Pondol
is a rural coastal barangay situated
west of Balamban. Its terrain is characterized by flatlands and scraggy hills.
It has a total land area of 578 hectares. It is bounded by Aliwanay &
Cambuhawe on the north, by Cansomoroy on the east, by Abucayan on the south,
and by the Tañon Strait on the west.
It
is politically subdivided into ten (10 sitios, namely: Menteryong Daan, Pundok,
Kabitoonan, Centro, Bung-aw, Sam-ang, Katunggan, Ibo, Lamac, and Tubod.1
NAME-ORIGIN
AND BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BARANGAY
There
several places in the Visayas which bear the name of Pondol like a barangay in
President Roxas, Capiz; a barangay and a city in Southern Leyte; and two
barangays in Loon and Jagna, Bohol.
Based
on the intonation and accent of the local dialect of the barangay, it could be
well-established that the early settlers of the place were migrants from Bohol.
In history, influx of migrants coming from Bohol to Cebu had proliferated during the time of Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. Though Bohol migrants had migrated to Balamban since the latter part of the 16th century particularly in Arpili and Abucayan who probably had expanded to some parts of Pondol, it would be very probable that Pondol was only established as a barangay in the early 1900’s after the arrival of migrants from Loon, Bohol, particularly from a barangay named Pondol, who had escaped away from the cruelty of the Americans who had burned down 20 pueblos to subdue the alleged remaining members of an anti-American movement in Bohol. Corroborating with this was the fact that the barangay’s annual fiesta celebrated last June 4, 2011 was considered as its 95th fiesta celebration; hence, the local church must had been established in 1916. The presence of a church with its own patron saint in the barangay could mean that it was a separate entity from the municipality.
In history, influx of migrants coming from Bohol to Cebu had proliferated during the time of Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. Though Bohol migrants had migrated to Balamban since the latter part of the 16th century particularly in Arpili and Abucayan who probably had expanded to some parts of Pondol, it would be very probable that Pondol was only established as a barangay in the early 1900’s after the arrival of migrants from Loon, Bohol, particularly from a barangay named Pondol, who had escaped away from the cruelty of the Americans who had burned down 20 pueblos to subdue the alleged remaining members of an anti-American movement in Bohol. Corroborating with this was the fact that the barangay’s annual fiesta celebrated last June 4, 2011 was considered as its 95th fiesta celebration; hence, the local church must had been established in 1916. The presence of a church with its own patron saint in the barangay could mean that it was a separate entity from the municipality.
The
said migrants from Pondol in Loon, Bohol had probably named their new home
after their original home. Pondol in Loon, Bohol was named after “pundok-pundok”, “pundo-pundo” or “pondol”,
a description of the place which has several “lawis” or points jutting out into the sea; or after “tubig nga gapundo”, or pools of stagnant
water found in the place. The earliest settlement of the said migrants must be
Sitio Pundok since aside from the similarity of its name from the name-origin
of Pondol in Loon, Bohol the oldest shallow water well of the barangay was
located there. Early civilizations flourished near a freshwater source since
potable water was the prominent basic need.2
However,
there are certainly a lot of oral traditions espousing the origin and creation
of the barangay. One version tells of the first settlers noticing plenty of
trees standing tall but without leaves and branches. These trees were presumed
to have withered and died as a result of a catastrophic climactic event like a
strong typhoon. Other folks also narrated that this barangay may have
experienced grave infestations by virulent insects that viciously attacked the
trees and other vegetations causing them to go bald and leafless. As a
consequence, the barangay was initially named Pugdol, meaning leafless and branchless and was later named Pondol.
Another
version speculated that the barangay was named after the winter melon, Benincasa hispida, which is also called
variously as white gourd, ash gourd, wax gourd, or Chinese watermelon and
locally as ondol, gondol, and kondol. It is a vine grown for its very large fruit, eaten as a
vegetable when mature. The fruit is fuzzy when young. The immature melon has
thick white flesh that is sweet when eaten. By maturity, the fruit loses its
hairs and develops a waxy coating, giving rise to the name wax gourd, and
providing a long shelf life. The melon may grow as large as 80 cm in length.
