All About the Philippines. Gidget Roceles Jimenez

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       The Bahay Kubo

       Growing Up in Luzon

       Mary’s Everyday World

       Growing Up in the Visayas

       Jaime’s Everyday World

       Growing Up in Mindanao

       Ari’s Everyday World

       Games We Play Together

       Why Can’t You Take a Bath on Good Friday?

       Family First!

       Fiesta!

       A Royal Reunion

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      Mabuhay! Welcome!

      Meet Mary, Jaime and Ari

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      My name is Mary Ong. My skin is pretty fair and I have straight black hair and almond-shaped eyes. I live in Mandaluyong City on Luzon, which is the largest Philippine island. My dad’s ancestors were Chinese merchants who first came to the Philippines more than 1000 years ago! My mom is descended from a tribe called Ifugao, who are famous for building the rice terraces in northern Luzon.

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      My name is Jaime Lopez. I have big round eyes and a pointed nose and light brown hair. I live in Cebu, one of the main islands in Visayas. My dad’s ancestors go all the way back to the Spanish explorers that came to this country to claim it as a colony and spread Christianity.

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      My name is Ari Abaza. I have curly black hair and my nose is kind of flat. I live in Zamboanga City on the island of Mindanao, which is where you’ll find most of this country’s Muslims. My dad is descended from Arab missionaries who came to the Philippines more than 700 years ago.

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      Together, we are a perfect blend,

       just like the Filipino people.

      So many different people make up this country—Malayo-Polynesians, Chinese, South Asian and Arab people who came looking for places to settle and trade. Spanish explorers and American soldiers also came here looking for spices and new lands to conquer.

      It’s no wonder that our country is known as a land of many different faces, a mix of different sorts of people who are all Filipinos.

      Ancestral Voyages

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      The Philippines is an archipelago, which is a group of islands that form a single country. It is believed that the Philippines’s first settlers were descended from mainland Asians who migrated to Taiwan thousands of years ago. Over time, their descendants developed strong seafaring abilities, eventually sailing from Taiwan to the Philippines, Indonesia, Borneo and Malaysia. With so much nautical skill spreading out over the region, trade and migration grew quickly. That’s how it all started.

      By the 10th century a steady trade route had opened up from India to China. Business boomed. Chinese and Arab traders came to trade exotic new goods and to settle on the islands. They brought new customs, languages and religions to the region.

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      The Barangay Outrigger

      A Barangay was a large wooden outrigger that carried the Malayo-Polynesian peoples to the islands. These boats were big enough to carry extended families of a hundred people! The families settled along coasts and riversides all across the islands. The word Barangay now refers to a small community, like a village or neighborhood.

      Chinese Junks

      Chinese merchants and traders came in their large Junk boats carrying porcelain vases and plates, silks, artillery, incense and tin. Some stayed to create market places where they could sell or trade their goods.

      Arab Dhows

      Arab traders came in their smaller Dhow boats, bringing with them linens, wool and metal items. Traveling with them were Muslim missionaries who married local women and spread Islam to the people living in the area.

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      Ferdinand Magellan

      In 1519, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan traveled east to find the Spice Islands for Spain. Two years later he sailed with his four remaining carracks onto Philippine shores to replenish supplies in the hopes of finishing his journey.

      During their short time on the island of Cebu, Magellan and his men converted many of the island’s people to Christianity. But many from the surrounding islands resented these foreign visitors and their Spanish King, Charles I.

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      Hostility turned into battle, and Magellan and many of his men were killed. Magellan’s ships never reached the Spice Islands, but the accounts of those who made it back to Spain paved the way for conquest and colonization forty years later.

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      In 1556, the archipelago fell completely under Spanish rule and became known as the Philippines. For 330 years the islands were forced to accept Spain’s king, religion and culture as their own. Today, long after Spanish rule, much of Spain’s influence is still part of everyday Filipino life.

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      American Warships

      On

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