Dumaguete Info Search


The Folklore on the Maya and the Philippine Eagle

Discussion in '☋ General Chat ☋' started by Travel Guide, Dec 6, 2007.

Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
  1. Travel Guide

    Travel Guide DI Member

    Messages:
    106
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Ratings:
    +3 / 0
    The Philippines has been making headlines in world affairs ever since the EDSA Revolution in 1986. When the national bird was changed from the Maya to the Philippine Eagle around that time, a local folklore ran among common folks explaining how the title was transferred. The folklore avers that the Philippines now has the prophetic role of sharply foreseeing and signaling a new turn of events.

    Both the Maya and the Philippine Eagle being popular in the Philippines, there was a time when the two birds were said to have vied for who would be the national bird. The folklore went around the country of who among the two native birds had the best ability and argument for being enthroned as the country’s national bird.

    For a long time, the Maya---a small bird found everywhere in the archipelago---used to be the national bird. The Maya enjoyed the uncontested title and many folks have learned to love the small bird as the country’s symbol for freedom. The folklore goes that Maya birds are best kept outdoors because keeping them in cages shortened their lives. Several times, some folks tried to sell them in bamboo cages to amused kids, dying their feathers in bright colors, but to no avail. So, the folklore likened the freedom loving birds to the freedom loving spirit of Filipinos who, though weak and small in stature, were able to gain and sustain their freedom through their history.

    One day the Maya and the Philippine Eagle met, says the folklore, to assess the country’s standing in regional and world affairs. The Maya could only comment on local developments, able to fly only within the country’s borders. The folklore narrates that to the Maya’s eyes, the country was still the same---it still had 7,100 islands---and was likely to be the same in the coming years. But the eagle’s sharp eyes could see beyond the country’s boundaries and commented that the Philippines had become a relevant link to the southeast.

    Seeing how far-sighted the eagle was, and how much have actually changed in the areas outside its range of vision, the Maya mused and then turned to the eagle. “I think it’s time to give the Philippines a new vision and symbol in these modern times,” the Maya said. So the folklore thus explains how the Maya turned over the throne to the Philippine Eagle. However, the folklore is quick to add that the eagle was emphatic of the fact that the Maya had, for a long time, inspired the small and weak nation during the two great wars, resulting in the emergence of great heroes. The Maya looked afar and sighed, saying how everything grand begins with small things.

    The folklore maintains that national symbols are a shadow of things to come. Thus, the folklore believes that the time for the Philippines has come.
     
  2. RHB

    RHB DI Senior Member

    Messages:
    744
    Trophy Points:
    168
    Ratings:
    +19 / 2
    What "folklore"? How about a reference. Can we assume this is folklore is unrelated to politics? 1986 seems hardly long enough ago for this to be otherwise.
     
  3. chrissar

    chrissar DI Senior Member

    Messages:
    676
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Ratings:
    +9 / 1
    We've heard from our tour guide ( Dolphine Watching) that Philippine's national bird is no longer Maya but instead it changed to Philippine Eagle. Is this true?
     
Thread Status:
Not open for further replies.
Loading...