Although the fruit is referred to as a "melon," the fully grown crop
is not sweet. Originally cultivated in Southeast Asia, the winter melon is now
widely grown in East Asia and South Asia as well.
In China and Taiwan, the winter melon is used to make soup in the same way as daikon radishes, and is often combined with pork or pork/beef bones.
In North India and Pakistan, the vegetable is used to prepare a candy called Petha.
In South Indian cuisine, it is used to make curries. Occasionally, it is used to produce a fruit drink which has a very distinctive taste. It is usually sweetened with caramelized sugar, which enhances the taste.
In Southeast Asia, the drink is widely marketed as winter melon tea.
In China, the winter melon is dried and sweetened and eaten at New Year festivals. In China and Taiwan, it is one of the bases of mooncake for the yearly Moon Festival. The winter melon requires very warm weather to grow but can be kept through the winter much like winter squash. The winter melon can typically be stored for 12 months. The melons are used in stir fry or to make winter melon soup, which is often served in the scooped out melon, which has been intricately decorated by scraping off the waxy coating. The shoots, tendrils, and leaves of the plant may also be eaten as greens.
In China and Taiwan, the winter melon is used to make soup in the same way as daikon radishes, and is often combined with pork or pork/beef bones.
In North India and Pakistan, the vegetable is used to prepare a candy called Petha.
In South Indian cuisine, it is used to make curries. Occasionally, it is used to produce a fruit drink which has a very distinctive taste. It is usually sweetened with caramelized sugar, which enhances the taste.
In Southeast Asia, the drink is widely marketed as winter melon tea.
In China, the winter melon is dried and sweetened and eaten at New Year festivals. In China and Taiwan, it is one of the bases of mooncake for the yearly Moon Festival. The winter melon requires very warm weather to grow but can be kept through the winter much like winter squash. The winter melon can typically be stored for 12 months. The melons are used in stir fry or to make winter melon soup, which is often served in the scooped out melon, which has been intricately decorated by scraping off the waxy coating. The shoots, tendrils, and leaves of the plant may also be eaten as greens.
Other
version said that Pondol was a coined word from “pondok sa doldol” (a group of silk-cotton trees). The Silk Cotton
or Ceiba Tree, Ceiba pentandra, is
one of the largest trees in the American tropics. It is a rapidly growing
deciduous tree that reaches heights of 80 feet or more, and a diameter of five
to eight feet above its buttresses. The buttresses themselves can be up to ten
feet tall and extend ten feet from the main trunk. The tree has a broad, flat
crown of horizontal branches. The leaves are compound with five to eight
lance-shaped leaflets that are three to eight inches long. From December to
February the tree produces numerous five-part whitish to pink flowers which
occur in dense clusters and bloom before the leaves appear. The tree produces
three-to-six-inch long, elliptical fruits. These fruits contain many seeds
surrounded by a dense mat of cottony fibers. The tree gets its common name from
these fibers which rain from the tree when the fruits ripen. The fibers are
almost pure cellulose, buoyant, impervious to water, and have a low thermal
conductivity, but they do not lend themselves to spinning. Called Kapok in Asia, the fibers are used for
insulation, padding in sleeping bags and life preservers, stuffing mattresses
and pillows, and in making floss. The leaves and bark of the tree can be used
medicinally. In Suriname's traditional medicine, the seeds, leaves, bark and
resin, from the kapok tree are used for: dysentery, fevers, venereal diseases,
asthma, menstruation bleedings and kidney diseases. Silk cotton wood has been
used to make coffins, cricket bats, and much earlier, canoes. The round seeds
of the silk cotton, the size of peas, are eaten on the Indonesian island of
Celebes. The seeds also yield kapok
oil, used in making certain edible products and in the production of soap. The
ground seeds are used in animal feed. Java is the main supplier of kapok to the
world.
Occasionally
homeless people live in the trunks of silk cotton trees, finding shelter from
sun, rain and wind in the hollows between the buttresses growing from the
trunk. Other creatures, notably snakes, sleep under the silk cotton and even
lay eggs there.
The silk-cotton tree is often associated with the supernatural.
