Aboitiz Power invests $220M in Vietnam coal power plant

AboitizPower Corp. is bringing its expansion drive abroad with a $220-million investment to acquire a 25-percent interest in a Vietnamese firm that operates a 1,320-megawatt coal-fired power facility.

The equity stake in Van Phong Power Co. Limited (VPCL) would be purchased from Sumitomo Corp., the energy giant said in a disclosure on Thursday.

The plant, which began its commercial operations in January 2024, has an existing 25-year power purchase deal with Vietnam’s national utility, Vietnam Electricity.

It said the Van Phong 1 coal-fired power plant has the capacity to cover about 4 percent of Vietnam’s annual gross power generation. The facility is also considered the largest foreign-invested project in the Van Phong special economic zone.

Chaising sustainable returns

‘This marks a pivotal moment in AboitizPower’s history as it represents the company’s first significant investment outside of the Philippines,’ the company said in a separate statement.

‘With this venture, AboitizPower remains on track to deliver sustainable returns to its shareholders, maintaining a well-balanced portfolio of energy technologies. This investment is in parallel with our renewable investment program .,’ it added.

Sumitomo, one of Japan’s conglomerate titans, has already signed the necessary agreements linked to Aboitiz Power’s acquisition. But the firm said the transaction still needs to secure regulatory approvals.

Once finalized, the Japanese group will continue to hold the majority stake in VPCL.

In May, Sumitomo disclosed that it would cut its equity interest in the coal plant, making VPCL an equity-method affiliate.

The Japanese company assured the public and investors that it would ‘continue to provide stable energy supply that is essential for the economic and industrial development of local communities.’

Japanese partner

Aside from energy, Sumitomo’s empire covers transportation, automotive, urban development, media and digital, steel, lifestyle business, mineral resources and chemical solutions.

On Wednesday, Aboitiz Power said its core net income had dropped by 15 percent to P23.1 billion, due to the full impact of depreciation and interest costs for GNPower Dinginin Ltd. Co.

Weaker spot market prices also offset the improvements recorded in power sales volume.

The company has business in power generation, distribution, retail electricity services and distributed energy. Its power generation portfolio includes both renewable and nonrenewable generation plants.

Aboitiz Power is the leading power generator in the Philippines as of first half of the year, with a market share of 23.86 percent in the national grid, based on data from the Energy Regulatory Commission.

MMDA: Asphalt overlay works on Quezon Ave. set for Nov. 1 to 30

Asphalt overlaying activities will be conducted along the eastbound lane of Quezon Avenue from November 1 to 30, every 11 p.m. to 5 a.m., the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) said on Friday.

MMDA, in a statement posted on its social media pages, said that the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) will do the asphalt overlaying over a portion of Quezon Avenue, specifically a few meters past Scout Chuatoco Avenue and Scout Santiago Street.

This means that the asphalt overlay would cross past the Timog Avenue intersection.

‘The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) will undertake asphalt overlay activities along Quezon Avenue Eastbound (from fronting Geomachine Co., to corner Sct. Santiago St.) starting tomorrow, November 1, to November 30,’ MMDA said.

‘The activities will be done during nighttime only, from 11 p.m. until 5 a.m. Motorists are advised to take alternate routes,’ it added.

Quezon Avenue is one of the major thoroughfares in Metro Manila that was subjected to road reblocking after streets were damaged due to successive typhoons during the southeast monsoon season.

According to the MMDA, 19 road sections in Quezon City, Caloocan, and Makati were reblocked from September 26 to 29

Boracay lights up for Halloween

The island famous for its beaches and nightlife has transformed into a spooky paradise this weekend as Boracay celebrates Halloween 2025 with a lineup of themed parties, trick-or-treats, and entertainment events organized by hotels and resorts across the island.

