Friday, August 23, 2013

Four things you may not know about our Baybayin- GMA News


By Ime Morales

As our forefathers’ age-old system of writing, Baybayin is believed to have existed in our archipelago even before the first Spanish colonizers sailed toward our shores. Our ancestors used it to pen songs, prayers, verses and messages or letters on such materials as tree barks, bamboos, leaves, rock faces, and metals.
Comandante, the scientist who invented the “sleeping fish” technology (a discovery that earned him numerous awards from all over the world), revealed the following results of his research on this ancient form of writing.

1. Baybayin scripts predate the birth of Christ. 
 
According to Comandante, the Manunggul Jar (Palawan) that was carbon-dated to 890-710 BC bears very old Baybayin scripts, contrary to findings that the markings are just designs. 
 
If this is true, it debunks historical assumptions that place the creation of this system of writing at around a hundred years before the Spanish colonizers came in 1521.
 
2. Baybayin has been the inspiration for a dance, called Sayaw Baybayin (Sabai) or Baybayin Dance, and a form of local martial art, Baybayin ng Silangan (Bangsi). 

The movements are copied from the forms of the written symbols. 
 
In his paper titled “Baybayin Dance: Script Forms Through Time,” Comandante argued that the adaptation of the script forms into movement has provided an easy way to learn how to write and read Baybayin, primarily because of “muscle memory.”
 
“You can use the Baybayin Dance to heal yourself and to pray—prayer through dance is the ultimate therapy,” he said.
 
The dance itself does not have specific or prescribed movements. The dancer is free to create her own expressions of the 17 symbols found in this ancient writing system.
 
3. The Baybayin script originated from the taklobo or giant clam. 
 
Comandante made this discovery after spending some time with a Tagbanua native from Palawan. 
 
The giant clam, said Comandante, was used by our ancestors as food, tool, container, utensil, source of lime for their betel chew, body ornament, or as a burial implement. 
 
In his paper, which he first presented at a conference in 2011, Comandante suggested that each Baybayin syllabary is a word in itself and may have evolved from our ancestors’ ritual or practice related to the giant clams. The symbols themselves may have been inspired by the physical shapes and forms of and on the clam itself. 
 
This theory presents an important and interesting development in the historical study of Baybayin, which could disprove previous assumptions on the origins of the syllabary.
 
4. The Baybayin script has inherent subtle energies. 
 
Comandante experimented on plants and discovered that each Baybayin syllabary carries specific powers that are related to its very nature. 

He is able to harness these energies for use in growing plants and healing oneself and others. 
 
The process involves writing down the appropriate Baybayin symbol and attaching the paper onto the subject, much like how albularyos write down their oracion and stick the piece of paper (tapal) onto the person’s body. 
 
“Do not forget that this is your prayer. Be specific, sincere and concise about your request and include the phrase 'My Prayer,'” Comandante revealed. Messages or prayers that are uttered are more effective, he said.


Continue Reading at this link...

Monday, October 22, 2012

Paleographic Baybayin


Paleographic Baybayin
Bonifacio Comandante Jr PhD
Marble Hall, National Museum
November 22, 2012

Relive a part of history and antiquity to discover some old Filipino script writings engraved on stones, clay, metal and bamboo. Ancient Petroglyps showing the syllabary depicting Filipino traditions and spirituality. Clay inscriptions on how kudlits were used in the past as well as how the script related to the tradition of wine making and storage. Metal engravings that left imprints on our past association with other Austronesian speaking cultures. The 1934 Paris Bamboo Baybayin Inscriptions, part of the grand exhibition in France named “Philippines- Art of Exchange”, to run next year at the Musée du Quai Branly. A rare chance for people who doubted the Filipino script forms in these artifacts to take a second look and for Baybayin enthusiasts to celebrate more the epitome of what Filipino ancestors left for generations to come.







Monday, October 1, 2012

Power Word UHA






The pictures were lifted (and highlighted) from the 1590 Boxer Codex, the very first book about Filipinos (Pintados plates 23-24). You will find the Baybayin scripts u ha prominently marked at the legs, thigh, breasts, arms, hands and forehead. 