In Africa, the silk-cotton tree is also considered sacred. It is said that
sleeping on pillows made of kapok cotton will bring good luck, purify and
empower your material and spiritual energy and bring good dreams and saintly
vibrations. Slaves brought to the Caribbean often slept on mattresses and
pillows stuffed with kapok. Interestingly enough, this custom was often shunned
by white planters and plantation overseers who believed that sleeping on kapok
pillows brought about nightmares.
In Puerto Rico the tree was often planted in
the center of plazas for shade, and it is considered a valuable honey tree.
The silk-cotton
tree has long been considered sacred by the indigenous peoples of America.
The
Mayans believe that the silk-cotton tree, which they call ceiba (the Spanish name for canoe), is the tree of life whose
roots extend to the underworld and whose branches hold up the heavens. It is
often planted in the center of their plazas and villages and is rarely cut down
even if it happens to be in an inconvenient location. In others, before cutting
down a silk cotton tree village folk would pour a libation on its roots or
ceremonially make an offering of corn, or sacrifice a chicken.
The Taino also
had a spiritual relationship with the silk-cotton tree. Because of its great
size, its tendency to grow straight, and because the wood is soft and more
easily worked using primitive stone tools, the silk-cotton tree was chosen to
make the great canoes used by the Taino to travel from island to island. Before
cutting down a silk-cotton tree, the Tainos needed a sign that the tree spirit
was amenable to being transformed. According to Taino myth, the tree would talk
to the woodsmen and tell them if it was all right to cut it down. The tree spirit
would also specify how it would like to be carved and painted. Those who were
involved in chopping down these trees would then have a life-long
responsibility to care for the transformed spirits and to make offerings to
them. In some Caribbean countries, the silk cotton tree is called the “god
tree’ or the “devil tree.”
In Guyana, it has been called the “jumbie tree.” The
tree has been regarded by some as having a soul or a resident spirit. But it
was most often it is considered to be associated with the souls of the dead,
living possibly in its roots and branches.
In the 19th century it was common to
find people who would affirm that silk cotton trees could, of their own accord,
move about and gather together as if to consult one another. In Trinidad, there
were huge silk cotton forests. These forests were frequented by followers of
the Rada Cult of Belmont who worshipped Damballah, the great snake god, and
the silk cotton tree at Belmont Circular Road was the subject of many strange
stories. According to legend, Gang Gang Sara, the African witch of Tobago,
climbed a silk cotton tree in Les Coteaux and tried to fly back to Africa. She
forgot that because she had eaten salt (reminiscent of the ol’ higue or hag or sucouyant) she could no longer fly. Gang
Gang Sara died instantly. Her grave is one of the tourist sites in Tobago.
Obeah men claimed to be able to cast a spell by driving a nail into a silk
cotton tree, then call on an evil spirit to cause someone’s soul to leave his
body and live in the tree. Picton, the British Governor of Trinidad from 1797
to 1802, had most of these silk cotton trees cut down because they were frequented by
the practitioners of “native arts.” In Jamaica, it was said that the Spanish
would bury treasure under a silk cotton tree then kill the slave who buried it,
so that the slave’s spirit would guard the treasure and no one would dare dig
for it. The same story is told in Guyana, except that it was the Dutch, rather
than the Spanish, who would use this method to guard treasure. The Halfway
Tree, which gave its name to a district in Kingston, was a silk cotton tree
which dated from the British Conquest of 1655 and survived until the late 19th
Century. Port of Spain occupies an area
that was once called “Cumucurapo” –
the place of the silk cotton trees. This name was recorded as Conquerabia by
the Europeans. Likewise in Balamban it was believed that an image of the Señor
Santo Niño could be found inside the silk-cotton tree if it would be cut open
vertically at the center. Hence, the said tree is believed to have a miraculous
healing power especially to insane person who would be tied on it for a whole
day under the hot yellow sun.
