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Topic: Ati-atihan festival


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In the News (Thu 23 May 13)

  
 Ati-Atihan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The key activity of the festival and one of the main reasons tourists flock to the island is the native dance competitons geared to rythmic and hypnotic drumbeats that run nonstop for several days.
Competitors practice for weeks before the festival and dress in very colorful costumes, wearing masks and headresses, and paint their bodies with black ash to appear like the native Ati.
The festival is held on the third week of January every year in Kalibo in the Aklan province on the island of Panay.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ati-Atihan

  
 Tagalog - Dictionary, Mardi Gras Festival
These Mardi-gras festivals are considered by some as purely religious occasions with all their symbolism while others may look at them as wholly joyful celebrations.
The rest of the festivals are noted for the soot-painted bodies elaborately decorated with anything from seashells to local materials.
Competition of different joining groups or tribus (as they are called in Dinagyang) adds to the excitement of the feasts as they are judged based on the creativity of their costume, dance and sounds, and the over-all performance.
www.tagalog-dictionary.com /source.html?a=mardigras

  
 ati TutorGig.co.uk Encyclopedia
The Ati Atihan festival, held every third Sunday of January in the town of Kalibo, Aklan Kalibo in the province...
The Ati Atihan, a feast in honor of the Santo
Ati is a city in Chad, the capital of Batha Prefectures of Chad prefecture.
www.tutorgig.co.uk /encyclopedia/sencyclo.jsp?keywords=ati

  
 Ati-Atihan Story
The spectacular Ati-Atihan festival, held on the third weekend of every January in the central Philippine town of Kalibo, is surely the rowdiest and most colourful ‘Mardi Gras’ in the country ; the whole town is carried away for three days.
A true mixture of peoples and cultures, Filipinos indulge in countless celebrations, extravagant festivals and local fiestas, often lasting several days, displaying a unique intermingling of traditions and paganism with strong religious overtones.
Festivities were held, during which the newcomers dyed their faces black to blend in better with the native Atis.
www.frankossen.com /Ati-Atihan%20Story.htm

  
 Philippine Holiday Celebrations - Large Selection of Philippine Hotels and Resorts - Philippine Hotels Resorts Online Reservation Service
One of the most popular of the Philippine festivals, the Ati-atihan is a celebration in honor of the Sto.
A worldwide Muslim festival celebrating the end of the month-long fasting period of the Holy Month of Ramadam by the Muslims.
The festival is marked by an afternoon procession by thousands of devotees.
www.amoretrip.com /info/holiday.html

  
 Aklan
Aklan is famous for two things: Boracay and the Ati-Atihan Festival.
Tourists also flock to see the annual Ati-Atihan Festival in Kalibo held every January.
The festival is a feast dedicated to Santo Niño or the Baby Jesus, and revelers paint their faces with black soot and wear bright-colored costumes.
www.serebella.com /encyclopedia/article-Aklan.html

  
 ati-atihan
Participants blacken their faces with soot to commemorate the 13th century land deal between the local Ati aborigines and twelve datus malays who had fled a tyrant in their native Borneo.
The three elements of "The Twelve Datus from Borneo - The Ati Natives of Panay - The Santo Nino by The Spaniard Priests" has became the wildest among Philippine fiestas.
It is said to be the home of the original Bisaya - a term considered by some etymologists to be a literal rendering of the Visayan "sadya" or the Tagalog "saya", meaning "happiness".
www.alibata.org /miscellaneous/atiatihan/atiatihan.html

  
 Colors Philippines - Philippine Travel Guide by colorsphilippines.com
The Ati-Atihan festival itself was named after the Ati, the aboriginal Negritos of Panay Island, reputed for their raucous singing and dancing.
During the Dinagyang Festival, the streets are turned into a color-splashed arena where different groups take turns performing for the crowd while striving to outdance the competition.
Although these festivals come on the heels of the traditionally colorful Philippine Christmas season, they are nonetheless celebrated in equal grand fashion.
www.colorsphilippines.com /festival.asp