The word uha/panambitan means a prayer or supplication- listed in the 1613 Vocabulario de la Lengua Tagala as follows: {SB 399 : llorar : panambitan pp : en copla a sus difunctos, nananambitan .3.ac. llorar ãsimemorando las cosas que con el difuncto es paso en vida, ypinananambitan .1.P. el que es llorado, sinong pinananambitan doon? A quien lloran alli? hovag cayong manambitandiyan, no lloreis ay [ahi].}

Baybayin script u ha may be seen at the Neolithic Angono Petro glyphs, Andres Bonifacio’s 1896 metal engraving in Bahay Nakpil (Manila) and healing materials (currently used by Lola Aning in her Tapal healing modality inscribed on Ikmo plant leaves (Luisiana, Laguna). Other healers use cloth and/or  paper in writing the ancient script for Tapal healing. 

According to literatures, tattooing in the Western world today has its origins in Polynesia through the discovery of tatau by eighteenth century explorers (but most of the Polynesian culture like pottery and rituals may have originated from the Philippines- Dizon 2009). The practice became popular among European sailors. As sailors travelled abroad and returned home with tattoos inscribed on their bodies, they began to show up in mainstream European and eventually North American culture.

© Comandante 2012 All Rights Reserved

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Baybayin Tattoo Year 1590



The pictures were lifted (and highlighted) from the 1590 Boxer Codex, the very first book about Filipinos (Pintados plates 23-24). You will find the Baybayin scripts u ha prominently marked at the legs, thigh, breasts, arms, hands and forehead. 

The word uha/panambitan means a prayer or supplication- listed in the 1613 Vocabulario de la Lengua Tagala as follows: {SB 399 : llorar : panambitan pp : en copla a sus difunctos, nananambitan .3.ac. llorar ãsimemorando las cosas que con el difuncto es paso en vida, ypinananambitan .1.P. el que es llorado, sinong pinananambitan doon? A quien lloran alli? hovag cayong manambitandiyan, no lloreis ay [ahi].}

Baybayin script u ha may be seen at the Neolithic Angono Petro glyphs, Andres Bonifacio’s 1896 metal engraving in Bahay Nakpil (Manila) and healing materials (currently used by Lola Aning in her Tapal healing modality inscribed on Ikmo plant leaves (Luisiana, Laguna). Other healers use cloth and/or  paper in writing the ancient script for Tapal healing. 

According to literatures, tattooing in the Western world today has its origins in Polynesia through the discovery of tatau by eighteenth century explorers (but most of the Polynesian culture like pottery and rituals may have originated from the Philippines- Dizon 2009). The practice became popular among European sailors. As sailors travelled abroad and returned home with tattoos inscribed on their bodies, they began to show up in mainstream European and eventually North American culture.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Oldest Baybayin Scripts on Clay Jar


People who say that the markings are just art designs should take a second look!

Extant and extinct Baybayin scripts (that may have been the precursor of geographical forms such as Tagalog, Ilocano, Bisaya, Bohol, Bicol, Pampanga, Pangasinan, Hinunoo, Buhid, Bangon and Tagbanua) have been found very recently to predate the birth of Christ. A lecture delivered by Comandante in UP Diliman Archaeological Studies Program presented the presence of Baybayin Scripts on the Manunggul Jar found in the same named cave that was carbon dated to 890-710 BC.


Manunggul Cave Palawan

The Tabon Cave complex, a series of about 200 caves, in Lipuun Point, Quezon, Palawan, bears witness to the earliest Philippine Paleographic Baybayin (on clay) found in the Manunggul Jar. While the Tabon man was dated to about 47,000 yrs old, the Manunggul Jar was found in the same named cave (within Tabon cave complex) dated to about 890-710 BC. (data from National Museum/Dr. Eusebio Dizon 2003).


The Tabon Cave, in fact, was populated by peoples earlier than Tabon Man, since stone tools were there again to prove this. The deepest soil deposit of the cave was dated to approximately 50,000 years old, and the youngest to about 10,000 years. This shows that the cave was used continuously for about 40,000 years by peoples that use the same kind of tools. The earliest carbon 14 date obtained for the Tabon Cave was about 30,000 years B.C. from charcoal sample, which among others suggest the earliest date for the use of fire in the Philippines. 



Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Ukit sa Banga(Excerpts from the Oct. 25, 2011 lecture)

Ukit Sa Banga by B. Comandante Jr. PhD