According to the Malay-Boracay Tourism Office, more than 20 establishments are hosting Halloween activities under the Boracay Halloween Pocket Events 2025, including the Dia de los Muertos Halloween Fiesta at Shangri-La Boracay, The Grand Grim Hotel at Le Soleil de Boracay, Alien Invasion at Discovery Shores, and Haunted Jungle at Club Tropicana.

The municipal government of Malay said it is coordinating with resort operators and tourism establishments to ensure public safety and order while supporting local tourism.

Visitors are advised to respect the island’s environment and regulations, follow resort rules, avoid bringing prohibited items, observe noise curfews where applicable, and engage in responsible tourism practices. The LGU reiterated its commitment to sustainable and regulated tourism on the island.

The timing of the Halloween festivities coincides with the observance of Undas (All Saints’ and All Souls’ Days), when Filipinos traditionally visit cemeteries to honor their departed loved ones. For Boracay, this long weekend brings a blend of leisure and reflection, with hotels and resorts catering to both partygoers and visitors seeking quiet remembrance.

Local tourism officers said this dual celebration highlights Boracay’s evolving identity-a destination that embraces both vibrant festivities and cultural observance, proving that even the country’s party capital can balance revelry with respect

MTRCB summons Viva after content creator cursed agency at ‘Dreamboi’ premiere

The Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB) has summoned Viva Communications Inc. to a dialogue following the circulation of a viral video showing one of its content creators uttering profane remarks directed at the agency during the premiere of ‘Dreamboi,’ an official entry to the CineSilip Film Festival 2025.

MTRCB said the talent content creator’s remark was disrespectful to the institution and to the people behind the Board’s work.

In a letter dated October 23 and addressed to Viva President Vincent G. Del Rosario, the MTRCB said the meeting seeks to promote mutual understanding and responsible conduct in public events.

‘In line with our Responsableng Panonood campaign and our vision for healthy collaborative practices with our stakeholders, we would like to invite you for a dialogue on the said report,’ the letter said.

‘While we respect freedom of expression, the Agency views with serious concern the use of language that undermines respect for public institutions and the standards governing film classification,’ the MTRCB added.

It said the meeting, set for Nov. 4, is intended to serve as a venue for constructive discussion and to reinforce the importance of professionalism and accountability within the entertainment industry.

The MTRCB did not immediately disclose the identity of the content creator who cursed at the agency.

However, a video of content creator Sassa Gurl recently made the rounds on TikTok, where she was captured seemingly cursing at the agency at the said premiere.

‘T*ng*na niyo MTRCB. Maldita diba? Bakit tayo irated X hindi naman ‘to porn,’ said the social media influencer.

It can be recalled that ‘Dreamboi’ received an X rating twice from MTRCB before it got an R-18 rating on third attempt.

UAAP: Montebon finds redemption in Adamson’s OT escape

Monty Montebon had a rough start in Adamson’s second-round encounter with the University of Santo Tomas in the UAAP Season 88 men’s basketball tournament.

The sweet-shooting guard made up for it in the best way possible, helping the Soaring Falcons outlast the Growling Tigers, 97-96, in overtime at Mall of Asia Arena on Wednesday.

Even Montebon himself was surprised by how Adamson clawed its way back against UST.

‘Honestly, I thought the game was a bit out of reach, but coach told us to keep playing until the end of the whistle,’ he said. ‘We did just that and everyone made the right plays. I was able to make those threes and force overtime.’

Montebon finished with 19 points on 6-of-13 shooting, with none bigger than his late-game heroics to end regulation.

The streaky shooter took matters into his own hands, scoring six of Adamson’s last nine points, including the game-tying triple with five seconds left that forced overtime. The Falcons were down by eight, 88-80, with just 30 seconds left in the fourth quarter.

Even coach Nash Racela lauded Montebon’s composure in shaking off his early struggles to give Adamson another shot in the extra period.

‘That’s one thing that Monty struggles with, playing the next possession, but today, he forgot about that,’ Racela said. ‘Regardless of what’s behind you, whether it’s good or bad, what’s important is what’s in front.’

