SANGYAW FESTIVAL
History Of Sangyaw: A Taclobanons Heritage
Sangyaw is a popular native festival held every 29th of June in Tacloban city.
Sangyaw, which means to announce or herald a news in the local dialect,
has assumed a popular following after its creation by then former First Lady
Imelda Marcos in 1976. The current festivities became an annual event until
1986 when the late Corazon Aquino assumed the presidency and abolished
Sangyaw. It was only in 2008 when Mayor Alfred Romualdez, a nephew of
the former first lady, finally revived the Sangyaw festival and was readily
accepted with by the reinvigorated Taclobanon community in the city and
other parts of the region.
Sangyaw is religious in origin and traces its roots to a purely
Taclobanon Christian beginning. Sangyaw Festival showcases
the rich cultural and religious heritage of the natives of Tacloban
and the province it belongs to. Warriors painted in colorful costumes,
women performing elaborate rituals and the incorporation of
Christianity are just some of the events featured in the event.
The main attraction, however, is the devotion to the Sto. Niño,
patron of Tacloban City.
The Sto. Nino church in Tacloban has thousands of devotees all throughout
the year. It is said that an intercession prayer to the Sto. Nino reaps miracles.
Many such wonder miracles have been attributed to the Sto. Nino by the
locals such as healing, good health, wealth, family, and guidance.
Today, the Sangyaw Festival is a cocelebration of that popular belief by
adjoining with other localities from all over the Philippines to showcase
their rich cultural heritage thru dances and religious pageantry.