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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Posts: 369
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Hi Tagalanao,
Welcome!! ![]() I wish u the best in the forum and in life. Really nice photography u got there. Thanks for sharing the photos and i agree with nechesh, u have a high skill in photography. Regards, Rasdan |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 221
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Welcome Bobby T, its been a long time since we communicated so its good to find you hear. A great friend of mine is from Marawi and some day I'll make it out there again to the majestic sites, perhaps cross paths with you on the way. btw Lake Lanao is at a high elevation and enjoys a cooler climate also worth checking out the museum at MSU Mindanao State University.
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#3 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oahu, Hawaii
Posts: 166
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Welcome Bobby, I enetered the forum much as you have after much lurking and studying, It has fired a passion in me that I didn't know I had.
Iligan you say, we still fly supplies in there for our guys on the ground in Marawi. Just returned from 7 months in the Philippines and was lucky enough to get to Mindanao twice. First time to Marawi and a smaller town on the east coast of Lake Lanao called Tampuran. The second time all the way down in Lanao Del Sur in a little town called Malibang. At a function in the Town of Tampuran I was talking to HRH The Sultan of Butic Nash Adur and he told me there was an American living near there that was trying to write a history of Mindanao. I have a contact to some professor there I'll try and dig up and send you. Loved the photos- phenominal. Probably a smart choice to get out of the journalism field also considering your geography. Favorite memory of those trips (besides the people) was flying over (helo) what we thought were birds but soon realized was a school of flying fish in the middle of Lake Lanao Again Welcome Dan |
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Singapore
Posts: 84
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Thanks for the photos. I'm delighted to see the traditional handicarafts still being produced, and with good quality. Don't see that kind of quality nowadays.
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: zamboanga city, philippines
Posts: 132
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bobby,
welcome to the forum. i wish the other lurkers who are also based in mindanao will join us here. for the benefit of all here is a simple road map of mindanao. when i was still with the government, i took several trips from zamboanga to iligan via public bus. travel time was over 14 hours. general tip for blade hunting: maranao and maguindanao pieces are found starting from iligan city going to the east. tausug, samal, and yakan pieces are found in areas west of iligan city, starting in the city of pagadian going south. carlo |
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#6 | ||
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Lanao, Philippines
Posts: 37
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Quote:
October last year, for a photo assignment in the Zambo-Basilan-Tawitawi area, I tried the Iligan-Zamboanga bus, leaving Iligan at 1a.m. It was torture! I promised myself never to take that trip again until the roads are paved. On my way back home, I tried my usual route - fly from Zambo to Cebu, then take the boat to Iligan, or Cagayan de Oro.Coz of the picture I've acquired driving all over Mindanao through the years, I've started work on this Mindanao photo gallery ... www.thelandofpromise.com ... in the hope that I can sell prints. But I haven't updated it yet in 2 years, and couldn't get the time to put shopping carts. Quote:
Bob |
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#7 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Lanao, Philippines
Posts: 37
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Dan,
Wow, your troops in Marawi! I did see a few of them last month, when US Embassy folks asked me to use some of my pictures for a photo exhibit on Muslim Life at the King Faisal Mosque compound also inside the Mindanao State University campus. There were some US soldiers, too. You got the names of towns wrong. Must be difficult for an American ear to get the spellings right. Hehe ... It's Tamparan, not Tampuran. Malabang, not Malibang (and don't ever say you're going to Malibang, coz you'll hear everybody laugh!). Butig, not Butic. This used to be site of a big camp of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), next only in size to the central headquarters in Matanog in Maguindanao. I've visited the camp a few times doing journalistic work.I've ridden on a helo, too, crossing Lake Lanao. This was during the war in Lanao in 2000, as I actively covered it for a Manila paper as the hostilities started in the town of Kauswagan in Lanao del Norte, just 15 minutes from my home. We could feel the ground shaking when Air Force planes drop bombs in Moro rebel strongholds. AFAIK, American troops were actively involved in Lanao in the early 1900s, led by Pershing. I heard there was fierce fighting in the coastal town of Bayang in Lake Lanao, similar in scale as those in Bud Dajo and Bud Bagsak of Sulu. Bobby T. Quote:
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Witness Protection Program
Posts: 1,730
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bobby,
thanks for the pics!!! love that sarimanok! just wondering tho; did you take those pictures of moro weapons inside the museum? if so do you have close-ups of those sandatas. would be nice if you can post them as well .as you can see, the majority of us can just dream of being there. maybe the next time i'm there we can hook up? once again, i truly appreciate you finally becoming a member of this forum. also, thanks for that little bit of history... |
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#9 | ||
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Lanao, Philippines
Posts: 37
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![]() If you open Cato's book, I personally know some of the people mentioned in the Preface. Jam Maridul is a Tausug who studied at the Mindanao State University in Marawi at the same time I was in college at MSU's Iligan campus. Cesar Padilla is publisher of the Mindanao Scoop, a weekly paper in Iligan that I edited from 1998-2003. Al Quirante, I accompanied him in coverages to Marawi when I was starting out in journalism in the late '80s fresh from college. He taught in Marawi in the 60s and 70s, I think, and thus fluent in the Maranao dialect. Maybe if I were here in Iligan when Cato visited Lanao, I may be in his Preface, too. I started as a journalist here in Lanao in '87 until '92, then moved to Manila to write for a daily paper (if you heard about the Philippine Daily Inquirer) and to be with my wife, who was taking her residency and fellowship at a hospital in Manila. We came home in '97, and I resumed covering Lanao.BobT |
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#10 |
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EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,342
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Love the pictures, Bob, especially of the museum goodies. Are there closeups of the kampilans?