Montebon’s clutch performance lifted Adamson to the upper half of the standings with a 5-4 record.

Dead and drowned: Cemeteries vanish as seas, floods rise

In flood-prone towns across Bulacan, even the dead can’t rest in peace.

‘Masakit (It hurts),’ said Esper, a Bulacan resident now living in Malolos, describing how it feels that not only the living – but even their departed loved ones-are affected by the constant flooding.

What used to be solemn sanctuaries are now stagnant ponds. Tombstones lie submerged. Mausoleums rot in silence. Candles are lit not beside graves, but in living rooms far from the site of burial.

In Hagonoy, one of Central Luzon’s most vulnerable coastal towns, climate change and corrupted road works have sealed off cemeteries under permanent water.

”Yun pong mga mahal namin sa buhay eh sa Hagonoy Memorial Park nakalibing. ilang taon na po naming hindi nadadalaw ‘yung mga nakalibing dun dahil nga po sa laging lubog sa tubig,’ Esper told INQUIRER.net.

(Our loved ones are buried at Hagonoy Memorial Park. and for years now, we haven’t been able to visit them because it’s always submerged in water.)

Once a tranquil resting place across Hagonoy Central School, the Hagonoy Memorial Park is now a watery graveyard. Residents say the water no longer recedes, especially after road elevations trapped rain and tidewater inside the park’s low-lying grounds. In Esper’s words, ‘Nakulong na ‘yung tubig sa loob mismo ng Memorial.’

(The water got trapped inside the Memorial Park itself.)

While the science of sea-level rise may sound distant to many, Esper’s story is a gut-wrenching reminder that even death offers no escape from a warming world.

The drowned and the grieving

Flooding in cemeteries is not a uniquely Filipino problem. Around the world, rising seas, stronger typhoons, and land subsidence are displacing the dead alongside the living.

Findings by Climate Central, Scientific American, and USA Today show how caskets in Louisiana float like battleships during hurricanes. In Alaska, Indigenous graves sink as permafrost melts. In Alabama and Florida, floodwaters scatter headstones like driftwood.

‘Trying to keep things buried that you want to stay buried is often a really big challenge,’ geologist Allen Gontz told USA Today in a 2023 feature. But in countries like the Philippines – ranked by Climate Central as the most at risk from the climate crisis – the problem becomes cultural, economic, and painfully personal.

In Hagonoy, residents like Esper are being asked to pay between P15,000 and P75,000 just to exhume and relocate family remains from submerged plots. ‘Hindi naman po biro ang ganung halaga (That’s no small amount),’ she said. Her parents and siblings are still there, somewhere beneath the water.

She’s not alone. In a public Facebook post, a local resident wrote: ‘Anim na taon na po kaming hindi nakakadalaw sa sementeryo.’

(It’s been six years since we’ve been able to visit the cemetery.)

Another said: ’13 years na puro pagpapataas ng kalsada, hindi naman naging solusyon sa mas tumitinding pagbaha.’

(It’s been 13 years of raising roads, but it hasn’t been a solution to the worsening floods.)

Mapping the risk: Cemeteries underwater

Preliminary mapping using Project NOAH and Climate Central confirms what locals already live with: Hagonoy’s major cemeteries are inside high flood-risk zones.

Project NOAH’s hazard database map classifies both the Hagonoy Memorial Park and Hagonoy Public Cemetery under the ‘High’ flood hazard level. Nearby homes, roads, and schools are similarly inundated.

In an overlay with Climate Central’s 2050 projections, both cemeteries fall within areas that may be below the annual flood level within the next 25 years.

INQUIRER.net’s INQFocus team’s cross-check of at least 40 cemeteries in Bulacan shows that nearly half are situated in medium-to-high flood hazard zones, especially in coastal or riverside towns like Malolos, Meycauayan, Bustos, and Pulilan.

While landslide or storm surge risks are minimal, the combined impact of tidal flooding and poor drainage means these sacred spaces are often the first to go under.

