Group: | Blaan |
Total: | 373,392 |
Total Year: | 2020 census |
Total Source: | Census |
Total Ref: | [1] |
Popplace: | Philippines: Soccsksargen, Davao |
Region1: | Sarangani |
Pop1: | 120,954 |
Ref1: | [2] |
Region2: | Davao del Sur |
Pop2: | 89,949 |
Ref2: | [3] |
Region3: | South Cotabato |
Pop3: | 48,391 |
Ref3: | [4] |
Region4: | General Santos |
Pop4: | 20,769 |
Ref4: | [5] |
Region5: | Sultan Kudarat |
Pop5: | 9,078 |
Ref5: | [6] |
Region6: | North Cotabato |
Pop6: | 5,988 |
Ref6: | [7] |
Region7: | Davao City |
Pop7: | 3,285 |
Ref7: | [8] |
Langs: | Blaan, Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Filipino |
Related: | Lumad, Visayans, and other Austronesians |
The Blaan people,[9] are one of the indigenous peoples of Southern Mindanao in the Philippines. Their name could have derived from "bla" meaning "opponent" and the suffix "an" meaning "people". According to a 2021 genetic study, the Blaan people also have Papuan admixture.[10]
The Blaan are neighbors of the Tboli, and live in Lake Sebu and Tboli municipalities of South Cotabato, Sarangani, General Santos, the southeastern part of Davao and around Lake Buluan in North Cotabato. They are famous for their brassworks, beadwork, and tabih weave. The people of these tribes wear colorful embroidered native costumes and beadwork accessories. The women of these tribes, particularly, wear heavy brass belts with brass "tassels" ending in tiny brass bells that herald their approach even when they are a long way off.
Some Blaan natives were displaced when General Santos was founded in 1939. Others settled in the city.
Their language is said to be the source of the name for Koronadal City, from two Blaan words – kalon meaning cogon grass and nadal or datal meaning plain, which aptly described the place for the natives. On the other hand, Marbel, which is another name for the poblacion, is a Blaan term malb-el which means "murky waters" referring to a river, now called Marbel River.
The tribe practices Indigenous rituals while adapting to the way of life of modern Filipinos.[11]
Relations with settlers and their descendants are not always harmonious; settlers reportedly clashed with some Blaan natives in March 2015.[12]
See main article: Blaan language. Blaans speak their native language of the same name. However, over the decades, Blaans can speak and understand Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Tagalog and to the some extent, Ilocano, alongside their own native language. These languages were brought and introduced by these settlers from Cebu, Bohol, Siquijor, Negros, Panay, Tagalog-speaking regions, Central Luzon and Ilocandia, upon their arrival into Blaan homelands during the early 20th century. [13]
Some of the deities in the Blaan pantheon include:
The Blaans have a system of weaving using abaca fiber.[14] The art of abaca weaving is called or, while the cloth produced by this process is called the tabih.[15]
Blaan weavers do not use spinning wheels. Instead, they join together by hand strands of the abaca fiber, which are then used to weave the tabih.
Fu Yabing Dulo was one of two surviving master designers left of the art of weaving. Estelita Bantilan, who was given the National Living Treasures Award in 2016, is a master weaver of traditional mats known as igêm.[16]
The Blaan have a tradition of creating art from brass and copper.[17] The Blaan smelt brass and copper to produce small bells and handles of long knives. These knives, called the fais, are made with intricately designed brass.
The Blaan also sew plastic beads or shell sequins to create intricate designs on women's blouses and trousers, called the . Geometric and other designs depicting the environment or the solar system are sewn using cotton yarns onto men's pants and shirts, called the .
The Blaan tribe at the foot of Mount Matutum Protected Landscape, scour, for half a century its forest slopes to collect the nocturnal revered Paradoxurus, "Philippine palm civet"'s defecated poops. Their conservation promotes livelihood from the prized wild civet coffee, called "balos" where a cup costs $80 in United States markets. Sitio 8 village, Barangay Kinilis, Polomolok is famous as a civet coffee-producing settlement.[18]