  
 BoracayOnWeb.com, Ati-atihan History
Present day Ati-atihan celebrations are characterized by the wild dancing, the putting of soot on some parts of the body (usually the face), the loud cheering, colourful attire and the culmination of the festival with a mass in the Kalibo cathedral.
The Ati-atihan was concieved as a response to the drive of the government to boost in tourism in the country.
It is said to have fused the elements of Spanish catholicism and those of animist aetas (atis) of the island of Panay.
boracayonweb.com /atiatihan.htm

  
 Philippine Fiestas and Holidays
Since the festival coincides with the feast of St. John the Baptist, be prepared to get wet as people observe the feast by repeating the ritual of baptism - pouring water.
Since the festival coincides with the feast of St. John the Baptist, be prepared to get wet as people ob Expect the Bukidnon to go tribal from the first to the second week of March, when the streets of Malaybalay take on that familiar fiesta theme.
Each city and barrio has at least one local festival of its own, usually on the feast of its patron saint, so that there is always a fiesta going on somewhere in the country.
asiarecipe.com /phifestival.html

  
 Seven Die in Central Philippine Festival Shooting
The "Ati-atihan" festival in honor of Santo Nino, one of the most revered Roman Catholic icons in the Philippines, was stopped, turning merrymaking into mourning for the victims.
Niño church in Kalibo, during celebrations of the "Ati-atihan" festival in honor of the Santo Niño.
The festival commemorating the conversion of pagan natives to Catholicism in the 16th century is known for street dancing by people smeared with charcoal, wearing grass skirts and carrying wooden spears.
www.freerepublic.com /focus/f-news/1322042/posts

  
 The Philippines
The ATI-ATIHAN festival in Kalibo, Panay island, is the festival in the Philippines, the biggest and it's also considered to be the best.
It is also the home of the famous Ati-Atihan festival.
The PANAAD festival is held in April-May at the stadium of Bacolod, Negros, and shows handicrafts & art from the province.
hem.passagen.se /waeppling/malapascua/philippines.htm

  
 Festivals
A celebration in honor of the Sto Niño, friendship pact between native Aetas and the newly-arrived Malays in the 13th century;and a harvest thanksgiving which is marked by frenzied merriment on the street when revellers-in colorful costumes, their bodies painted black and their faces made-up, -dance, prance, stomp, to drumbeats.
This historic festival could be called the Mardi Gras of the Philippines.
Three days of singing, dancing, and the playing of drums by thousands of local inhabitants garbed in costumes consisting of an intricate patchwork of coconut shells, feathers,and wearing masks.
www.geocities.com /Athens/Acropolis/9529/festi4.htm

  
 :: Welcome to Manila Bulletin Online ::
Niño devotees is at the core of the 2005 festival thrust of the Kalibo Ati-Atihan Management Board (KAMB) envisioned to develop the festival into a world-class event by attracting tens of thousands of local and international devotees and encouraging annual balikbayan pilgrimages to Aklan.
These are easily the source of the magical charm of Ati-Atihan, the week-long festival that draws hordes of local and foreign vacation-seekers to Kalibo, Aklan during this capital town’s fiesta staged from Jan. 11 to 16 every year.
Allen S. Quimpo, is also spearheading the promotion of the festival as an annual destination of Aklan balikbayans.
www.mb.com.ph /issues/2005/01/10/TOUR2005011026027.html

  
 Phlog -
Although, the Ati-Atihan Festival is very similar to Mardi Gras, it has no relation to the Fat Tuesday festivities.
Hence the festival name "Ati-Atihan." An encomiendero during the Spanish rule urged the people
It is said that the Ati-Atihan Festival at Kalibo, Aklan began when the
www.phlog.net /view_entry.php?entry=186435&style=default

