27 years
of
Community Service
MUNTING NAYON
News Magazine
Operated by couple Eddie Flores and Orquidia Valenzuela
News and Views of the
Filipino Community Worldwide
The Fluvial Festival of Bicol



By Renato Perdon
Sydney, Australia
September 6, 2015

 
 


Many colourful traditions in the Philippines were inherited from Spain. One of them is the fiesta, usually a celebration of a religious event or to honour a patron saint in the Church’s calendar.

In Naga City, in the southern part of Luzon island, a well known and considered the biggest religious festival in the whole Bikol peninsula, is held in September to honour the Virgin of Peñafrancia.

One story indicated that a student at the Colegio de Sto. Tomas, later the University of Sto. Tomas, suffered a serious illness. He was informed of the miraculous Virgin of Peñafrancia. Reading through all literature about the miraculous image, he became a devout follower of the cult.

Because of his new found belief, he recovered from his illness. As a sign of gratitude, he initiated the construction of two churches to honour the Virgin of Peñafrancia, one in Nueva Caceres, later Naga City, in 1710, and the other in the district of Paco, Manila, in 1712.

Another version is that of a Spanish official who originated from the town of Peñafrancia in Spain where the famous Madonna of Peñafrancia is located.

Like in many religious rituals in the Philippines, the cult of Peñafrancia is not pure Spanish in character. The ancient beliefs of the Filipinos that spirits lived in the river, in the mountains and in the trees became integrated in the church religious rites.

During the pre-Spanish times when people got drowned in rivers, or attacked by crocodiles, or when rivers run out of fish, it was a sign to pay homage to the spirits of the river.

The ancient belief found its ways into the Peñafrancia ritual, a homage to a river for the fiesta of Peñfrancia is basically a rivertine procession.

According to Bikol legend, the first miracle that was attributed to the Virgin was the resurrection of the dog that gave it life to paint her image.

The story goes that the image of the Virgin Mary, the central focus of the fiesta, is a small and crudely carved wooden image. It has a ‘pagan-idol finish stained with blood instead of painted to capture the black image of the Virgin and Child in Salamanca.’ Because of this the dog was resurrected by the Virgin.

Today, the image is richly dressed in gold embroidered silk and has a jewelled crown of gold. It has retained its most distinctive feature, an old dark brown face like the colour tone that is Malayan in appearance, like that of a Filipino’s.

As in other religious rites in the Philippines, the main component of the fiesta of Peñfrancia is a nine-day prayer. The novena is usually timed to make the ninth day falls on the third Saturday of September when the actual feast starts with the transfer of the image from its shrine in the Peñfrancia Church to the Naga Cathedral.


The image is then paraded through the streets culminating in the fluvial processions. Even storm and other natural calamities cannot stop devotees from participating in the fluvial parade when the image is escorted from the Naga Cathedral to a huge pagoda-barge waiting at the southern part of the Bikol river in the city.

The gaily decorated barge is then towed by twenty five to forty dug-out wooden boats. Each boat is rowed by thirty male devotees and prominent townsmen. Like in the Quiapo religious procession in Manila, no women are allowed to participate in this task nor allowed to board the barge for fear that if a woman is on board, the barge with sink.

This belief has been re-enforced when several accidents happened during fluvial procession in the past. Hundred of devotees were drowned when a barge sank and went with it the image and the people on board.

In another disaster, the bridge where the procession would pass under collapsed and many died. All these accidents were blamed on the women who were found on board the barge carrying the Virgin and the Child.

Women’s place in the religious rites was confined along the riverbanks where they recite the prayers and sing festive hymns while fireworks light the skies.

The procession returns to the Church of Peñafrancia where the religious rites end followed by feasting, drinking and dancing that start early in the evening and last the following morning.

Again, this is a feature of the pre-Spanish ritual of the natives. After the morning mass, a community singing and dancing in front of the Church is performed to show the devotees’ gratitude for the blessings before the rice planting starts.

    Tweet
    MoreAustralia and the Changes in Asia
    Renato Perdon

    Foreword: First of a series of articles (by Renato Perdon) , in preparation for the forthcoming observance of the 70th anniversary...
    MoreThe Fluvial Festival of Bicol
    Renato Perdon

    Many colourful traditions in the Philippines were inherited from Spain. One of them is the fiesta, usually a celebration of a religious...
     
    MoreMy 2015 Holiday in the Philippines
    Renato Perdon

    Now being the eldest in the Regino Perdon branch of the Perdon family of Nabua, Camarines Sur, I spent part of my 2015 holiday with the last line members of the Perdon family still living in Caramoan, Camarines Sur. It is this part of the Perdon family that my father, a pioneer educator trained under the tutelage of last batch of the...
    MorePHL CUISINE AND PRODUCTS FEATURED IN MADRID’S 1ST LA NAVIDEÑA CHRISTMAS FAIR
    Department of Foreign Affairs

    06 January 2016 - The Philippine Embassy in Madrid featured Philippine cuisine and products at the first edition of La Navideña Feria Internacional de las Culturas, a Christmas fair organized by the Madrid City Government. 
     ...
     
    MoreThe Hague Chapter (The Netherlands) Celebrates Rizal day at the Philippine Embassy
    Sir Anton Lutter

    The just established Knights of Rizal chapter in The Netherlands celebrated for the first time the Rizal Day ceremony at...
    MoreA LAND TOUR OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA AND NEVADA - (Part 3)
    Mga Gintong Kwento ni Rene Calalang

    FIRST STOP of the second day of the tour was San Francisco, which on our way from the...
    MoreFRIESLAND SWINGS
    Ruth Galura

    Date: April 23, 2016
    Venue: ‘t HARSPIT
    P. Walmastraat 8a-OPPENHUIZEN-FRIESLAND
    THE NETHERLANDS
    ...
    MoreKnights of Rizal-Canada celebrates Dr. Jose P. Rizal 119th Anniversary of Martyrdom
    Jojo Taduran

    FLORAL OFFERING at RIZAL MONUMENT , EARL BALES PARK
     ...
    MoreKNIGHTS OF RIZAL TEXAS AREA COMMAND BORN
    Ben Ongoco

    The Knights of Rizal has evolved a new Area under the U.S.A. Region of Commander Francis D. Sison, KGOR and...
     
    More`CON AMOR’ FOUNDATION B0ARD MEMBERS VISIT PROJECTS IN PHILIPPINES
    By: Orquidia. Valenzuela,  as reported by Myrla Danao

    Businessman Jaap van Dijke, chairman and two board members, Myrla Danao and Dr. John Deen of Con Amor foundation in...
    MoreArt Creations
    Vicente Collado Jr.

    Welcome!

    Many believe formal training is a prerequisite to quality in painting. Not a few will agree with me one can...
    MoreTHE CHILDREN IN DON MANUEL GK VILLAGE
    Orquidia Valenzuela Flores

    Sixty-three children from age three to six years, in the very poor community of Don Manuel village in Barangay...
     
    Disclaimer

    Contents posted in this site, muntingnayon.com, are the sole responsibility of the writers and do not reflect the editorial position of or the writers' affiliation with this website, the website owner, the webmaster and Munting Nayon News Magazine.

    This site, muntingnayon.com, the website owner, the webmaster and Munting Nayon News Magazine do not knowingly publish false information and may not be held liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential or punitive damages arising for any reason whatsoever from this website or from any web link used in this site.