Teduray people

The Teduray are a Filipino ethnic group. They speak the Tiruray language. There were 103,139 of them in 2010.[1] Their name may have come from words tew, meaning people, and duray, referring to a small bamboo hook and a line used for fishing.[2]

The Tiruray (Teduray) culture was studied at length in the 1960s by anthropologist Stuart A. Schlegel. Schlegel spent two years as a participant/observer among a group who lived in and was sustained by the rainforest. He was profoundly moved by the egalitarian society he witnessed, and went on to write several books and papers on the subject, including Wisdom of the Rainforest: The Spiritual Journey of an Anthropologist.

Ancestral land

The Teduray ancestral homeland is considered sacred.[3] The Teduray, together with the indigenous Lambangian people, originate from the Agusan, Davao and Lanao regions, the province of Bukidnon, and in the cities of Davao and Zamboanga.[2] The Teduray, Lambiangan, and Manobo have jointly applied for recognition of their ancestral domain covering 289,268 hectares of land comprising the municipalities of Upi, South Upi, Ampatuan, Shariff Aguak, Datu Unsay, Datu Saudi, Guindulungan, Talayan, and Datu Odin Sinsuat in Maguindanao Province and portions of Esperanza, Lebak, Bagumbayan, Senator Ninoy Aquino, Kalamansig, and Palimbang in Sultan Kudarat Province and the city of Cotabato where the indigenous groups are predominantly situated.[4]

Indigenous religion

The Teduray or Tiruray people believe in various spirits and deities. The most prominent deities are:

  • Minaden – The goddess who creates of the world, and had a brother named Tulus.
  • Tulus – The chief of all good spirits who bestow gifts and favors upon human beings. He goes around with a retinue of messengers called telaki. Tulus is said to have rectified some errors in the first creation of the world and of human beings. Also known as Meketefu.[5]

References

  1. "2010 Census of Population and Housing, Report No. 2A: Demographic and Housing Characteristics (Non-Sample Variables) - Philippines" (PDF). Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  2. "The Teduray". National Commission for Culture and the Arts. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  3. McKinsey, Kitty (October 10, 2011). "Mindanao's indigenous people ask UNHCR's help to gain their rights - UNHCR Philippines". UNHCR. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  4. Benitez, Jules L. (2010-10-03). "Teduray and Lambangian peoples call for 2nd tribal congress". MindaNews. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  5. The Tiruray, Grace L. Wood, Philippine Sociological Review. Vol. 5, No. 2 (APRIL, 1957), pp. 12-39


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