Wisdom from the bamboo
PLANT
BAMBOOS by the riverbanks to prevent erosion.
So
the Pampanga Bamboo and Rattan Center enjoined local government units along the coastal towns. Even as it boasts of
having planted no less than 22,000 bamboo propagules all over the province, the
council targets 5,000 more in August in celebration of the Bamboo Day
Celebration which has been appropriated some P1 million by the provincial
government.
Bamboo
propagation has received a big boost with the Pampanga Agricultural College chosen
as a pilot area for a 10-year research project supported by the United Nations
Development Program.
Rivalling,
if not surpassing, the coconut as a “tree of life” for its myriad use, it gives
us much pleasure now that the bamboo is getting the attention and importance it
deserves.
Why,
I would even go for the bamboo as national plant, not simply for its being the
main component of the national house.
But for its thatched roof of nipa fronds, everything else in
the bahay kubo is made of bamboo –
from rafters to posts, from ceilings to walls – of sawali, down to the slatted floor.
Which manifests the wisdom of the early Filipino home
builders, cool bamboo as building material being most appropriate for the hot tropics;
the bahay kubo on bamboo stilts best
to survive the periodic inundations from the swollen rivers in the rainy
season.
Bamboo went beyond building material in Filipino life, at
least the life we – the 50s plus-plus generations – knew and lived.
The bamboo took a central role in our community
life
The defining spirit of Filipino communal unity
and cooperation – the bayanihan –
is bamboo-based. Here, the whole community helped a family relocate by carrying
their whole house, with bamboo poles placed length-wise and cross-wise under
the house floor, borne on the shoulders of men, the women following with pots
of cool water and ladles for drinking.
The bamboo is celebrated in Filipino folk dances, from tinikling to singkil. And in song, the most famous being Lawiswis Kawayan – the sound produced by the bamboo leaves when
blown by a soft breeze as backdrop to a lovers’ tryst. Originating from the
Waray region, the song spread throughout the islands.
In my youth in the somnolent town of Sto. Tomas, the bamboo played
as great a role as the guitar in haranas or serenades. Once the serenaders were seated
at the balkonahe, the father of the
girl ceremoniously accosted them with the cryptic: “Nanung mitulak kekayung mipadalan king kakung hardin (What moved
you to pass by my garden)?”
To which the guy a-courting replied: “Keni la pu makayungyung deng kwayan (It is here where the bamboos
leaned to).”
In the absence of parks, much less motels, the bamboo groves
did indeed make the perfect lovers’ lanes, the lawiswis of the leaves enhancing the romantic ambience.
The same bamboo groves though were made the source of
children’s fears by our parents who wanted us not to loiter around during the
night, the lagitik or crackling sound
produced by bamboos hitting each other as they swayed to the wind said to be
the voices of the tiyanak (dwarves)
and other laman-lupa (enchanted
creatures) who feasted on the innards
of children.
Come to think of it, maybe our parents just did not want us
to see forbidden things at the bamboo groves that could have abruptly ended our
age of innocence.
Our elders made the bamboo as an object lesson in humility
too: “Anti ka mong kwayan, kabang
susukdul ka banwa king ketasan lalu kang duruku king gabun a kekang tatalakaran
(Be like the bamboo, the higher you rise to the heavens, the more should
you bow toward the earth upon which you stand).”
Keep yourself always grounded. That was what the maxim was
all about.
More adages about the bamboo followed us through college –
Bruce Lee revealing the bamboo as one principle of his jeet kune do: “Notice that the stiffest tree
is most easily cracked, while the bamboo or willow survives by bending with the
wind.”
The dragon there sharing a
Buddhist teaching: "Be like bamboo. It is strong on the outside and
soft and open on the inside. The stem stands freely in the wind and bends, it
does not resist. What bends is harder to break."
The
bamboo well taken on a high philosophical plane there. A source of wisdom deserving indeed of the title national plant
or tree.
So
what words of wisdom have you heard lately of other trees and plants?
Uh-oh:
“Oo, inaamin ko, saging lang kami. Pero
maghanap ka ng puno sa buong Pilipinas, saging lang ang may puso! Saging lang
ang may puso! (Yes, I admit, we are only bananas. But search all trees in
the whole Philippines, only bananas have hearts! Only bananas have hearts!)”
Oh
please, have a heart.
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