What the data and the dead reveal

Residents confirmed that even during dry months, water no longer drains from the Hagonoy Memorial. ‘Halos lahat po ng sementeryo dito sa amin ay may baha,’ INQUIRER.net was told. Among the primary causes cited were high tide events and climate change.

(Almost all the cemeteries here in our area are flooded.)

Esper added that only mausoleums remain visible. ‘Lubog na lubog po sila, tuluyan pong inilubog sa tubig,’ she said, referring to her family members still resting in the submerged cemetery. ‘Hindi na po matatanaw maski mga lapida.’

(They are completely submerged; they’ve been totally drowned in water. You can’t even see the gravestones anymore.) But the cost of recovery is steep. Even if one finds a dry burial plot elsewhere, the cost of relocation-labor, permits, excavation-is unaffordable to many. Relatives of those with loved ones buried in the Memorial have also been told that the former caretakers allegedly passed away in 2023.

Residents say no one responds to inquiries. ‘Suntok sa buwan na po ‘yung mailipat sila,’ Esper lamented.

(It’s a long shot that they’ll ever be relocated.)

Planning for the dead in a climate-changed world

For towns like Hagonoy where cemeteries are now frequently submerged, experts say it is no longer enough to treat burial sites as static spaces. They must be treated as part of the urban fabric-and planned with the future in mind.

‘Cemeteries can be considered as public, green or recreational spaces,’ said urban planner Ragene Andrea Palma, ‘and such spaces are considered as green infrastructure and are key to how our cities and municipalities can address climate adaptation.’

She suggested that integrating cemetery management into broader urban design strategies – such as those aligned with land use and climate risk planning – can help LGUs better anticipate threats like flooding, sea-level rise, or land subsidence.

‘Design and planning solutions can range from simple actions such as planting more trees to cool cemetery walkways and support biodiversity, to more complex strategies such as integrating cemeteries into urban corridors, or networks of blue-green spaces, so these can be part of everyday mobility routes,’ she said.

‘Cemeteries are also historical and cultural spaces in the city, and in our context, many are affected by subsidence and worsening floods due to the climate crisis. It is important for cities to take actions that are respectful for different communities and feasible for local governments to implement.’

Palma emphasized that while immediate steps may be necessary, they should not be rushed or implemented without context. ‘[T]hese may become band-aid solutions and may also pose risks or do more harm than good,’ she warned.

Still, she identified three priority actions that LGUs could consider when working to rehabilitate cemeteries:

‘Immediate measures would include developing flooding [ot] disaster protocols that cover Undas and other events taking place in cemeteries and its surrounding area, given we now experience more severe weather events during the last quarter of the year; ensuring maintenance of spaces is properly observed; and very importantly, assessing the cemeteries’ risks and impacts on the environment.’

For medium- to long-term solutions, Palma acknowledged the challenges of space and overcrowding, especially in older cemeteries located in urban centers. Still, she said, there are opportunities to innovate.

‘[W]here still feasible, we can look into design solutions, such as improving and increasing elevated and vertical columbaria, which are space-efficient, maximizing niche capacity, and improving greenery and paths,’ she explained.

‘Where applicable, long-term solutions should also include determining buffer areas with corresponding information-education efforts on the environment, sanitation, and public health, and may explore the transformation of cemeteries into ‘forest memorials’ (or in our case, perhaps ‘mangrove memorials’) and gardens [or] arboretums.’

In the most extreme cases-such as chronically flooded or irreparably damaged burial grounds-managed relocation may be necessary, Palma said. But this should never be done in haste.

‘Where really necessary, and where there are resources available, the managed relocation of cemeteries is also a solution, although this should entail proper consultation and engagement with the local communities (e.g., families, parishes, and the general public), so that considerations are taken into account.’