  
 Student Travel Information & Discounts - Events: Ati-Atihan (Kalibo, Philippines)
The Ati-Atihan is a confusing blend of the sacred and the profane, a festival held to honour Jesus Christ on one of the world's most beautiful "paradise" islands.
It is a festival in which people come to show their gratitude for a good harvest, an uncomplicated birth, or a good year of business.
Ati-Atihan actually means "apeing the atis" and it is for this reason the celebrants blacken their faces and dance with an abandon which can only be labelled extreme.
www.istc.org /sisp?fx=event&event_id=7267

  
 Pilot Guides.com:Spiritual Street Dancing at Ati Atihan Festival
The Ati-Atihan festival is held every third Sunday of January and is one of the three variations on Mardi Gras that are held in the Philippines.
The Torch Procession is held on the last evening of the festival, marking the end of the Ati-Atihan.
The highlight of the Ati-Atihan is undoubtedly a three-day three-night frenzy of drinking and dancing, dubbed the 'Big Three Days of Spiritual Street Dancing'.
www.pilotguides.com /destination_guide/asia/philippines/ati_atihan.php

  
 RPConnect on List of Philippines Fiestas and Festival Celebrations
This festival is a celebration of the cultures of the ethnic minorities of Baguio in northern Luzon.
In the duck-breeding suburb of Pateros, a curious festival is held in which the hunting and killing of a crocodile that had threatened the livelihood of the farmers here is re-enacted.
A festival that honours the patron saint of Jaro, a suburb in the city of Iloilo.
www.rpconnect.com /rpconnect/travel/fiestas/fiestas.html

  
 January
Fiesta Senyor, as it is widely known, is the most celebrated among Cebu''s festival where people converge along the routes of a grand solemn procession and partake in the gaiety amidst a mardi gras parade immersed in wild colors and the constant beating of drums.
Translated literally, it means "Day of Koronadal" and indeed it is. Hinugyaw Festival, dubbed as the "Festival of Festivals", is a celebration of the different cultures that has dwelled on the fertile valley of Koronadal for many years now.
Official Festival of the City of Makati by virtue of resolution No. 251 of Jan. 21, 1991 displaying the call of the local Government for the protection and conservation of our ecology.
www.internetngbayan.com /AboutPhils/CCJan.htm

  
 Swastika Fylfot Sunwheel Philippines - Parade at the Ati Atihan Festival
Fiestas are very important on the Philippines, for example the yearly Ati Atihan festival in Kalibo or the Sinulog festival in Cebu.
A festival was then held, and the new-comers painted there faces black, to look like the resident Ati.
The origin of this festival goes way back: In the 13th century 10 Datus with there families had to flee from Borneo.
swastika-info.com /il/article.php?article_file=1063233710.txt&...

  
 Sun.Star Iloilo - Globelines adds vibe to Ati-Atihan fest
This year, the Ati-atihan festival gets an added boost as Globelines, the landline service provider that puts its customers ahead, lends their support for the world-famous celebration.
LONG before the beauty of the island of Boracay was discovered by tourists almost two decades ago, the province of Aklan has already been famous for one thing: their annual celebration of the Ati-atihan festival.
Injecting additional vibe to festival, Globelines will provide their colorful banners and streamers on the already-colorful streets of Kalibo.
www.sunstar.com.ph /static/ilo/2004/01/16/life/globelines.adds.vibe.to.ati.atihan.fest.html

  
 PHNO: Headline News
Aklan's Ati-atihan festival traces its root to the purchase of Panay island from the aboriginal Atis by Bornean Datus in the 13th century.
Also known as the Ati-atihan, the centuries-old festival is the precursor of today's mardi gras festivals like the Dinagyang in Iloilo and Sinulog in Cebu.
The highlight of the festival comes on the last day when groups representing different Ati tribes compete in a stunning display of absolute revelry.
www.newsflash.org /2002/01/hl/hl015041.htm

  
 Sanrokan News Magazine Romblon Province, Philippines
The Biniray is similar to the ati-atihan festival of Aklan.
The story goes that the ati-atihan or Biniray Festival in Romblon started when Fr.
During the "Biniray Festival", people decorate themselves with flowers and vines, paint their faces, and dance in the streets.
www.sanrokan.com /old/feb21/feature_atiatihan.htm

