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Friday, April 19, 2024
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HomeFeaturesBeyond balyena and uga: The Cadiz Ati-atihan in full color

Beyond balyena and uga: The Cadiz Ati-atihan in full color

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“Dagsa” in Hiligaynon means a lot of things.

It can mean “a lot” or “abundance.”

dinagsa 2020 feature image

In the case of Cadiz City, it can refer to the landing of whales on its shores, the abundance it is now enjoying, and the waking up of a city amid the challenges it has faced brought by the turbulent political and economic times.

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And recently, a storm.

“Nagdagsa diri ang mga balyena,” older residents of this second-class city in the north would tell visitors, referring to the 1960s event when several humpback whales got beached on the shorelines of Cadiz.

Variety of dried fishes, also known as "Uga", segregated according to their species at Cadiz city public market. | Photo by Richard Meriveles
Variety of dried fishes, also known as “Uga”, segregated according to their species at Cadiz city public market. | Photo by Richard Meriveles

That was the second dagsa.

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A century before the whales, it was the Spaniards who came in droves. In 1861, the metal-clad conquistadores arrived on what was then a small settlement on the banks of the Hitalon River, according to city government research.

The Spaniards, far from home, called the settlement Cadiz. It reminded them of a city of the same name in Sain that was also located in the north.

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Cadiz was not even a town yet. It was just one of the villages of Saravia (now EB Magalona), already a town then.

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In less than two decades, Cadiz became a munisipyo, the people elected Antonio Cabahug as its first official, then called gobernadorcillo, an article on the Cadiz Eco Center website said.

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Julius D. Mariveles
Julius D. Mariveles
An amateur cook who has a mean version of humba, the author has recently tried to make mole negra, the Mexican sauce he learned by watching shows of master chef Rick Bayless. A journalist since 19, he has worked in the newsrooms of radio, local papers, and Manila-based news organizations. A stroke survivor, he now serves as executive editor of DNX.
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