What local government is doing and what many still hope for

In a public post, Hagonoy Mayor Ma. Rosario ‘Ate Charo’ Sy-Alvarado Mendoza announced that cleanup efforts were underway at the Hagonoy Public Cemetery and that the local government unit (LGU) had set aside funds to rehabilitate the site by 2026.

‘Batid po ng Pamahalaang Bayan ang bigat sa bawat mamamayan na napipilitang lumusong sa maruming tubig para lamang makapagtulos ng kandila sa mga mahal sa buhay,’ the mayor said.

(The Municipal Government is aware of the burden carried by every resident who is forced to wade through dirty water just to light a candle for their loved ones.)

While the announcement was welcomed by residents with loved ones in the public cemetery, many hope that similar action will eventually extend to other burial grounds in Hagonoy that are facing the same fate.

For families with relatives resting in private cemeteries like the Hagonoy Memorial Park, the hope remains that no grave, however submerged, will be left behind. ‘Matagal ng di kasama ang mga mahal sa buhay lalo mga magulang at mga kapatid ko, tapos ‘yung ilang beses lang o minsan, isang beses lang sa isang taon na madalaw sila eh hindi na namin nagagawa dahil sa perwisyong baha po na ‘yan,’ Esper stressed.

(It’s been a long time since I’ve been with my loved ones-especially my parents and siblings-and now, the few times we get to visit them, sometimes only once a year, we can’t even do that anymore because of this terrible flooding.)

‘Kaya nga po sana, kung nagmamalasakit po si [Hagonoy] Mayor Charo sa mga nasa ibang sementeryo sa Hagonoy, ganun din po sana sa mga nasa Hagonoy Memorial,’ she added.

(That’s why we hope that if Mayor Charo of Hagonoy truly cares for those in other cemeteries in Hagonoy, she would also show the same concern for those in Hagonoy Memorial.)

INQUIRER.net has reached out to the Office of the Mayor of Hagonoy for an interview or official statement regarding the status of private cemeteries like the Hagonoy Memorial Park. As of this writing, the office has acknowledged receipt of our request via email.

In the same Facebook post, the mayor’s office also noted efforts to engage with private cemeteries:

‘Sa kabilang banda sinisikap ng Pamahalaan na makipag-ugnayan sa iba pang mga Private Cemetery upang masigurado ang kaayusan nito para sa darating na paggunita ng Undas.’

(On the other hand, the government is striving to coordinate with other private cemeteries to ensure order ahead of the upcoming Undas observance.)

Displacement after death

For centuries, cemeteries offered permanence. A final place of rest. A site for memory and peace. But climate change is breaking even those promises.

Experts warn that as seas rise and infrastructure fails to adapt, the number of submerged cemeteries will rise. Globally, relocating one grave can cost up to P500,000. In flood-prone, resource-strapped towns like Hagonoy, the price of inaction is less monetary than it is moral.

‘Hindi na nga po namin madalaw,’ Esper said. ‘Sana man lang, may tulong na dumating bago tuluyang mabura ang alaala nila.’

(We can’t even visit them anymore. I just hope some help comes before their memory is completely erased.)

Healthy exports narrowed Philippines’ trade gap in Sept

The country’s trade deficit narrowed in September as export sales continued to rise despite US tariff woes, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Thursday.

Data from the PSA showed that the country’s trade-in-goods deficit, or the difference between exports and imports, narrowed by 14.7 percent to $4.35 billion in September compared to $5.1 billion in the same month last year on robust electronics exports.

But the figure was wider than last month’s $3.54-billion gap.

Year-on-year, exports surged by 15.9 percent to $7.25 billion compared with the previous year, while imports grew at a slower pace of 2.1 percent to $11.6 billion.

Filipino goods

Exports rose despite the 19-percent tariff that the United States imposed on Filipino goods starting Aug. 1, which Malacañang said in July would have a minimal impact on the country’s economy.

The United States is back as the country’s top export market, after being dethroned by Hong Kong last August, accounting for 15.3 percent or $1.11 billion of the total exports in September.

