Manlilikha ng Bayan Salinta Monon
Manlilikha ng Bayan Salinta Monon
Tagabawa Bagobo Textile Weaver
Bansalan, Davao del Sur
101st Birth Anniversary
(b. December 12, 1920 – d. June 4, 2009)
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December 12 – MB Salinta Monon Birth Anniversary
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[Official] Salinta Monon 100 Stamp Design
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[Official] First Day Cover Design
In commemoration of Manlilikha ng Bayan Salinta Monon’s 101st birth anniversary today, the #NationalMuseumPH pays tribute to her contribution in the preservation and transmission of Bagobo weaving heritage. Salinta Monon learned how to weave the inabal from her mother at the tender age of 12. She and her younger sister are the only Bagobo weavers left before her passing in 2009.
In the Bagobo society, the inabal (ikat-dyed woven abaca (Musa textilis) cloth) are considered as symbols of wealth, offerings to deities, and gifts to those who officiate rituals. These finely woven fabrics become ikut or sacred objects when inherited and used as protective charms that guarantee completion of houses.
Manlilikha ng Bayan Salinta Monon is known for the quality of her work and the intricacies of her designs. She had mastered one of the most difficult and favored designs, the binuwaya (crocodile). Her meticulousness in weaving enabled her to easily identify the designs, as well as the weaver of a particular piece at a glance. Upon receiving the Gawad sa Manlilikha ng Bayan in 1998, she helped establish the School of Living Tradition in Bansalan, Davao del Sur, where she taught the art of weaving to the younger generations in her community.
In 15 January 2021, President Rodrigo Duterte signed Proclamation No. 1076, declaring 12 December 2020 to 11 December 2021 as the “Centennial Year of Manlilikha ng Bayan Salinta Monon” for her unwavering dedication and commitment to her craft by fully demonstrating the creative possibilities of Bagobo inabal at a time when such art was threatened to extinction. A sample of her work is exhibited at the upgraded Manlilikha ng Bayan Hall, National Museum of Anthropology and her backstrap loom will be displayed at the Hibla ng Lahing Filipino featuring Lumad Textiles at the Eastern Northern Mindanao Regional Museum in Butuan City.
#MuseumFromHome
#ManlilikhaNgBayan
#GAMABA#SalintaMonon
Text and poster by the NMP Ethnology Division and NCCA GAMABA Executive Council
© The National Museum of the Philippines (2021)