Bambanti showcases Isabela's produce, food, people
Angelo G. Garcia
Posted at Feb 03 2018 09:00 AM
ILAGAN, Isabela -- It's festival season once again and almost every province, municipality, and city in the Philippines is busy putting on a show. Some of the biggest festivals in the country like Cebu's Sinulog and Iloilo's Dinagyang recently ended their celebrations with the usual showstopping and colorful street dance parades.
Another festival that recently showed off its cultural legacy is Isabela province's Bambanti Festival. It's one of the biggest festivals on the island of Luzon. This year, with the theme “Isabela Kong Mahal,” the festival showcased the best of its local produce, food products, people, and destinations.
Bambanti translates to scarecrow, which is a symbol of the province's main industry—agriculture. Isabela is the leading producer of corn in the country. It's also one of the top provinces that produce rice, mung beans, and other local produce.
The festival celebrates the province as a powerhouse in the agricultural sector as well as it rich culture, history, and like any other festival in the country, its Catholic faith.
Bambanti Festival was founded by former governor Benjamin Dy in 1997 but was stopped for several years before current governor Fasutino Dy III revived it in 2011. Since then, the festival has won several awards including the Hall of Fame in the national festival competition Aliwan Fiesta and and Aliw award for Best Festival Practices and Performance.
This year's week-long celebration comprised of several events, including Bambanti Festival King and Queen pageant, Bambanti Village fair, cook fest, choral competition, grand concert, and the highlight of the festival, the street dance competition. All of these festivities were held in Isabela's capital city, Ilagan.
Street dancing
The street dance competition was held at the Isabela Sports Complex and with a total of 22 participating groups. Some of the judges of the contest were Ricardo Eric Cruz, chief culture and arts officer of the Cultural Center of the Philippines; Prof. Lordinio Vergara, director of the Center for Culture and Sports Development of Philippine Normal University; dance artist Nonoy Froilan; and designer Albert Andrada.
The competition was divided into two categories: Street Dance and Dance Showdown. Each participant prepared a street dance routine performed on the sports complex's oval track and a dance showcase on the main stage.
The contingent from Alicia show off their winning routine.
The municipalities of Alicia, Ramon, and city of Cauayan won first, second, and third respectively in the Best Street Dance Contingent category. The municipality of Alicia also won first prize in the Best Dance Showdown Contingent category while the municipality of Luna and Cauayan city won second and third respectively.
“ISABELA KONG MAHAL” TOP BILLS BAMBANTI FESTIVAL 2018
Jerny Destacamento
FEBRUARY 1, 2018
The annual Bambanti Festival is back this year with the warm yet vibrant theme “ISABELA KONG MAHAL” (Isabela, My Beloved Land), committed to showcasing the ardent love of Isabeleños for their land of birth.
Bambanti Festival: Isabela Kong Mahal
Organized by the Provincial Government of Isabela, the Bambanti Festival is a tourism, trade, and environment project aiming to develop, promote, and market Isabeleños’ world-class indigenous products, lifestyle, merchandise items, and cuisine as the pride of place.
Bambanti Festival 2018, celebrated from January 22 – 27, focuses on Isabeleños’ warm traits for their beloved land, care and protection for their national resources and environment, love and respect for the culture, history, and heritage of the community, and consistent efforts for a sustainable agriculture and all other industries.
The theme “ISABELA KONG MAHAL” depicts Isabeleños strong commitment to their beloved land and outstanding virtue of hard work, proudly sharing to its visitors how their family-inherited traits contributed to the fast-growing socio-cultural and economic development of the province through various creative concepts and images.
“Bambanti” is an Ilocano word for a scarecrow, which the province considers as protection despite the common notion that it arouses fear. Created with colorful straws and grasses wrapped in farmer’s clothing, bambanti has always been the icon and mascot of the festival.
In Photos: Stars at the Bambanti Festival 2018
Alexa Villano @alexavillano
Published 2:50 PM, January 29, 2018
McLisse, Ogie Alcasid, 4th Impact, and Jona entertain the province of Isabela during the annual Bambanti Festival.