It is noteworthy to notice that in Sitio
Menteryong Daan there is still a few number of silk-cotton trees growing. The
said sitio was used to be an old Spanish cemetery connected to the poblacion
with a Spanish bridge that was made of blocks of stones. The said bridge was
popularly known as “taytayan sa Katsila”,
the same name applied by the local folks to a newer bridge built parallel where
it used to be. Both the said bridges where associated with legends about a
ghost of a Spaniard who was said to haunt a lone passer-by in the silence of
the night and lure him to his destruction. The souls of those lured passers-by
would then be taken accordingly to a convention of opías, the spirits of the dead, in the cave near the Cambuhawe
Spring. According to the Spanish belief, one could identify opías because they lacked navels similar
to elemental spirits called by the natives as “dili-ingon-nato” (not like us) who are said to be identifiable due
to the absence of a lip canal. The said ghost was said to be the soul of a
Spanish guard of the old Spanish bridge who used to play “dama”, an Arabian chess which became a favorite past-time game
among early Cebuanos, with a passer-by or of a Spanish cacique (a landlord) who used to collect tolls from any passer-by at the Spanish bridge when he was still
living. Looking at this angle, it was very possible that Pondol during the
Spanish time at the latter part of the 19th century was not yet a
barrio but part of the poblacion and only served as a cemetery for the
Spaniards which was separate to a public cemetery for the Balambanganons at Baliwagan.
Aside
from the silk cotton trees, local cotton plant known as Gapas tuod (Gossypium arboretum or Gossypium herbaceum) was said to
grow abundantly in Pondol. Hence, since the Spanish period a viable
loom-weaving industry already existed in the barangay. The local women of Pondol
used the large looms introduced by the Spaniards in loom-weaving even until
today.
Nevertheless,
it had been observed that even the pre-hispanic women of Balamban had already woven
their own clothes. Based on archaeological findings, it was found out that the
early Cebuanos wore clothes made of the barks of certain trees, as evidenced by
the bark beaters in local archaeological sites, especially those which have
been untouched by looters, as in Camotes. Later, they learned to strip the skin
of the trunk of the abaca plants to extract the fiber and make abaca cloth.
Still later, they started to spin thread from the local cotton plant, as
evidenced by the finding of spindle whorls in archaeological sites.
The
export of high-grade cotton cloth became a large-scale industry in Cebu,
especially in the southern towns. It appears that merchants from Cathay
(China), Cipangu (Japan), and other Southeast Asian countries such as Siam
(Thailand), Annam (Vietnam), and Champa, as well as Arab countries, regularly
travelled to this island in their trading ships to barter their goods with
those of the natives.
This
explains the presence of beautiful porcelainware from China, Thailand and
Vietnam included among the bahandi interred
with the bodies of local residents in pre-Hispanic times, as well as other
items not produced here.
Unlike the large loom
which was introduced by the Spaniards, pre-Hispanic Cebuanas used a simple
backstrap loom, which many tribals in the Cordilleras of the north and the
remote areas of Mindanao are still employing at present.
This
loom was handier, since it could be simply attached to a beam inside the house,
or a sturdy branch of a tree in the yard in fine weather. The weaver simply sat
on the floor of the house, or on a smooth rock in the yard, with the strap of
the loom circling her back (thus the term “backstrap loom”) as an anchor.
To
dye their abaca or cotton cloth, the residents used natural substances: red was
extracted from the bark of such trees as sibukaw,
blue from indigo (tagum), yellow from
duwaw or turmeric, orange from a
native saffron called kasuba, and
black from a kind of black soil.1
EQUI
FRILI BRIUM
Dr. Hilario Camino Moncado del Prado (middle) in Berlin |
During
this period he traveled extensively. One of his Mystic and Psychic Masters
accompanied him through India, China, Japan, Korea, Africa, New Zealand,
Borneo, Sumatra, Java, Celebes, Australia and the entire Philippine
archipelago. He had an elder sister named Macaria Del Prado who owned two ships
the Augusta and the Benedicta which she used for travel and
trading purposes around the world. She received a certificate as the first
woman navigator of the world. Dr. Hilario Camino Moncado Del Prado spoke 11
languages fluently like his sister Macaria. He could also speak and understand
three Filipino dialects; Hiligaynon, Tagalog and Ilonggo. He never used
tobacco, drugs or alcohol. He was a great pianist and a dancer, he always
attended and participated all of Zarsuela shows conducted by his sister Macaria
Camino DelPrado.