  
 Panagbenga Festival - Baguio Flower Festival - Lakbay Pilipinas Festivals
They began by creating an identity for the Festival, one that would reflect the history, traditions and values of Baguio and the Cordilleras.
Shortly thereafter, a Festival hymn was composed by Professor Macario Fronda of Saint Louis University.
The 18th Kadayawan Festival was well participated, particularly the Indak-Indak sa Kadalanan participated in by local government units, including those outside the Davao region.
www.lakbaypilipinas.com /festivals/panagbenga_festival.html

  
 Sun.Star Iloilo - SM City Iloilo launches Dinagyang festival
Honored by the arrival of the image, the Ilonggos thought of reviving the observance of the Negrito (Ati) tribes to Christianity through what was called the Iloilo Ati-Atihan Festival.
Since 1977, the festivities have been known as Dinagyang instead of Iloilo Ati-Atihan to differentiate it from the other Ati-Atian festivals.
When it first began in 1968, the festivities consisted of a fluvial parade, the participation of the Ati tribes, and mardi gras-inspired activities.
www.sunstar.com.ph /static/ilo/2005/01/10/life/sm.city.iloilo.launches.dinagyang.festival.html

  
 The Ati
The Ati-Atihan is a festival in honor of the Santo Niño, celebrated in the third week of January.
One time the Ati people was in need of food because of a bad harvest in their homelands.
A real friendship was born and the Maraynon started to paint their faces black in honor of the Atis and took part in the fiesta.
www.philippines.hvu.nl /culture3.htm

  
 Filipino Mardis Gras - Ati-Atihan
In case you miss it there's a much smaller version of the festival that is called " the original Ati Ati Han" held one week later in Ibajay, a town located half way between Kalibo and Boracay Island on the provincial road.
The festival includes every local group in Aklan with a unique tribal heritage, various civic or commercial organizations and individuals that create new costumes every year.
The informality of the festival is what makes it so great and allows everyone to participate, dance, beat on a drum or just take photos while in the middle of the tribal groups.
pages.zdnet.com /asiabill/id12.html

  
 Tanikalang Ginto www.filipinolinks.com Philippines : Society/Festivals, Fiestas, and Holidays
Ati-atihan is the celebrated Mardi Gras-like festival held during the 3rd week of January in Aklan province.
the festival presents the grandest, the most colorful and most exciting street dance in the Philippines, the largest beer garden, the showcase of indigenous products, culture and arts, the arena for the best of skills in native games, the blending of native and adapted foreign culture.
Sinulog is considered to be the biggest festival in the Philippines in honor of Santo Nino.
www.filipinolinks.com /Society/Festivals__Fiestas__and_Holidays/index.html

  
 Antique revives Binirayan festival - FEATURES (January 21, 1999)
As Cebu's Sinulog and Kalibo's Ati-atihan festivals culminated and Iloilo's Dinagyang was set to kick off this Sunday, Antique quietly revived its own festival to begin the new year.
While the Cebu, Kalibo and Iloilo festivals were all being held in honor of the Señor Sto.
According to the Binirayan saga, carefully reenacted during the festival, it was in 1240 when Bornay (Borneo) was ruled by a despotic sultan named Makatunaw.
www.travelsmart.net /ph/inquirer/issues/jan99/jan21/fea_2.htm

  
 BIYAHE NA! HALA BIRA! (TRAVEL NOW! LET'S GO!)
Kalibo’s Ati-atihan festival, held on the third week of January, is the Philippines’ most famous fiesta.
Two traditional features of the festival are the paeapak or patapak (rub-on) of the Image of the Santo Niño on revelers’ bodies and the kaadlawan (feast day).
They made a pact with the locals which was reinforced by a harvest feast prepared by the new arrivals for their Ati neighbors.
www.newsflash.org /2003/05/tl/tl012283.htm

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