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#11 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 221
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Quote:
After my stay, part of my exhibit ended up at Capitol University in Cagayan de Oro, if you get a chance to visit, there's old photographs and a chronicle of the fighting throughout the occupation. Can you post a nice pic of the lake overlooking the MSU campus? |
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#12 | ||
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Lanao, Philippines
Posts: 37
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Quote:
I swore I won't go back to that place again as I experienced the scariest moments of my life there. ![]() Quote:
But I oblige, coz if there's someone to be warned by the mods, it should be Mabagani being the senior member. Hehehe ...Top photo is the view of the lake from MSU's golf course. 2nd pix downtown Marawi taken from the same angle. 3rd is the famous "Sleeping Lady," the mountain across Lake Lanao, which can also be viewed from MSU on a cloudless day. Bob |
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#13 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 221
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#14 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oahu, Hawaii
Posts: 166
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Bob and Mabagani, Thanks for the corrections, seems like every map I read has a different spelling for the town names and trying to keep up with baranguays was a full time task that I never mastered.
I had known of the museum at Marawi through this forum and it was the one stop I really wanted to make, unfortunately due to time constraints and political sensitivities I was not allowed access to the town of Marawi itself, maybe someday when I'm a civilian. Magabani, you make good points about previous US involvement in Mindanao, I just gave a short class to my guys that are scheduled to rotate down there about the proud history of the Mindanao peoples and the complicated interactions of all the stakeholders down there. I can only hope that it prepares them to be sensitive to all sides of the issues that they will have to deal with. The trepidation of US involvement, due to past history, was evident in most conversations I had with local officials. My dearest hope and the goal of our involvement there is to help create stable economic development and convince everyone (local and AFP) that a government responsive to the needs of its people is a must regardless of who's in charge. Of course I always threw in references to the incomparable craftmanship found no where else in the world, in the hopes that the old traditions and weapons will not die out. I found in all my conversations that the history I learned through this forum and simply knowing the correct terms for things immediately elevated my credibility both with the locals and the AFP. Thank you all for that. Dan |
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#15 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Lanao, Philippines
Posts: 37
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Quote:
http://www.timonera.com/pix/movimondo.zip BobT |
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#16 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 221
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#17 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Posts: 369
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Way to go Marco!!
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#18 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Lanao, Philippines
Posts: 37
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Quote:
Here's a virtual tour of the Aga Khan Museum at the Mindanao State University campus in Marawi, to those who haven't gone there yet. There's also a museum at the Xavier University in Cagayan de Oro (1.5 hours away from Iligan, opposite side of Marawi, where Mabagani once taught, though in a different university) with Moro weapons. |
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#19 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Oahu, Hawaii
Posts: 166
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Welcome Bobby, I enetered the forum much as you have after much lurking and studying, It has fired a passion in me that I didn't know I had.
Iligan you say, we still fly supplies in there for our guys on the ground in Marawi. Just returned from 7 months in the Philippines and was lucky enough to get to Mindanao twice. First time to Marawi and a smaller town on the east coast of Lake Lanao called Tampuran. The second time all the way down in Lanao Del Sur in a little town called Malibang. At a function in the Town of Tampuran I was talking to HRH The Sultan of Butic Nash Adur and he told me there was an American living near there that was trying to write a history of Mindanao. I have a contact to some professor there I'll try and dig up and send you. Loved the photos- phenominal. Probably a smart choice to get out of the journalism field also considering your geography. Favorite memory of those trips (besides the people) was flying over (helo) what we thought were birds but soon realized was a school of flying fish in the middle of Lake Lanao Again Welcome Dan |
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