According to Jonathan Ravelas, senior adviser at Reyes Tacandong and Co., export sales will not significantly dwindle despite the tariffs.

‘The US remains our top export market because American firms still demand high-value Philippine goods, especially electronics and services. Tariffs have not stopped trade where quality and reliability matter,’ he said.

Electronics

Electronic products remained the key driver in the country’s export surge in September, making up more than half of the country’s total exports or $4.02 billion. This was up from $3.14 billion in earnings in the same month last year.

The same commodity group also dominated the country’s total imports, accounting for $3.05 billion or 26.3 percent of the total.

China, meanwhile, is still the largest supplier of the country’s imported goods, accounting for $3.29 billion or more than a quarter of the total in September.

‘China dominates our imports simply because it supplies everything, from raw materials to consumer goods, at scale and low cost,’ Ravelas said.

‘The lesson is we must diversify markets and upgrade local industries to reduce dependency and boost our resilience,’ he added.

Taal Volcano unrest continues; 31 quakes, 13 tremors in 24 hours

Volcanic earthquakes and tremors continue to jolt Taal Volcano in Batangas province, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) reported Friday morning.

According to its latest bulletin, Taal recorded 31 volcanic earthquakes and 13 volcanic tremors that lasted one to three minutes over the past 24 hours. The previous day, the volcano registered 41 quakes accompanied by 20 tremors.

From Oct. 1 to 31, Phivolcs documented a total of 367 volcanic earthquakes and 69 tremor episodes-marking a notable increase from September’s 189 quakes and 129 tremors.

The agency explained that volcanic earthquakes are caused by ‘magmatic or magma-related processes beneath or near an active volcano,’ while volcanic tremors are ‘continuous seismic signals with low frequencies (0.5-5 Hz) and a sine wave appearance.’

These tremors, it added, may result from magma movement, resonance within cracks or vents, or minor explosions inside the volcano.

The volcano also emitted 444 metric tons of sulfur dioxide and generated 600-meter-high plumes, which Phivolcs classified as ‘weak emissions.’

Despite the ongoing activity, the volcano remains under Alert Level 1, indicating an ‘abnormal condition’ and continued unrest.

‘At this level, sudden steam-driven or minor phreatomagmatic eruptions, volcanic earthquakes, ashfall, and dangerous concentrations or releases of volcanic gas may occur and threaten areas within Taal Volcano Island,’ Phivolcs warned.

The agency again reminded the public that entry into the island, boating on Taal Lake, and flying aircraft near the volcano remain strictly prohibited.

Roxas City raises alert to code blue for Undas

The Roxas City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (CDRRMO) has activated the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) under Code Blue status starting 8 a.m. on Thursday as part of the city’s heightened preparations for Undas 2025.

According to the public advisory released by the CDRRMO-EOC, Code Blue signifies a heightened alert level, where all response agencies, emergency teams, and support units are on full standby for quick mobilization in case of emergencies or incidents during the observance of All Saints’ and All Souls’ Days. The alert will remain in effect until 5 p.m. on Nov 4.

Emergency responders, medical teams, and security personnel have been deployed across cemeteries and major areas of convergence to ensure public safety, crowd control, and traffic management. The EOC has also coordinated with the Roxas City Police Station, barangay tanods, and transport units for continuous ground monitoring.

Residents and visitors are reminded to follow safety and traffic rules, park only in designated areas, avoid bringing prohibited items such as liquor, bladed weapons, or firearms inside cemeteries, and dispose of trash properly.

The EOC further issued Undas Safety Tips, encouraging the public to secure their homes before leaving-lock all doors and windows, unplug appliances, turn off gas stoves, and ensure no candles are left burning. People are also advised not to announce on social media that their homes are unattended and to entrust house keys to trusted relatives or neighbors.

Citizens are urged to report any emergencies or hazards immediately to the EOC hotlines at (036) 520-1086 or 0912-472-2669.