Dr.
Hilario Camino Moncado Del Prado was the owner and editor of Filipino Nation, a
semi-monthly Filipino magazine published in English. The Filipino Nation
magazine was established in Los Angeles, California on November 1, 1924. He was
the only Filipino to be ever listed in the billionaire's association in America
and in Europe. In 1932, he wrote “World Travel memories and America, the
Philippines and the Orient”. In 1934, he was Commissioned Brigadier General of
the National Volunteer as an Officer of the Commonwealth of the Philippines.
During that year he wrote “Women's Suffrage”. In 1935, he was one of the delegates
to the 1935 Constitutional Convention.
In
August 1941, Dr. Hilario Camino Moncado Del Prado went to the Philippines via
Honolulu, in order to run for President. He told his members that if they heard
information that he was dead, they should not believe it. He said that he did
not expect to win and that soon after election the Japanese forces would take
over the Philippines and the President - elect would run out of the country. He
predicted that the Japanese could not hold the Philippines for more than three
and a half years or 42 months. It indeed, came true! As soon as the Japanese
forces entered Manila, the capital of the Philippines, they arrested him for
being pro - American and put him in prison. Not only that, they tortured him
and confiscated his car and his house because they claimed that the money he
used to buy those properties was from America. It was not enough that they
killed people on the way. In Intramuros, there was a deep well where the
Japanese army threw Moncado to its bottom together with other Filipino
captives. They poured gasoline into it and put it on fire.The soldier were
dancing around the glassy well. Dr. Hilario Camino Moncado Del Prado believed
that if he had no power, he would have gone forever due to that incident.3
At
present the Church of Equi Frili Brium is standing at Pondol. Its followers are
called Moncadistas. Not very far this church also stood the churches of Aglipay and Iglesia ni Cristo.
Although
Pondol is predominantly Roman Catholic it caters freely different faiths and
religions. It is even a haven of most faith healers famous in the town among
ordinary people.
EDUCATION
Pondol
has one public elementary school named Cornelio Melgar Elementary School after
the donor of the school site and one private elementary school, the Little
Angels Montessori. The current Assistant Schools Division Superintendent of
DepEd-Cebu Province, Dr. Gregorio Cyrus R. Elejorde, is hailed from this
barangay.
ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
There
is lot of stores selling motorcycles, spas, pizza houses, apartelles, and
boutiques sprouted recently at an area opposite the house of its current
barangay captain, Hon. Bernabe “Thymus” V. Gonzalez Jr., who is also the
current ABC President of Balamban and who also served as Sangguniang Bayan member of Balamban for three terms. There is also
a gasoline station of Petron in Pondol.
Pondol
also caters a lot of beach resorts but the most famous is the Costa Roca
Resort, which was formerly known as Binghay Marine Mark, which is owned by
Msgr. Binghay.
The Costa Roca has the advantage of easy accessibility from the poblacion. It has a well-kept restaurant that serves delicious food, and the facilities are so designed that many people have used it for parties and other occasions. But what makes it more attractive is its close proximity to a very clean mangrove stand and the invigorating, unpolluted sea breeze that sweeps through it.
In
general, Pondol is a highly residential area. Binghay Residences is among them.
It is where Mayor Ace Stefan V. Binghay, Hon. Dave John B. Karamihan, and their
respective families are residing in. Most of the middle and upper classes of
the town are residing in Pondol.
On
the other hand, the common people living in the barangay are mostly living on
fishing and farming while most of those who have graduated high school are now
working at the shipyards either at Arpili or at Buanoy.1
Thank you for this, this help me a lot since we have a homework about the history of pondol but I have no one to interview about it. 💯
ReplyDeleteMe too
DeleteI can't believe that the Pondol is very historical, it's very helpful to me since my studies is all about history of where I was born
ReplyDeleteThanks for these useful info it helps me little bit but I want to know the background story of Captain Thymus
ReplyDeleteThank you so much out this inflrmation, how about its barangay captain?
ReplyDelete