Lumad without necessarily denying them their birth rights of continuing their tradition.

The measures that we will be all out for are those that allow the natives to enjoy urban amenities without them moving out of their places of abode; measures that will showcase not just their culture and tradition but the Lumad themselves as human being, not as breathing “commodities” or social outcasts.

Yes, now that the former candidates in the May 13 polls are now blessed with the trust of the people of Davao, they must do projects that will make the non- Lumad discover their own past and present identity to be distinct yet not necessarily different from that of the Lumad ways. And perhaps the public servants installed after that mid-term elections should not implement projects that they alone think of. Instead they have to craft the projects based on what the Lumad believe they need to improve their lives, and what their communities can offer to make the projects work.

From where we are perched we can see clearly only two most effective ways to change the sorry state of the lives of most indigenous people as well as the condition of the communities the live in. One is education which is really a very long and expensive process. The other is by providing them skills that can be applied in jobs that may be germane in their culture and utilize resources readily available in their communities.

Beforehand though, the officials who conceived of empowering the Lumad should bring development projects in the latter’s domains that do not destroy or take out its resources but instead harness them tapping the services of the IP population.
And if education is indeed the best option to positively intervene in the way of life of the Lumad, then it is imperative that government (and we mean the local as well as national) through the new set of leaders, should start getting serious with their efforts to provide the kind of education that best suits the Davao Lumad. It’s about time that they move from the “talk” level to the “do” level.

The government should build more schools in areas where there are concentration of Lumad. They should also make revisions in the curriculum that will allow easy interaction between the teachers and the Lumad students. The new leaders, local legislators more specifically, should come up with programs that will encourage more IPs to study college and take up education, and for those who will graduate to return to their places of origin and teach there.

We also recommend that the Department of Education (DepEd) dispenses with the passing of the Licensure Examination for Teacher (LET) as requirement for Lumad graduates before getting hired in schools in their areas. They, however, should still be ordered to take the exams as condition for the continuity of their service and future promotions.

Educating the Lumad, as we said, is a long and expensive process. But there is no doubt that this would mean a new generation of indigenous peoples very much the Filipinos that everybody wants to see and interact with will be forthcoming.

Thus we believe that education for the Lumad and developing them and their communities to a productive society must be to the account of the government.

As to the other “colonizers” of what is left of the once indigenous peoples’ domain, the onslaught can only be mitigated if our present crop of leaders can make good their commitment to protect the Lumad domain from encroachment.

All they need to do is implement all existing laws intended to perpetuate ancestral lands for the natives to live and cultivate. They should update laws and ordinances that are already overtaken by time. Development encroachment in the Lumad communities should not be allowed just as wantonly as some leaders and economic “experts” think it should in the name of development.

And if indeed it is inevitable, it has to be planned in a way that the indigenous peoples and their communities have the first crack at its benefits and the rest of the players get second priority. After all, any development venture is likely to stay in place if it gets the support of the host community.

-30-

Author

Powered By ICTC/DRS
Did you find the information you were looking for on this page?

0 / 400