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IFUGAO TRIBE
À̸§ : tutors ÀÛ¼ºÀÏ : 2011-09-28 Á¶È¸¼ö : 109182 Ãßõ¼ö : 0

Traveling to the northern part of the island Luzon will bring you not only to beautiful landscapes with amazing rice terraces.  It will bring you also to the regions with remote villages and colorful and traditional living upland tribal communities. Their ancestors constructed the fascinating rice terraces with the perfect working irrigation systems. These mountain tribes still distinguish themselves by their specific cultural expression and their skills.

 

 

 

Typical houses of the Ifugao

 

 

 

 

The Ifugao build their houses on piles. The pyramid-shaped roof is used as a bedroom, kitchen and storeroom. All in one space! There are no windows. To please the gods, the skull of a sacrificed pig is fixed on the outside of the house. The residents still live in the same type of houses as their ancestors.

 

 

They have skills in making bowls, baskets, weapons and clothing. It were the Bontocs and the Ifugao people who built up the rice terraces. Traveling in the provinces of Ifugao or other provinces in Luzon, will make clear to you that the way of living of these people didn't change. They are still living and working as in the past.  Many tourists decide to make the long bus-trip from Manila to these provinces especially to meet the Ifugao, the Bontocs, the Kankanays or other tribes. 

 

 

Skills of the Ifugao

 

The Ifugao still practice the same skills as in the past: Woodcarving and weaving clothes. They discovered  the tourists as a  welcome client for their products in a time that the most young Ifugao prefer Western clothes.

 

 

 

 

Were you ever invited to see the bones of an ancestor? Read the story of the tourist Jon, who visited the region of the Ifugao some years ago...."As we wandered further, a lady approached us and asked us if we would like to look at 'the bones'....and she produced a large bundle wrapped in a blanket that she unfolded to reveal the skeleton of her Grandfather Po Po. Bizarre?

 

Not in the culture of the Ifugao. Like with the Bontocs, their funerals are not only a sad event because of the lost of the person. There is also a celebration during days, because of the believe of a better life after death. Six years after the body  is buried, the bones are dug up, after which a second celebration will take place. This is one time repeated after another six years.


 

 

 

 
 
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