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The Butbut tribe are known as headhunters who resided in villages in Tinglayan, Kalinga. They greatly valued family and kinship ties, with the household and extended family making up important social units. While headhunting is no longer practiced, the Butbut people have maintained their distinct culture, language, and strong communal bonds despite some migrating to other areas. Tattoos held important meanings for the Butbut, with elaborate designs signifying bravery for men and beauty/fertility for women. A peace pact system called Bodong is crucial for managing intertribal relations and preventing conflicts over land and resources.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
713 views5 pages

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The Butbut tribe are known as headhunters who resided in villages in Tinglayan, Kalinga. They greatly valued family and kinship ties, with the household and extended family making up important social units. While headhunting is no longer practiced, the Butbut people have maintained their distinct culture, language, and strong communal bonds despite some migrating to other areas. Tattoos held important meanings for the Butbut, with elaborate designs signifying bravery for men and beauty/fertility for women. A peace pact system called Bodong is crucial for managing intertribal relations and preventing conflicts over land and resources.

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Easter College Incorporated

Easter School Road Guisad, Baguio City


Senior High School Department

In Partial Fulfillment of the Subject

UNDERSTANDING CULTURE, SOCIETY AND POLITICS

Section: Grade 12-Block F

Humanities and Social Sciences (HUMSS)

Submitted By:

Jara Mae U. Sugao Jeff Robert F. Balanay

Submitted to:

Sir Renante Lamoste

December 09, 2019


INTRODUCTION

Do you want to learn more about Buscalan kalinga

Butbut Tribe? Don’t hold yourselves back any

longer. Step into our domain and navigate your

way around our reaction paper for a brief

The Kalinga’s are known as headhunters and they were never under any foreign

rule and during World War II they fought with hatchets and Buscalan is beautiful. In fact,

the name Kalinga, which originated from the Gaddang and Ibanag languages, means

“headhunter”. Grass and local blooms fill its meadows overlooking the expansive

panorama of a pristine terraced hinterland. The practice of headhunting has long been

dead since the 1960s. The new generation of Butbut is gentle, respectful and very warm

to tourists. Many of them go to school but only very few make it to college. Animism was

once a time-honored practice among the Butbuts. They believed that spirits live on trees,

stones and animals. Magical powers from natural elements were believed to cure, protect,

guide or promote fertility. All of these are told in the tattoos on their skins. Christianity may

have been evangelized in the highlands, but these folk beliefs are still silently honored

alongside the modern-day religious practices. The realities of modern times such as the

necessities of education and jobs, assimilation to mainstream lowland societies, the

disappearance of true hand combat warriors and the changing concepts of beauty impact

the tradition of acquiring their customary tribal tattoos. This reality is threatening the Batek

tradition and is feared to end in the hands of its last master artist, Apo Whang-od.

There are five Butbut mountain villages: Bugnay, Buscalan, Locong, Butbut proper,

and Ngibut. There are also several lowland resettlement villages including Ileb, Lacnog,

Pakak, Binungsay, Anonong, San Pedro, Malapiat, and a few mixed villages. Oral history

recounts that the forefathers of the Butbut tribe were originally from a village called Astan

but which is now extinct. When the population grew, they decided to split and two tribes
emerged, the Butbut and Tulgao. The Kalingas are a proud people and well known for

their intricate hand-woven textiles and beautiful and colorful beaded jewelry. In every

celebration, they incorporate dance and traditional music as a form of thanksgiving and

cultural preservation. The Butbut Kalinga reside in Tinglayan, Kalinga. Farming is their

main source of livelihood, as the province has a rugged and mountainous topography.

Sometime in the 1970s, because of economic problems, the Butbut began migrating to

two municipalities up North: in Tabuk and in Rizal. Since then, eight more Butbut

barangays have been established. Despite this out-migration the Butbut people have

maintained their culture, their distinct language, and a strong sense of communal

solidarity. The Butbut people settled in a village now called Butbut Proper. Again, increase

in population caused them to spread out into four more villages or barangays: Loccong,

Ngibat, Buscalan and Bugnay. These barangays form part of the municipality of

Tinglayan.

BODY

Stewardship is everyone’s concern and must be held with action. They have a

reputation for being “the strong people of the Cordilleras.” At the same time, Kalingas

greatly value family and kinship; thus, the household, extended household of the kinship

circle, and territorial region are significant units of Kalinga society. In the past, they gained

leadership and respect through headhunting, along with other skills at which an individual

excelled. Their neighbors and even invaders feared them due to their as headhunters.

Chiefdoms are like bands and tribes in being mostly classless societies. However,

chiefdoms differ in having a permanent, fulltime leader with real authority to make major

decisions for their societies. These leaders are usually referred to by anthropologists as

chiefs. Sometimes there is an advisory council as well, but there is no bureaucracy of

professional administrators.

The government is essentially just the chief. Some of the more advanced

chiefdoms in Africa are an exception in that they have a paramount chief and lesser chiefs

who perform administrative functions. The Baganda click this icon to hear the preceding
term pronounced and Bunyoro click this icon to hear the preceding term pronounced of

Uganda are examples of this. The chiefdoms of ancient Hawaii and elsewhere in

Polynesia were similar in having several levels of chiefs. Chiefdoms also are known

historically from Europe, Asia, the southeastern United States, the Caribbean islands,

Panama, Colombia, and the Amazon Basin of Brazil.

Seniority in kin groups is usually the primary basis for individual status within

chiefdoms. The chief is at the top of the kinship hierarchy. Other people are commonly

ranked in terms of their genealogical distance from the chief. Subsequently, there is a

keen interest in maintaining records of descent from important family ancestors.

CONCLUSION

The butbut tribe have the reputation of being the strong people of cordilleran. They

greatly value Kinship thus, the household, extended household of the kinship circle, and

territorial region are significant units of Kalinga society. They would cut off their enemies’

heads and as a reward they would be inked with magnificent tattoos that exude valiance

when they return triumphantly to their village. The females also received tattoos as a rite

of passage and symbol of beauty. Their tattoos transform girls into women; the women

thereafter become eligible for marriage and bearing children. The more tattoos women

had, the more attractive they were to the men in the village. One of their leaders was

Macliing Dulag and he was called the father of the tribe in which he was the one who

fought for the Chico Dam project but then he was killed by Philippine Military. Butbut is

represented in the formal government structure by elected officials with assistance from

respected elders.

Bodong, known as the Peace Pact system, defines intertribal relationship. The

Peace Pact is very important because of intermittent tribal wars among the different tribes

which are caused by land dispute, killings, and water rights. The elders of the family who

holds the Bodong is responsible to maintain the peace between the tribes. These

centuries old practice of revenge-killing has kept the Butbut people under the bondage to

fear. Currently there is tribal war going on between Butbut and a neighboring tribe.
REFFERENCES

Lewis, M. Paul (ed.), 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Sixteenth edition. Dallas,

Tex.: SIL International. Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com/.

CCP Encyclopedia of the Philippine Art. Volume II: Peoples of the Philippines Kalinga to

Yakan. 1994. Manila: Cultural Center of the Philippines.

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