From the pages of history of the middle 18th
century, it was discovered that the ancient name of Padre Burgos was “Matnog”, a
name which means “marshes and swamps”. Matnog was a sitio of Lungsodaan, once a
barrio of Municipality of Malitbog but presently is under the jurisdiction of
Municipality of Padre Burgos. Matnog was the humble and peaceful home of early
Burgosanons. It was the place where early settlers dreams of a better and
prosperous life. However, when the population increased and new people from
neighboring places kept on pouring in, it was agreed by the local folks to
transfer the heart of the barrio to Matnog, where it has a wider and bigger
area than Lungsodaan. The early and original settlers of Matnog, whose
influence and efforts, made the transfer possible. It would be noteworthy to
mention, in stating the names of Gabriel Gilles, Venancio Leyson, Santiago
Palermo Sr., Bernabe Telen, Cirilo Leyson and the Naronas. These original and
dominating families worked, labored and left no stone unturned for the
expansion and growth of the barrio.
When
Venancio Leyson became the barrio Capitan, he changed the name of Matnog into
“Tamolayag”, a corruption name of “Tana Molayag” which literally means “Let’s
sail”. It was not just an ordinary expression but an alarm against the brutish
Moro pirates. It was on this time where Moro piracy was on its height. Moro
pirates are Muslim people who swept and raided coastal barrios and towns of
Sogod Bay and brought havoc and untold miseries upon its inhabitants. Because
of this rampant piracy, Capitan Venancio constructed a watchtower which they
called Moro watchtower, situated in Lungsodaan, to warn his people of the
approaching Moro pirates. During Moro raids, bamboo gongs were sounded and
people upon hearing it shouted “Tana Molayag”, immediately jumped into their
sailboats and without fear sailed toward Panaon Island where they hide themselves
in dense jungles for safety.
During
the Spanish campaign against Moro piracy, Capitan Venancio requested an
audience with the Spanish Comandante Politico-Militar (Spanish
Political-Military Commander) of Leyte in the person of Honorable Vicente Sanz
Cantero. He brought with him the pile of rights ears and presented it in front
of the Spanish authorities. The Spanish Comandante was amazed of the pile of
Moro’s right ears and greatly admired his utmost valor against the fanatical
Muslims. Because of Capitan Venancio’s valor acts, a ceremony was held by the
Spanish Comandante in front of a pyramid-shaped monument in honor to him. In
addition to his recognition, the Spanish Comandante profoundly and gratefully
announced before the cheering crowd the change of the family name of Capitan
Venancio, from Leyson to Piramide, a name which symbolizes bravery and solidity
of purpose as solid as a pyramid-liked statue.
In
the last two decades of the Spanish sovereignty in the Philippines, barrio
Tamolayag just like any other part of the country did not escaped the abuses
and discriminations of the Spanish government. Forced-labor was a very evident
example of the abuses of the Spanish colonialism at that time. The Filipinos
were forcibly employed in cutting of timber, in the construction of churches
and convents, in the construction of ships and in the digging of the canals.
Santa Sofia Canal, aside from being a pride of the barrio, was a living
testament of those abuses.
Capitan
Venancio received orders from the Spanish authorities to construct through
forced-labor the Santa Sofia Canal located in the southern tip of the barrio.
In terms of trade and commerce, the digging meant prosperity, safety and
economy. Boats and bancas going in and out of Sogod Bay could safely pass
through this canal instead of sailing around the Tangkaan point where the
current of which is very strong and a danger point for navigators. Thus, saving
time, money and effort. The canal also offers a safe anchorage for bancas and
other small vessels in times of typhoons and bad weathers. Despite of all this
advantages, the practiced of forced-labor cannot be put out of sight and was
all the more unjust because of the inadequate pay, which amounted only to four
reals a month, equivalent to two pesos today. Frequently, the small sum never
reached the hands of the laborer. Several people from Maasin to Hinunangan
including those from the towns of Panaon Island did not escaped from these
abuses and were forced to work in the digging of the Santa Sofia Canal on rotation
basis, until the canal was completed and ready for navigation purposes.
