This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 26, August 7-13, 2005
The Holok: An Indigenous Pest
Control System in Ifugao
BY MONTAŇOSA RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT CENTER Part 2:
Contemporary Holok Practice Religion has greatly
contributed to the deterioration of traditional rituals and practices associated
to agricultural production. When Christianity first entered the holok region,
some mombaki were still able to perform the indigenous rites. But during
a sudden growth of Christian faith in the area, indigenous religion became
associated with evil. Some bulol or Ifugao rice god icons were gathered
and burned. Even the holok was
not spared. In 1987, Umanhan, then bumhat and a mombaki, performed
the traditional holok. The catechists urged the people not to use the
holok because it was created through a system that called upon more than one
God. Umanhan used the holok and was one of the few who harvested rice
during that year. Unfortunately, Umanhan died shortly thereafter.
During the same period,
members of a fundamentalist religious sect based in Cababuyan challenged the
traditional farmers that the holok could be effective even without the
accompanying ritual. To prove their point, they collected the same species of
plants, processed it the traditional way, and applied it to the rice crop. To
their great disappointment, the holok did not kill the pests.
Nevertheless, they argued that the holok ritual remains a part of an evil
system that must be stopped at all cost. Through the use of kinship influence,
they persuaded the lone mumbaki left in Cababuyan not to perform or teach
the holok ritual to interested parties lest his soul will burn in the
fires of hell. The holok still
persists with major changes. One significant development is the growing
involvement of women in the system. Traditionally, women had no role in the
holok and the various roles vital to local culture, such as leadership and
technological knowledge, were always transmitted through men. Today, a woman is one of
the more active guardians of the holok. During his last years, Umanhan
was too weak to go to the forest and search for plants. He sent his niece
Ginnamay to cut the plants for him. After Umanhan passed away, Ginnamay began
taking on a more active role in the holok. She helped the bumhat
gather plants whenever a holok was needed. She memorized the location of
the rarer plants. She also memorized new places where other plants grew.
Ginnamay is probably the first of the line of Nalidong to establish a garden for
some of the plants for the holok. Plants for the Holok The plants needed for the
holok include trees, lianas, shrubs, tubers, cacti, ferns, sedges, and grasses.
These plants grow at elevations of about 800 to 900 meters above sea level.
Almost all of the plants for the holok can be found in the communities
and woodlands of Hingyon. The rarest plant is the hanakteh, a liana which
was last seen in Nuntungod, a settlement in Banawe. Almost all holok
plants exude odor which, when combined together, was so intolerably
overpowering. Although this was considered the primary basis for selection, some
plants were included because of their medicinal, toxic and extra-ordinary
properties. For example, the bungoh
was included because it was proven through experience that it could ward off
snakes. It was the same with the bolwang which is used to kill fleas and
lice. Other plants were chosen because of a special function they perform. For
instance, the ferns and cacti excrete a sticky sap which acts as a binder that
prevents the holok from being scattered by wind. The number of plants used
varies according to availability. Sometimes the bumhat would innovate and
include a new kind of plant which he believes will be helpful. A bumhat
has included the palawel, a flowering ornamental plant found in some
houses in the region. There will be problems with
the availability of the plants due to the lack of a system for preservation. A
bumhat have just realized the need to raise some of the plants after the
natural habitat of many of these plants is being threatened by agricultural
expansion and logging. For example, the hanakteh which increases the
potency of the holok, was seen in 1993 in the forests close to Halong,
Mompolia. The site has since been cleared to make way for a sports comples. The effects of the growing
unavailability of the plants are becoming felt. A bumhat in Hingyon
Poblacion, which has jurisdiction over the site where the Billidan grows
is beginning to prohibit bumhat from other villages from cutting the
plant. It is generally accepted that the billidan, a liana, is the most
active ingredient of the holok. Challenges The major hindering factor
in the performance of the holok is the attached ritual which faces
enormous challenge and condemnation from church leaders and members. Although
improbable, its practice demands reverence just like any other religion around. Meanwhile, scientific
endeavors today are geared towards modernizing pest management through the use
of chemical pesticides. There is a need to study the holok system (sans
ritual) to prove its scientific basis as an alternative low-cost approach.
The plants are known to
thrive in many Cordillera areas and proving their pesticidal properties would
promote the holok system, maybe not as complicated and spiritual as the
original practice, but in the simplest and most effective manner that is open
for innovations by adaptors. Moreover, forested areas
are rapidly thinning due to over cutting for shelter and agricultural purposes.
Some of the more potent ingredients of the holok are now endangered due
to destruction of habitat. It is vital to preserve the remaining forest, not
only for the holok plants, but to maintain the diverse flora. There is also a need to
study the possibility of domesticating the wild plants for easier accessibility.
However, it is also necessary to include in the study the structure of the soil
and the environment where the plants grow. It was related by a bumhat
that the pagge-pagge, which only thrived in a certain area, lost its
potency when transplanted in the vicinity of O-ong. Lastly, it is imperical to
protect the holok plants from biopiracy through legislative and
appropriate actions. Nordis / Posted by Bulatlat
Part 1: Rice,
Pests and Ifugao Gods © 2004 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
Pest management in the
Cordillera came from extensive practical and traditional knowledge developed
over years of observing natural processes. Called Holok, it entails
comprehensive understanding of the entire rice production system and makes use
of more than 20 indigenous plants.
Northern Dispatch (Nordis)
Posted by Bulatlat