The Roxas City Government assured the public that 24-hour operations will continue throughout the Undas period to maintain peace, order, and safety in the city.

Dung-aw: Voices keeping memories of the dead alive

When words falter and sorrow becomes too heavy to bear, Ilocanos turn to dung-aw, a chant for the dead, a lament woven with memory, love, and longing.

The chant, performed during wakes and funerals, carries grief on the wind since through its verses, the dead are not merely mourned – they are spoken to, remembered, and kept alive in the hearts and minds of the bereaved.

RELATED STORY: ‘Panagmanto’: The deep link between black, death, grief

A 1999 study by Flordeliza Pineda and published in the repository of De La Salle University stated that dung-aw, an expression of sorrow, is often done by elderly women.

The study, which is a collection and analysis of dung-aw in seven selected towns of Ilocos Norte, said the practice ‘does not restrict itself to qualifications as long as one wails and observes the functions of dung-aw.’

These functions, it said, are to (1) announce death; (2) serve as an emotional outlet; (3) act as a coping mechanism for those who are in grief and pain; (4) celebrate the life of the dead; and (5) ask forgiveness.

Dung-aw can as well serve as advice for the listeners or a way for the chanter to seek help for problems and advice for major decisions in life.

While the practice is chanted most of the time in wakes and funerals, it can also be performed on the ninth day, the 40th day, and the death anniversaries of the departed, or even when the bereaved ends the grieving period through the babang-luksa.

No script

The chanter, either a relative or a friend, does not have a prepared ‘script’ for the dung-aw, as it is based on personal experiences with the deceased – his or her life and how he or she had impacted the lives of others.

A lament that bridges the world of the living and the dead, the dung-aw is not a simple sound, but a soul – an offering of words and wails that carry love, regret, and memory to the other side.

For instance, in Isabela, a grieving woman lamented the death of her younger brother, saying this with rhythm: ‘Ay, awanen aya ni ading kon. Ay [.] awanen daytay bagbagaan mi iti nagan na [.] ta pumanaw metten.’

She expressed sorrow over the reality that she has to confront-that her brother, whom she calls by his nickname, is now gone and that they would no longer be able to call him once more.

RELATED STORY: Remembering the dead: Understanding atang, why it endures

But sometimes, if not often, the dung-aw is heavier, with the chanter crying out loud while expressing regrets over the loss, like a mother grieving the sudden death of her son.

‘Ay, apay ta damdamagen na no kayak ti agmaymaysa. Apay ngata kunak. Diak man lang pinanpanunot, anakko, no apay ta sangkaradamag mo,’ said the bereaved parent.

It was an expression of intense grief, reminiscing how she has been ‘repeatedly asked’ by her son if she, who is already a widow, can already live alone, stressing that she never thought that her son was already saying goodbye.

Down from the elderly

Passed down through generations, the dung-aw is characterized by verses that are composed on the spot, sometimes listing down the virtues of the dead or recalling moments of kindness.

This, aside from lamentations over ‘what could have been.’

While the exact origin of the practice is not yet known, the dung-aw has not only served as an emotional outlet as it has been regarded as a way for the listeners to know the dead better even if he or she is already gone.

‘The chanter covers her face with a manto (black veil) and coils herself like a snake while chanting,’ Pineda stated in her study, which pointed out that the dung-aw and the chanter have always been regarded with respect.

RELATED STORY: ‘Antoway’: Bontoc’s unique mourning for the dead at risk of dying

‘Creating noise is definitely not allowed while chanting is going on,’ she said.

‘Talking is only allowed if necessary but it should not attract the attention of the chanter and the audience. Even children are warned to behave and show respect for the man-dung-aw (chanter) and the dead alike,’ Pineda stressed.

Indeed, with dung-aw, grief is sacred, reminding those who listen that to mourn is not weakness, but an act of profound love. In the trembling voice of the dung-aw, the living and the dead meet once more, even for only a while.