A mind-changing week with the T’boli
My week in Lake Sebu, South Cotabato, last summer, specifically with the T’boli, has changed the way I view living in Manila and the process of preserving one’s heritage.
My week in Lake Sebu, South Cotabato, last summer, specifically with the T’boli, has changed the way I view living in Manila and the process of preserving one’s heritage.
Among the leading ecodestinations is Lake Sebu in South Cotabato, with its seven falls, the ancestral domain of the T’boli ethnolinguistic group.
A PROJECT to construct a “boulevard” or lakeside park on a shore of Lake Sebu in the town of the same name in South Cotabato province has drawn both support
THERE is a world beyond the land of the T’boli to which they constantly bring propitiatory offerings—the world of the spirits. In T’boli culture, death is a simple affair: When
PROBABLY the most oppressed, and certainly the most neglected, Filipinos are the indigenous peoples (IPs) in every region of the country. Voters at party-list election should make them top
The noise of the habal-habal’s engine broke the silence in Sitio T’bong in Lake Sebu, where the weaving school of the late T’boli Dreamweaver Lang Dulay stood above the dusty road often traveled by tourists.
Upon arriving at General Santos City airport, you immediately notice the hustle and bustle of business life in the city. Foreigners and locals alike stream out of the airport. It’s my first time in General Santos City, and it seems to me that commerce and the march of progress is well underway in this booming port. But the city was not our first destination as we immediately headed to South Cotabato and the enchanting Lake Sebu.
Strange that some Filipino travelers are familiar with what’s going on in places like Inner Mongolia and yet have no clue about many Philippine must-see sights and must-go sites.
Perched above the hills, some over 300 meters above sea level, Lake Sebu, a first-class municipality in Mindanao’s south-central tip, is a veritable paradise for tourists of all persuasions.
Backpacking as a mode of travel is a definition of identity. If you feel like a fish taking to water despite that cumbersome load on your body, then it is for you.
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