However, as time passed by, the canal was left neglected. It became
non-navigable because it is irretrievably sealed by monsoon deposits of gravel
and sand. Only the surfaces of the indigenous flat land reveal the canal route.
Santa Sofia canal was a smaller version of the Suez and Panama canals. If it
had been fully developed and adequately preserved, it would have attained
attractions.
In
the 19th century, during the incumbency of Capitan Narciso Piramide,
the son of Capitan Venancio, for the third and last time changed the name of
the barrio, from Tamolayag to Padre Burgos. He chose the name in honor to Padre
Jose Burgos, a Filipino priest and martyr, who champion and devoted his life for
the cause of filipinization of all parishes and to give way or opportunity for
the Filipino priest to handle and led parishes and dioceses.
It
was this time, when Burgosanon faithful experienced friar abuses. The local
church was under the mother church in Malitbog, managed by the regular orders. It
was a daily burden for the early Burgosanons in every time where there is a
mass conducted in the local church. One example of these abuses was according
to the early Burgosanons, when a mass is about to be celebrated in the barrio,
the Spanish friar will not say the mass unless the faithful will carry him on a
bamboo-made lifter from Malitbog to Padre Burgos. It was a sad experience in
the spiritual aspect of the early Burgosanon faithful whose desire is to receive
the good news of the Savior’s love to the world.
During
these years, the barrio was nurtured and nourished by the guiding hands of the
mother municipality of Malitbog, grew and progressed gradually by leaps and
bounds. Inhabitants got higher in number. Farming and fishing was the prime livelihood
of the Burgosanons. The economic condition at that time was improving and
education and cultural strides of its inhabitants steadily progressing.
It
was this time, when the leaders of Padre Burgos started to work up for the
political independence of the barrio. A dream of self-governance and self-determination
from the discriminations of other neighboring barrios and municipalities. The dream
for the political emancipation of the barrio began in 1920. Reverend Father
Arsenio Japson, an Aglipayan priest, was sent to Manila to request an audience with
the late Congressman Tomas Oppus to file a bill leading to the creation of the
barrio of Padre Burgos into a town. The following year, a three-man delegation
was formed to make further representation before the Leyte Provincial Board in
connection with the possibility of making Padre Burgos a municipality. The three-man
delegation was composed of Mr. Pedro Piramide Sr., a Vice-Mayor; Mr. Desiderio
Orquez, a Municipal Councilor; and Atty. Santiago Palermo. The three-man
delegation, except Atty. Palermo, went to Tacloban and conferred with Honorable
Vicente De la Cruz, then the Provincial Governor of Leyte. The mission,
however, was a failure because the papers containing all the necessary
requisites of a municipality, entrusted in the hands of Atty. Palermo, did not
reach the office of the Provincial Governor. The sadder news was the papers
were nowhere to be found.
Aside
from the failure of the mission of the three-man delegation, the aspiration for
political independence died out when World War II erupted. But after the
Philippines liberated by the Americans, Mr. Teodorico Esclamado and other
prominent Burgosanons founded Saint James Academy (SJA), the shout for the
independence of Padre Burgos again surged in the lifeblood of every Burgosanon.
Presently,
Padre Burgos comprises the barrios of Poblacion, Sta. Sofia, Buenavista,
Tangkaan, Cantutang, Lungsodaan, Dinahugan, Sto. Rosario, Bunga, San Juan and
Laca.
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Padre
Burgos is a place of remembrance. A municipality with a rich heritage, culture
and the arts, and a paradise which every Burgosanon must be proud of.
References: (For further reading)
1. Southern Leyte Province Inaugural Souvenir
Program, 1 July 1960
2. “Southern Leyte: The People, the Land and the
Sea of First” authored by Joaquin Gonzales Chung Jr., Copyright 1997
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