ALL TOGETHER NOW. Ogie Alcasid, McLisse, and 4th Impact rock the Isabela Sports Complex during the Bambanti Festival. All photos by Rob Reyes/Rappler
ILAGAN, Isabela – The people of Isabela were treated to a night of entertainment on Saturday, January 27, at the closing event of the Bambanti Festival.
Bambanti, which means scarecrow, is the province's festival that celebrates the richness of its agricultural industry.
In attendance at this year's Bambanti were Ogie Alcasid, Jona, and the tandem of McCoy de Leon and Elisse Joson, who gamely sang and dance with the Isabeleños at the Ilagan Sports Complex.
Setting the Limelight to Isabela's Bambanti Festival 2018
http://www.gastronomybyjoy.com
SUNDAY, JANUARY 28, 2018
There is one thing Isabeleoñs are undeniable about, their ardent love for their Motherland.
Ergo, the annual Bambanti Festival was again live this year, in all its vibrancy and warmth of welcome bearing the theme “ISABELA KONG MAHAL” (Isabela, My Beloved Land).
Organized by the Provincial Government of Isabela, the Bambanti Festival is a tourism, trade, and environment project aiming to develop, promote, and market Isabeleños’ world-class indigenous products, lifestyle, merchandise items, and cuisine as the pride of province.
Bambanti Festival 2018, celebrated from January 22 – 27, focuses on Isabeleños’ warm traits for their beloved land, care and protection for their national resources and environment, love and respect for the culture, history, and heritage of the community, and consistent efforts for a sustainable agriculture and all other industries.
The theme “ISABELA KONG MAHAL” depicts Isabeleños strong commitment to their beloved land and outstanding virtue of hard work, proudly sharing to its visitors how their family-inherited traits contributed to the fast-growing socio-cultural and economic development of the province through various creative concepts and images.
‘Bambanti’ isn’t just the Ilocano word for scarecrow
Apart from being the Ilocano word for scarecrow, Bambanti is also the name of the award-winning annual festival of Isabela Province. Of course it makes sense that the colorful Bambanti is the mascot and icon of the Bambanti Festival, which begins today January 22 and end on Saturday, January 27.
With events like are street dances, showdown competitions, street performances, a search for Bambanti Festival King and Queen, and the most important – at least in our book – the Isabela’s Master Kusinero Cooking Contest, Bambanti Festival aims to highlight the province’s rich cultural heritage, lifestyle, products, and food.
Taking home the Best Festival Practices and Performance Aliw Awards from 2015-2017, it’s safe to say that the local government of Isabela has been doing a good job.
From last year’s “Isabela Para sa Daigdig”, the theme for this year's Bambanti Festival is “Isabela Kong Mahal”, depicting Isabeleños’ ardent love for the love of their province. — LA, GMA News
Queen’s province celebrates the scarecrow
Although named after a Spanish queen, the province of Isabela celebrates yearly the lowly scarecrow, which despite being inanimate, has been a “friend” to farmers in many parts of the world, including the Philippines, for generations.
The scarecrow or bambanti in Ilocano, the predominant language in the second northernmost province, has been the low-technology protector of farmlands from birds that would otherwise devastate agricultural crops.
Not surprisingly, for Isabela, self-proclaimed center of agriculture in the country, the bambanti represents the best of the province and her people—silent but vigilant and resilient.
The Agri-Ecotourism Fair this year was participated in by majority of Isabela’s 34 municipalities and three cities, including the capital Ilagan.
Isabela enthusiastically pursues the one town-one product (OTOP) campaign initiated by then President Fidel V. Ramos.
This was evident in the offerings of every booth in the agri-ecotourism fair including chocolate-scented pinilisan red rice, corn (Isabela is reputedly the country’s corn capital), sugar, cacao, monggo and other legumes, mushrooms, mangoes, ube, and various rice cakes.
The distinctive products of each town were also showcased in the giant bambanti that “guarded” the agri-tourism booths. Beans and legumes, rice, corn, seashells and many other materials went into the making of the different scarecrows, depending on the main crop or product of the town or city they represented.